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Lesson4 - Salazar, Mary Rose C.
Lesson4 - Salazar, Mary Rose C.
System of justice
Within civil society, there is a system of justice that
establishes it. It may be just or unequal, but it is not
political.
Framework of relationships
People are pitted against one other in civil society,
which is defined as a system of private relationships
between legally autonomous persons.
Working class
Civil society creates, recreates, and extends
the working class, but it is never allowed
access to its advantages.
According to the labor theory of value, the price of economic commodities is determined
by the quantity of labor required to manufacture them. By arguing that prices are determined
by the relative quantities of social labor required in the production of commodities, Smith,
Ricardo, and Marx drew a straight line between the division of labor and price. The division
of a pool of social work and the trade of commodities are directly linked under the labor
theory of value. However, the theory encounters a number of analytical difficulties, leading
modern economists working in the classical tradition to conclude that the best way to build a
materialist basis for exchange is to use a different starting point, which is also present in
classical theories: the price of production. Instead of basing the price on the division of a
pool of social labor, these scholars base it on the technical specifications of a production
system.
The set of outputs generated must be appropriate in form and adequate in volume to offer
the inputs required for their own production in order for reproduction to occur. If the output
set is entirely accurate in this sense of replacing the inputs used in its production, the
economy is said to create a surplus equal to the excess of the set of products over the
reproduction inputs. Each price must meet the criterion of being adequate to meet
production expenses while also being consistent with the prices of items that use that output
as a productive input. In this sense, price of production refers to a price that is
commensurate with the commodity's placement in the reproduction system. The price
determines whether a commodity may be used as both an input and an output. The first and
most important determinant of the pricing system is the production structure, which is a
material technical definition of the needs for reproducing the commodity system.
The classical technique contrasts with the neoclassical method in its analysis of
consumption, particularly that of workers. The application of the classical model to wage
determination has resulted in the concept of labor as a commodity whose price is decided in
proportion to production costs. Otherwise, technological procedures for translating inputs
into outputs will not be able to calculate the pricing of items that use labor as an input in a
unique way. The classical method solves this difficulty by determining the composition and
amount of employees' consumption based on principles that are independent of individual
workers' wishes and decisions.
The concept of subsistence has evolved beyond the simple concept of production costs.
Workers' consumption is regarded as a given in today's classical models. Subsistence
indicates that the demands that the market must meet are independent of the market and do
not change in response to commodity prices. Consumers have acquired needs that are
acquired in the market to meet their wants. Regardless of how such demands are identified,
they do not involve trade-offs and do not fluctuate with price in the short term. Consumers
who make decisions based on preferences, on the other hand, will adjust the mix of their
consumption in response to changes in the relative pricing of their components.
As discussed in the classical framework, workers' subsistence demands may fall short of
the quantity of subsistence that those same employees, together with the necessary inputs,
can generate in a given period. More broadly, it is technically possible that using current
output as inputs into production would yield an amount of output greater than that required to
maintain present production levels. The question then becomes what to do with the surplus.
This means that society must distribute surplus funds to certain activities such as
consumption and production in accordance with a set of rules.
To sum it up, market pricing, which is linked to social institutions like property and
contracts, indicates a deeper reality that is shared by nonmarket allocation and distribution.
According to the classical perspective, all societies must reproduce themselves by
replicating their workers' subsistence, and they must also divide their surplus in line with the
requirements of their own social structures. What differs amongst civilizations is the shape in
which these processes take. The market is one of several social systems for addressing
basic human needs. This indicates that whether or not the market exists, the economy in the
sense of material provisioning occurs, and so whether or not our economic actions take
place in a distinct area, we would term it an economy.
References
Caporaso, J. A., & Levine, D. P. (1992). Theories of Political Economy. Cambridge.