G'day Quiet Ones,

Abd al-Rahman Ibn Muhammad Ibn Khaldun al-Hadrami of Tunis, father of the
LTV ... here's the intro - more at
http://www.georgetown.edu/oweiss/ibn.htm

IBRAHIM M. OWEISS

In his Prolegomena (The Muqaddimah), 'Abd al-Rahman Ibn Muhammad Ibn
Khaldun al-Hadrami of Tunis (A.D. 1332-1406), commonly known as Ibn
Khaldun, laid down the foundations of different fields of knowledge, in
particular the science of civilization (al-'umran). His significant
contributions to economics, however, should place him in the history of
economic thought as a major forerunner, if not the "father," of economics,
a title which has been given to Adam Smith, whose great works were
published some three hundred and seventy years after Ibn Khaldun's death.
Not only did Ibn Khaldun plant the germinating seeds of classical
economics, whether in production, supply, or cost, but he also pioneered in
consumption, demand, and utility, the cornerstones of modern economic
theory.

Before Ibn Khaldun, Plato and his contemporary Xenophon presented, probably
for the first time In writing, a crude account of the specialization and
division of
labor. On a non-theoretical level, the ancient Egyptians used the
techniques of specialization, particularly in the era of the Eighteenth
Dynasty, in order to save time and to produce more work per hour. Following
Plato, Aristotle proposed a definition of economics and considered the use
of money in his analysis of exchange.

His example of the use of a shoe for wear and for its use in exchange was
later presented by Adam Smith as the value in use and the value in
exchange. Another
aspect of economic thought before Ibn Khaldun was that of the Scholastics
and of the Canonites, who proposed placing economics within the framework
of laws
based on religious and moral perceptions for the good of all human beings.
Therefore all economic activities were to be undertaken in accordance with
such laws.

Ibn Khaldun was cognizant of these ideas, including the one relating to
religious and moral perceptions. The relationship between moral and
religious principles on one hand and good government on the other is
effectively expounded in his citation and discussion of Tahir Ibn
al-Husayn's (A.D. 775-822) famous letter to his son 'Abdallah, who ruled
Khurasan with his descendants until A.D. 872.1 From the rudimentary
thoughts of Tahir2 he developed a theory of taxation which has affected
modern economic thought and even economic policies in the United States and
elsewhere.

This paper attempts to give Ibn Khaldun his forgotten and long overdue
credit and to place him properly within the history of economic thought. He
was preceded by a variety of economic but elemental ideas to which he gave
substance and depth. Centuries later these same ideas were developed by the
Mercantilists, the commercial capitalists of the seventeenth century-Sir
William Petty (A.D. 1623-1687), Adam Smith (A.D. 1723-1790), David Ricardo
(A.D. 1772-1823),
Thomas R. Malthus (A.D. 1766-1834), Karl Marx (A.D. 1818-1883), and John
Maynard Keynes (A.D. 1883-1946), to name only a few-and finally by
contemporary economic theorists.

                    Labor Theory of Value, Economics of Labor,
             Labor as the Source of Growth and Capital Accumulation

With the exception of Joseph A. Schumpeter, who discovered Ibn Khaldun's
writings only a few months before his death,3 Joseph J. Spengler,4 and
Charles
Issawi, major Western economists trace the theory of value to Adam Smith
and David Ricardo because they attempted to find a reasonable explanation
for the
paradox of value. According to Adam Smith and as further developed by David
Ricardo, the exchange value of objects is to be equal to the labor time
used in its production. On the basis of this concept, Karl Marx concluded
that "wages of labour must equal the production of labour"5 and introduced
his revolutionary term surplus value signifying the unjustifiable reward
given to capitalists, who exploit the efforts of the labor class, or the
proletariat. Yet it was Ibn Khaldun, a believer in the free market economy,
who first introduced the labor theory of value without the extensions of
Karl Marx ...



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