The following is a sketch of some of my current research aimed at
confronting my earlier work on social costs and the hours of labour with
Alf Hornborg's explication of the concept of machine fetishism and more
generally the literature on ecological unequal exchange influenced by the
work of sociologist Stephen G. Bunker. I've dug up an intriguing
convergence between what Bunker was arguing and Nicholas Kaldor's arguments
from the 1980s, which while not explicitly aimed at "Endogenous Growth
Theory" (e.g., Paul M. Romer) certainly offers an incisive critique of its
foundational assumptions. I haven't yet encountered anyone directly
confronting the endogenous growth theory literature with the ecological
unequal exchange arguments. So here is my stab at it (also posted at
http://ecologicalheadstand.blogspot.ca/2012/10/endogenous-growth-theory-and.html
):

What the late Stephen G. Bunker wrote bears repeating:

The crucial difference between production and extraction is that the
dynamics of scale in extractive economies function inversely to the
dynamics of scale in the productive economies to which world trade connects
them.

Rather than repeat what Bunker wrote, though, I'm going to cite, later, a
longer piece by Nicholas Kaldor from his 1985 Hicks Lecture that makes a
somewhat similar point. But first, I want to present some background on an
old debate and a 'new' theory.

In December 1926, *The Economic Journal* published an article by Piero
Sraffa dealing with "that difficult branch of economic theory" -- the
theory of increasing returns. Over the next five years it published
responses from Cecil Pigou, G. F. Shove, Lionel Robbins and Allyn Young
and, in March 1930, a symposium on the topic by D. H. Robertson, Sraffa and
Shrove.

Almost exactly 60 years later, in October 1986, *The Journal of Political
Economy*, published Paul D. Romer's "Increasing Returns and Long-Run
Growth," an important contribution to so-called New Growth Theory. Romer
took his cue explicitly from Young's 1928 paper, "Increasing Returns and
Economic Progress" and although he mentioned the precedents of Adam Smith's
pin factory and Alfred Marshall's distinction between internal and external
economies, he skipped over the rest of the debate in which Young's
contribution had appeared.

Critics have argued that Romer's usage of increasing returns and external
economies is not faithful to Young's formulation, in that it "overlooked
Young's emphasis on the reciprocal relations between the division of labor
and the feed-back into aggregate demand as a requirement for growth,"
"neglected Young's categorical rejection of the usefulness of Walrasian
general equilibrium models" and wrested "Marshall's microeconomic concepts
of internal and external economies out of his theory of value and price to
serve as a basis for amending constant return production functions to
exhibit increasing returns for the macroeconomy" (Rima 2004, 181-182).

My concern here is with a more conspicuous omission in Romer's analysis --
the distinction between increasing returns as *characteristic* of
manufacturing and diminishing returns as dominant in agriculture and
extractive industries (Young 1928, 528-529). The words "agriculture,"
"land" and "rent" do not appear in Romer's 1986 article. When Romer
mentions diminishing returns, it is only in the context of research
activity or the limiting assumptions of classical conventional growth
models. But diminishing returns is a *specific* limitation, not a
generality that can be indiscriminately "offset" by increasing returns. In
a lecture given at Harvard in 1974, "What is Wrong with Economic Theory,"
Kaldor explained that "it is the income of the agricultural sector, (given
the "terms of trade") that really determines the level and the rate of
growth of industrial production, according to the formula:"

<http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Jueoa8ozqS4/UHWqO0Ij7QI/AAAAAAAAAqU/BGxEdPVjdkY/s1600/kaldor.JPG>
Or, in prose, economic growth depends on *either* a relative reduction in
the income of agriculture or increased demand from agriculture for
industrial products. And, of course, increased demand from agriculture
implies increased agricultural production, which at some point confronts
the problem of diminishing returns. In his 1985 Hicks Lecture, Kaldor
explained the inverse dynamics of scale between industrial and agricultural
areas, parenthetically, in terms of the "differing manner of operation of
perfect and imperfect competition":

The basic requirement of continued economic growth is that the various
complementary sectors expand in due relationship with each other -- that is
to say that general expansion is not held up by "bottlenecks" in key
sectors. However, in the course of time, under the influence of technical
progress, both of the natural-resource saving and labour-saving kind, the
requirements of expansion may become considerably modified. In the
manufacturing sector which becomes more important as real incomes rise,
there are considerable economies of scale, as a result of which
manufacturing activities are subject to a "polarization process" -- they
are likely to develop in a few successful centres, and their success has an
inhibiting effect on similar developments in other areas. The realisation
of these economies of scale normally requires also that numerous processes
of production which are related to each other are carried out in close
geographical proximity.

As a result different regions experience unequal rates of growth of output
and of population. The industrial areas experience a growing demand for
labour which may involve immigration from other areas once their own
surplus labour is exhausted. Technological development in primary
production on the other hand, tends to be more labour-saving than
land-saving, so that the growth of output may go hand in hand with a
falling demand for labour; and though output per head may grow fast in real
terms, the level of wages will tend to remain low (and may even be falling)
as a result of a growing surplus population. Since labour cost per unit of
output is the most important factor in determining selling prices (at any
rate under competitive conditions) the low wages prevailing, in terms of
industrial products, will mean that the terms of trade will move
unfavourably to primary producers, which may be the main factor, along with
the low coefficient of labour utilisation, for their state of
"under-development" characterised by low standards of living. The important
contrast -- which I regard as a major factor in the growing inequality of
incomes between rich and poor countries -- resides in the fact that the
benefit of labour saving technical progress in the primary sector tends to
get passed on to the consumers in the secondary sector in lower prices,
whereas in the industrial sector its benefits are retained within the
sector through higher wages and profits. (The main reason for this
difference lies in the differing manner of operation of perfect and
imperfect competition.)

Kaldor's parenthetical explanation suggests more than it reveals. Sraffa's
1926 discussion is the key to unpacking why Kaldor specifies perfect
competition as characteristic of primary production and associates
imperfect competition with manufacturing industry. The key determinants, in
that view, are the shapes of the firms' supply curves (increasing or
diminishing returns) and the nature of external economies.

*Externality and Ecological Overshoot*

Marshall's notion of "external economies" has gone through a series of
modifications to become today's "externalities." Pigou extended the concept
beyond Marshall's industrial agglomerations and distinguished between
“incidental uncharged disservices” and "incidental uncompensated services."
The former became known as negative externalities and the latter as
positive externalities, although typically it is the negative environmental
externalities that are referred to simply as externalities. There is a
seeming but misleading symmetry to the two terms and a similarly illusory
quality of reciprocity within each of them. When a disservice is uncharged
or a service is uncompensated there is a presumption that there might
otherwise have been a "whom" to charge or to compensate and that the
missing invoice could have been denominated in currency. In other words,
the charging and compensating would appear to be a financial transaction
between two parties, both of whom must be assumed to be legal persons. In
reality, the services or disservices performed may (or may not!) be
extremely indirect and the parties affected incredibly diffuse, both in
space and time. Mundane examples of factory soot and laundry hanging out to
dry may be more mystification than illumination.

In the case of the external economies of increasing returns and diminishing
returns, respectively, although they function inversely to one another it
is a *double inversion* that ultimately produces parallel incentives to
firms in manufacturing and agricultural or extractive industries. In other
words, while firms in the manufacturing center are routinely considered to
be the beneficiaries of external economies that generate increasing returns
in the sense that they receive uncompensated services, firms in the
extractive periphery may also benefit from the externalization of
diminishing returns in that they are able to avoid being charged for the
environmental disservices they inflict. In effect, the cost of diminishing
returns is first displaced to poor regions where it is then deflected onto
society and the environment. Unequal exchange thus takes place, that is to
say, in the global external economies, "behind the back", so to speak, of
formal monetary transactions.
-- 
Cheers,

Tom Walker (Sandwichman)
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