A bit polemic, but a very useful framing. 


Takers and Makers: Who are the Real Value Creators? - Evonomics
http://evonomics.com/value-of-everything-mariana-mazzucato/
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We often hear businesses, entrepreneurs or sectors talking about themselves as 
‘wealth-creating’. The contexts may differ – finance, big pharma or small 
start-ups – but the self-descriptions are similar: I am a particularly 
productive member of the economy, my activities create wealth, I take big 
‘risks’, and so I deserve a higher income than people who simply benefit from 
the spillovers of this activity. But what if, in the end, these descriptions 
are simply just stories? Narratives created in order to justify inequalities of 
wealth and income, massively rewarding the few who are able to convince 
governments and society that they deserve high rewards, while the rest of us 
make do with the leftovers.

If value is defined by price – set by the supposed forces of supply and demand 
– then as long as an activity fetches a price (legally), it is seen as creating 
value. So if you earn a lot you must be a value creator. I will argue that the 
way the word ‘value’ is used in modern economics has made it easier for 
value-extracting activities to masquerade as value-creating activities. And in 
the process rents (unearned income) get confused with profits (earned income); 
inequality rises, and investment in the real economy falls. What’s more, if we 
cannot differentiate value creation from value extraction, it becomes nearly 
impossible to reward the former over the latter. If the goal is to produce 
growth that is more innovation-led (smart growth), more inclusive and more 
sustainable, we need a better understanding of value to steer us.

This is not an abstract debate. It has far-reaching consequences – social and 
political as well as economic – for everyone. How we discuss value affects the 
way all of us, from giant corporations to the most modest shopper, behave as 
actors in the economy and in turn feeds back into the economy, and how we 
measure its performance. This is what philosophers call ‘performativity’: how 
we talk about things affects behaviour, and in turn how we theorize things. In 
other words, it is a self-fulfilling prophecy.

If we cannot define what we mean by value, we cannot be sure to produce it, nor 
to share it fairly, nor to sustain economic growth. The understanding of value, 
then, is critical to all the other conversations we need to have about where 
our economy is going and how to change its course.

Why Value Theory Matters

The disappearance of value from the economic debate hides what should be alive, 
public and actively contested. If the assumption that value is in the eye of 
the beholder is not questioned, some activities will be deemed to be value- 
creating and others will not, simply because someone – usually someone with a 
vested interest– says so, perhaps more eloquently than others. Activities can 
hop from one side of the production boundary to the other with a click of the 
mouse and hardly anyone notices. If bankers, estate agents and bookmakers claim 
to create value rather than extract it, mainstream economics offers no basis on 
which to challenge them, even though the public might view their claims with 
scepticism. Who can gainsay Lloyd Blankfein when he declares that Goldman Sachs 
employees are among the most productive in the world? Or when pharmaceutical 
companies argue that the exorbitantly high price of one of their drugs is due 
to the value it produces? Government officials can become convinced (or 
‘captured’) by stories about wealth creation, as was recently evidenced by the 
US government’s approval of a leukemia drug treatment at half a million 
dollars, precisely using the ‘ value- based pricing’ model pitched by the 
industry – even when the taxpayer contributed $200 million dollars towards its 
discovery.

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Second, the lack of analysis of value has massive implications for one 
particular area: the distribution of income between different members of 
society. When value is determined by price (rather than vice versa), the level 
and distribution of income seem justified as long as there is a market for the 
goods and services which, when bought and sold, generate that income. All 
income, according to this logic, is earned income: gone is any analysis of 
activities in terms of whether they are productive or unproductive.

Yet this reasoning is circular, a closed loop. Incomes are justified by the 
production of something that is of value. But how do we measure value? By 
whether it earns income. You earn income because you are productive and you are 
productive because you earn income. So with a wave of a wand, the concept of 
unearned income vanishes. If income means that we are productive, and we 
deserve income whenever we are productive, how can income possibly be unearned? 
As we shall see in Chapter 3, this circular reasoning is reflected in how 
national accounts – which track and measure production and wealth in the 
economy– are drawn up. In theory, no income may be judged too high, because in 
a market economy competition prevents anyone from earning more than he or she 
deserves. In practice, markets are what economists call imperfect, so prices 
and wages are often set by the powerful and paid by the weak.

In the prevailing view, prices are set by supply and demand, and any deviation 
from what is considered the competitive price (based on marginal revenues) must 
be due to some imperfection which, if removed, will produce the correct 
distribution of income between actors. The possibility that some activities 
perpetually earn rent because they are perceived as valuable, while actually 
blocking the creation of value and/or destroying existing value, is hardly 
discussed.

Indeed, for economists there is no longer any story other than that of the 
subjective theory of value, with the market driven by supply and demand. Once 
impediments to competition are removed, the outcome should benefit everyone. 
How different notions of value might affect the distribution of revenues 
between workers, public agencies, managers and shareholders at, say, Google, 
General Electric or BAE Systems, goes unquestioned.

Third, in trying to steer the economy in particular directions, policymakers 
are – whether they recognize it or not – inevitably influenced by ideas about 
value. The rate of GDP growth is obviously important in a world where billions 
of people still live in dire poverty. But some of the most important economic 
questions today are about how to achieve a particular type of growth. Today, 
there is a lot of talk about the need to make growth ‘smarter’ (led by 
investments in innovation), more sustainable (greener) and more inclusive 
(producing less inequality).

Contrary to the widespread assumption that policy should be directionless, 
simply removing barriers and focusing on ‘levelling the playing field’ for 
businesses, an immense amount of policymaking is needed to reach these 
particular objectives. Growth will not somehow go in this direction by itself. 
Different types of policy are needed to tilt the playing field in the direction 
deemed desirable. This is very different from the usual assumption that policy 
should be directionless, simply removing barriers so that businesses can get on 
with smooth production.

Deciding which activities are more important than others is critical in setting 
a direction for the economy: put simply, those activities thought to be more 
important in achieving particular objectives have to be increased and less 
important ones reduced. We already do this. Certain types of tax credits, for, 
say, R&D, try to stimulate more investment in innovation. We subsidize 
education and training for students because as a society we want more young 
people to go to university or enter the workforce with better skills. Behind 
such policies may be economic models that show how investment in ‘human 
capital’ – people’s knowledge and capabilities – benefits a country’s growth by 
increasing its productive capacity. Similarly, today’s deepening concern that 
the financial sector in some countries is too large – compared, for example, to 
manufacturing – might be informed by theories of what kind of economy we want 
to be living in and the size and role of finance within it.

But the distinction between productive and unproductive activities has rarely 
been the result of ‘scientific’ measurement. Rather, ascribing value, or the 
lack of it, has always involved malleable socio- economic arguments which 
derive from a particular political perspective – which is sometimes explicit, 
sometimes not. The definition of value is always as much about politics, and 
about particular views on how society ought to be constructed, as it is about 
narrowly defined economics. Measurements are not neutral: they affect behaviour 
and vice versa (this is the concept of performativity which we encountered in 
the Preface).

So the point is not to create a stark divide, labelling some activities as 
productive and categorizing others as unproductive rent- seeking. I believe we 
must instead be more forthright in linking our understanding of value creation 
to the way in which activities (whether in the financial sector or the real 
economy) should be structured, and how this is connected to the distribution of 
the rewards generated.

Only in this way will the current narrative about value creation be subject to 
greater scrutiny, and statements such as ‘I am a wealth creator’ measured 
against credible ideas about where that wealth comes from. A pharmaceutical 
company’s value- based pricing might then be scrutinized with a more collective 
value- creation process in mind, one in which public money funds a large 
portion of pharmaceutical research – from which that company benefits – in the 
highest- risk stage. Similarly, the 20 per cent share that venture capitalists 
usually get when a high- tech small company goes public on the stock market may 
be seen as excessive in light of the actual, not mythological, risk they have 
taken in investing in the company’s development. And if an investment bank 
makes an enormous profit from the exchange rate instability that affects a 
country, that profit can be seen as what it really is: rent.


Adapted from The Value of Everything by Mariana Mazzucato. Copyright © 2018 by 
Penguin Random House UK.

2018 June 30

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