> All it says is that "equilibrium" is at the point where the
> supply and demand functions *intersect.* It says nothing
> about actual price at any actual point in time.
>From that the proper price is given as the equilibrium price, with deviation
from such resulting in shortages and surpluses. Now this is circular logic
for the proper price is needed to determine utility for how else do you
determine marginal cost?
--

Keep in mind that I am not a defender of marginalism.  
My criticism of you is that you do not properly 
characterize it, therefore your criticism is 
irrelevant in that it merely reflects your personal 
misunderstanding.  It becomes particularly egregious 
because you start your own analysis from the very 
same premises as do the marginalists -- limited 
resources, unlimited wants, etc.  Starting from those 
same premises the marginalist argument is quite 
logical and consistent.  Yours is a contradictory 
hodge-podge.

The marginalist argument is from the perspective of 
the profit-maximizing firm, not the economy as a 
whole.  The vertical axis of their graph is 
demarcated in utils received and expended per 
accounting period, not dollars - though sometimes 
they will substitute the dollar symbol for the util 
in their expositions.  The horizontal axis is 
demarcated in quantity produced per accounting 
period, not time.  The accounting period is therefore 
undefined.  It could be very short or very long, or 
something in between.

They assume, in terms of the graph from left to right 
along the horizontal axis, the supply cost curve is 
sloping upward with increasing quantity produced per 
accounting period due to the assumed marginally 
diminishing productivity of labor and capital.

The utility received curve is sloping downward due to 
assumed marginally falling demand from their 
customers with increasing quantity supplied per 
accounting period.

The point where the two curves intersect is the point 
of realized profit maximization for the firm in terms 
of net utils received per undefined accounting 
period.

The theory does not explain how utils are translated 
into dollar prices in actual markets.
------------------------------------


> The hypothetical primitive economy is characterized by atomized
> producer/consumers who trade between themselves. The modern
> economy is characterized by multistage production where the
> means of production are differentiated from consumption. In
> such a system money is more in the nature of a ticket or
> claim check against a portion of that production rather than
> it is a medium of exchange.
Money is money. It is not a claim slip, for claim slips have claim on
something to which money doesn't. Everybody could one day decide to not use
your currency, and you are out of luck.  It is merely an overvalued
commodity.
--

Saying that money is money is a truism that does not 
define money.  You arbitrarily say that it is not a 
claim slip, then define claim slips but arbitrarily 
assume that money does not fit that definition.

Modern money is what modern money is, not what you 
say it is.  Most people think of money as being the 
form of credit they receive in their pay vouchers.  
But that credit enables the final resolution of the 
process of production that is conducted 
contractually, not through medium of exchange.  And 
the credit you receive in your voucher is itself a 
generalized contract or ticket.  It is something 
quite different than the paper it is written on.














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