Everything about Piero Sraffa totally explained
Piero Sraffa (
1898-
1983) was an influential
Italian economist whose book
Production of Commodities by Means of Commodities is taken as founding the
Neo-Ricardian school of
Economics.
Early life
He was born in
Turin,
Italy, the son of Angelo Sraffa, a Professor in
commercial law, and Irma. He studied in his town and graduated at the local
university with a work on
inflation in Italy during and after
World War I. Notably, his tutor was
Luigi Einaudi, one of the most important Italian economists and later a president of the
Italian Republic.
From
1921 to
1922 he studied in
London at the
London School of Economics. In
1922 he was appointed as Director of the provincial labour department in
Milan, then as Professor in
Political economy first in
Perugia, and later in
Cagliari,
Sardinia. In Turin he'd met
Antonio Gramsci (the most important leader of
Italian Communist Party). They became close friends, partly due to their shared ideological views—Sraffa was at this time a radical
Marxist. He also was already in contact with
Filippo Turati, perhaps the most important leader of
Italian Socialist Party, whom he allegedly met and frequently visited in
Rapallo, where his family had a holiday villa.
In
1925 he wrote about returns to scale and perfect competition, underlining some doubtful points of
Alfred Marshall's
theory of the firm. This work was completed in an article he published the following year.
Major works
In
1927, his as yet undiscussed
theory of value, but also his risky political ideas and his compromising friendship with Gramsci (who had already been imprisoned by the fascists —notably, Sraffa had brought him the materials, literally pens and paper, with which Gramsci would write his
Prison Notebooks), brought
John Maynard Keynes to prudentially invite Sraffa to the
University of Cambridge, where he was initially assigned a lectureship. After a few years, Keynes created ex novo for him the charge of Marshall Librarian. Sraffa joined the so-called "
cafeteria group", together with
Frank P. Ramsey and
Ludwig Wittgenstein, a sort of informal club that discussed Keynes's theory of probability and
Friedrich Hayek's theory on business cycles.
Ricardo's works and correspondence
In the following years, also on Keynes's initiative, the
Royal Economic Society handed over the task of editing a new collected edition of
David Ricardo's works over to him. Sraffa's painstaking and meticulous collecting and editing of Ricardo's works, begun in 1931, turned out to be a 20-year task. Although already in the printers in 1943, the edition was delayed after the last-minute discovery of a trunk full of Ricardo's papers in Ireland. Publication finally began (after
Maurice Dobb became co–editor) in 1953. It was a formidable edition. As
George Stigler was to put it later in his review, "Ricardo was a fortunate man... And now, 130 years after his death, he's as fortunate as ever: he's been befriended by Sraffa." (Stigler, 1953). Sraffa's introduction to the works was perhaps one of the most remarkable interpretations of the tenets of Classical and Neoclassical theory in the history of economic thought.
John Eatwell wrote of Sraffa's work on Ricardo
» His reconstruction of Ricardo's surplus theory, presented in but a few pages of the introduction to his edition of Ricardo's Principles
, penetrated a hundred years of misunderstanding and distortion to create a vivid rationale for the structure and content of surplus theory, for the analytical role of the labor theory of value, and hence for the foundations of Marx's critical analysis of capitalist production. (Eatwell 1984)
Sraffian economics
Sraffa's
Production of Commodities by Means of Commodities was an attempt to perfect Classical Economics'
theory of value, as originally developed by
David Ricardo and others. He aimed to demonstrate flaws in the mainstream
neoclassical theory of value and develop an alternative analysis. In particular, Sraffa's technique of aggregating capital as dated inputs of labour led to a famous scholarly debate known as the
Cambridge capital controversy.
Economists disagree on whether Sraffa's work refutes neoclassical economics. Many
post-Keynesian economists use Sraffa's critique as justification for abandoning neoclassical analysis and exploring other models of economic behavior. Others see his work as compatible with neoclassical economics, as developed in modern
general equilibrium models. Nonetheless, Sraffa's work, particularly his interpretation of Ricardo and his
Production of Commodities by Means of Commodities, is seen as the starting point of the
Neo-Ricardian school in the 1960s.
Personal connections
Norman Malcolm famously credits Sraffa with providing
Ludwig Wittgenstein with the conceptual break that founded the
Philosophical Investigations, by means of a rude gesture on Sraffa's part:
Wittgenstein was insisting that a proposition and that which it describes must have the same 'logical form', the same 'logical multiplicity', Sraffa made a gesture, familiar to Neapolitans as meaning something like disgust or contempt, of brushing the underneath of his chin with an outward sweep of the finger-tips of one hand. And he asked: 'What is the logical form of that?'
Sraffa was described as a very intelligent man, with a proverbial shyness and a real devotion for study and books. His famous library contained more than 8,000 volumes, now partly in the Trinity College Library. A popular anecdote claims that Sraffa made successful long-term investments in Japanese government bonds that he bought the day after the nuclear bombing on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
In
1972 he was awarded an honorary doctorate by
Paris's university (
Sorbonne), and in
1976 he received another one from
Madrid's
Complutense university.
Footnotes
Bibliography
- Sraffa, Piero 1926, "The Laws of Returns under Competitive Conditions", Economic Journal, 36, 535-50
- Sraffa, Piero 1960, Production of Commodities by Means of Commodities: Prelude to a Critique of Economic Theory. Cambridge University Press.
Further Information
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