Adam Smith's Theory of Value: A Reappraisal of Classical Price Discovery
Sabiou Inoua, Vernon Smith

TL;DR
This paper reexamines Adam Smith's classical price theory, highlighting its relevance and robustness in understanding market price formation, and proposes a modernized model based on his foundational ideas.
Contribution
It offers a reinterpretation of Smith's classical price theory, deriving key propositions from a simple model to support a modern theory of market price formation.
Findings
Classical price theory provides a stable, efficient view of market competition.
Smith's insights form a useful foundation for modern price formation models.
Experimental evidence supports the robustness of classical price discovery.
Abstract
The relevance of Adam Smith for understanding human morality and sociality is recognized in the growing interest in his work on moral sentiments among scholars of various academic backgrounds. But, paradoxically, Adam Smith's theory of economic value enjoys a less prominent stature today among economists, who, while they view him as the 'father of modern economics', considered him more as having had the right intuitions about a market economy than as having developed the right concepts and the technical tools for studying it. Yet the neoclassical tradition, which replaced the classical school around 1870, failed to provide a satisfactory theory of market price formation. Adam Smith's sketch of market price formation (Ch. VII, Book I, Wealth of Nations), and more generally the classical view of competition as a collective higgling and bargaining process, as this paper argues, offers a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEconomic Theory and Institutions · Political Economy and Marxism · Economic theories and models
MethodsAdam
