登陆注册
37819200000003

第3章 PART I(3)

When a herring or mackerel boat has discharged on the beach, at Hastings or Dover, last night's take of fish, the boatmen, in order to dispose of their cargo, commonly resort to a process called Dutch auction. The fish are divided into lots, each of which is set up at a higher price than the salesman expects to get for it, and he then gradually lowers his terms, until he comes to a price which some bystander is willing to pay rather than not have the lot, and to which he accordingly agrees. Suppose on one occasion the lot to have been a hundredweight, and the price agreed to twenty shillings. If, on the same occasion, instead of the Dutch form of auction, the ordinary English mode had been adopted, the result might have been different. The operation would then have commenced by some bystander ****** a bid, which others might have successively exceeded, until a price was arrived at beyond which no one but the actual bidder could afford or was disposed to go. That sum would not necessarily be twenty shillings; very possibly it might be only eighteen shillings. The person who was prepared to pay the former price might very possibly be the only person present prepared to pay even so much as the latter price; and if so, he might get by English auction for eighteen shillings the fish for which at Dutch auction he would have paid twenty shillings. In the same market, with the same quantity of fish for sale, and with customers in number and every other respect the same, the same lot of fish might fetch two very different prices.

(Thornton, pp. 47-8.)

This instance, though seemingly a trivial, is really a representative one and a hundred cases could not show, better than this does, what Mr. Thornton has and what he has not made out. He has proved that the law of the equalisation of supply and demand is not the whole theory of the particular case. He has not proved that the law is not strictly conformed to in that case. In order to show that the equilisation of supply and demand is not the law of price, what he has really shown is that the law is, in this particular case, consistent with two different prices, and is equally and completely fulfilled by either of them. The demand and supply are equal at twenty shillings, and equal also at eighteen shillings. The conclusion ought to be, not that the law is false, for Mr. Thornton does not deny that in the case in question it is fulfilled; but only, that it is not the entire law of the phenomenon. The phenomenon cannot help obeying it, but there is some amount of indeterminateness in its operation--a certain limited extent of variation is possible within the bounds of the law; and as there must be a sufficient reason for every variation in an effect, there must be a supplementary law, which determines the effect, between the limits within which the principal law leaves it free. Whoever can teach us this supplementary law, makes a valuable addition to the scientific theory of the subject; and we shall see presently that in substance, if not strictly in form, Mr. Thornton does teach it. Even if he did not, he would have shown the received theory to be incomplete; but he would not have, nor has he now, shown it to be in the smallest degree incorrect.

What is more; when we look into the conditions required to make the common theory inadequate, we find that, in the case at least which we have now examined, the incompleteness it stands convicted of amounts to an exceedingly small matter. To establish it, Mr. Thornton had to assume that the customer who was prepared to pay twenty shillings for a hundredweight of fish, was the only person present who was willing to pay even so much as eighteen shillings. In other words, he supposed the case to be an exception to the rule, that demand increases with cheapness: and since this rule, though general, is not absolutely universal, he is scientifically right. If there is a part of the scale through which the price may vary without increasing or diminishing the demand, the whole of that portion of the scale may fulfil the condition of equality between supply and demand. But how many such cases really exist? Among a few chafferers on the beach of a small fishing port, such a case, though even there improbable, is not totally out of the question. But where buyers are counted by thousands, or hundreds, or even scores; in any considerable market--and, far more, in the general market of the world--it is the next thing to impossible that more of the commodity should not be asked for at every reduction of price. The case of price, therefore, which the law of the equalisation does not reach, is one which may be conceived, but which, in practice, is hardly ever realised.

The next example which Mr. Thornton produces of the failure of supply and demand as the law of price, is the following:-- Suppose two persons at different times, or in different places, to have each a horse to sell, valued by the owner at £50; and that in the one case there are two, and in the other three persons, of whom every one is ready to pay o650 for the horse, though no one of them can afford to pay more. In both cases supply is the same, viz., one horse at £50; but demand is different, being in one case two, and in the other three, horses at £50. Yet the price at which the horses will be sold will be the same in both cases, viz., £50. (p. 49.)

The law does fail in this case, as it failed in the former, but for a different reason; not, as in the former case, because several prices fulfil the condition equally well, but because no price fulfils it. At £50 there is a demand for twice or three times the supply; at £50.

0s. 0¼d. there is no demand at all. When the scale of the demand for a commodity is broken by so extraordinary a jump, the law fails of its application; not, I venture to say, from any fault in the law, but because the conditions on which its applicability depends do not exist.

同类推荐
  • 平流园席上

    平流园席上

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 仿指南录

    仿指南录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 灵峰蕅益大师宗论

    灵峰蕅益大师宗论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 真气还元铬

    真气还元铬

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 东观汉记

    东观汉记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 兽醒

    兽醒

    当我从人类异变成兽人之时。我是继续挥洒汗水捍卫狮心帝国的荣耀。还是带领我的兽人同胞,用生命和鲜血建立自己的家园。我到底是兽人?!还是人类?!
  • 异闻神魔录

    异闻神魔录

    灵气入脉,自成生生洞府……有那凤凰台与九霄雷池争锋,有镇仙楼镇压万古,也有剑海自成禁地……我涂云有雷诀别云,号神将捏云,雷公鸣鼓,有大梦春秋,可断万古,众神又如何,我都可破之!
  • 请你不要离开我

    请你不要离开我

    “瞎说我这么可爱。”“能当饭吃么。”某只禽兽毒舌“......能!”某只白痴死鸭子嘴硬。“哦,那好,以后你别再我哪里吃饭了。“某只禽兽终于说出了目的。“!!!你个禽兽又坑我!我不爱你了!"某只白痴终于反应过来了一双美瞳瞪的老大,双颊通红。”哈哈......“
  • 追金主的一百零八计

    追金主的一百零八计

    "金主爸爸,我好想你啊~"她抱着他一双手甜甜糯糯的开口,水汪汪的大眼睛似清澈又似魅惑的看着他。"是吗?乖,哪里想?告诉我?嗯?"他挑着她的下巴,目光蛊惑人心的盯着她的眼睛问。"告诉我,小妖精,是这里?还是这里?"他的手指顺着她白皙细腻的肌肤往下滑,身体里好像藏着一团火正在熊熊燃烧......
  • 我爱上了我爹的死对头

    我爱上了我爹的死对头

    父亲常常教导我,最危险的地方就是最安全的地方。于是在我全家被小人设计得死的死伤的伤的时候,我带着振兴家族的重大使命跑去了父亲死对头宫里做仙娥。父亲说,啻晏神君一向心系天下、有菩萨心肠,还说啻晏神君脾气执拗,有时候像个小孩子。后来,我用自己惨痛的经历证实了,父亲对神君的第一条认知错得有多离谱!燕迟与啻晏打了几十万年,前头岁月里,燕迟到处追着啻晏跑,哭着喊着要与之一较高下,后来,啻晏提着聘礼将燕迟堵在宫门口,死皮赖脸要其将闺女嫁给他。——何溪的爱是陪着她绽放,啻晏的爱是陪着她成长。昔年的阿秋追一只野兔误闯啻晏的居所,只一眼,便敌与何溪相识的上万年,从此眼里、心里,再也装不下他人。(表面高冷内心邪魅身份成谜神君×装乖颜狗混世魔王)
  • 衿心动魄

    衿心动魄

    她是生活无忧无路的小半仙,自从送上门来一个帅哥管家后,生活大转变,开始寻身世,一路跌跌撞撞,竟没想到自己身世竟是如此彪悍。“你说喜欢一个人的最高境界是什么?”“那就是你追的人,倒追回来,那才叫厉害!”“这,,,,,”
  • 槐树在唱歌只有我听见

    槐树在唱歌只有我听见

    没有人听过树唱歌,初中生尹竹轩听到了;不但听到了,还被一颗老槐树拐带进异次元了!你问他有什么感想?他说:“我只想做一个平凡的学生,考考试,念高中,这就挺好。”但是,你们看他那口是心非的样儿!
  • 九劫魔界

    九劫魔界

    若有来生,我还做我的九天魔帝,还继续雄霸这,魔荒古纪
  • 宋乱

    宋乱

    五花马,千金裘,呼儿将出换美酒。将进酒,莫停杯,与尔同销万古愁。北宋末世,内忧外患,朝堂六虎,方腊之乱,梁山起义。西有西夏蠢蠢欲动,北有猛虎大辽虎视眈眈。值此春秋,一名小人物忽然回到了这个时代,本该早已注定了的天下大势霎时间风云变幻,暗潮汹涌。在这条充满荆棘的道路上,不反抗,就只有死!生于斯,长于斯。生当为人,我们无从选择。情节虚构,请勿模仿。
  • 重生八零之极品亲戚都爱我

    重生八零之极品亲戚都爱我

    许念念重生到八零年,成了十里八村最美一枝花。家里三个弟弟,老妈尖酸刻薄,却爱她如命,闺女是金疙瘩,儿子全是赔钱货。本以为会遇到一堆极品,没想到极品倒是多,但极品却把她宠成了金疙瘩。抠门儿奶奶遇到她,好东西都往她这儿掏。尖酸刻薄的老妈前一秒还在骂儿子,看见闺女,脸色立刻变得像朵菊花。于是许念念的目标,变成了努力赚钱,把家里的极品们养得白白胖胖。偶得空间灵泉,许念念每天都在变美。靳御第一次遇见许念念,只觉得这姑娘千娇百媚,美得让他晃了神。他心中还惦记着另外一个小姑娘,却莫名被许念念勾走了心,没想到他想负责的和喜欢的是同一人。