Lange Model
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The Lange Model is an economic model which combines public ownership and a trial and error approach to determine output and equilibrium. The state owns non-labor factors of production and consumer goods are allocated by market. In economic theory, the Lange Model states that an economy in which all production is performed by the state, but in which there is a functioning price mechanism, has similar properties to a market economy under perfect competition, in that it achieves Pareto efficiency. Proposed by Oskar R. Lange in 1936, the Lange Model is the most famous theoretical model of market socialism. While this is considered to be the first model of market socialism, other variants of the model exist. In addition, several other economists, including H.D. Dickinson and Abba P. Lerner contributed to Lange’s model. This model was developed in response to Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich Hayek’s criticisms of socialism, stating that the state does not have the knowledge to calculate general equilibrium prices, and that market prices were essential for the state to allocate resources. The Lange Model contains underlying principles from the writing of Vilfredo Pareto and Léon Walras. Lange’s theory emphasizes the idea of Pareto efficiency, which states that a situation is Pareto efficient if there is no way to rearrange things to make at least one individual better off without making anyone worse off. In order to achieve this Pareto efficiency, however, a set of conditions must be formulated through a number of sequential stages. This idea of deriving a set of conditions which ensures the preferences of consumers are in balance with the maximum amount of goods and services being produced is emphasized by Walras. This theorem indicates that a socialist state could achieve one of the principal economic benefits of capitalism, a rational price system, and was an important theoretical force behind the development of the concept of market socialism.
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[edit] Basic Principles of the Lange Model
The Lange model suggests three levels of decision making. The firms and households represent the lowest level, with industrial ministries as the intermediate level, while the highest decision making level is made up of the central planning board. The central planning board sets the initial price of consumer goods arbitrarily and informs the producing firms of these prices. The firms would then produce at the level of output where marginal cost is equal to price, MC=P, and where the cost of production is minimized. At the intermediate level, industrial authorities are responsible for determining the sectoral expansion of industry. At the lowest level of decision making, households decide how to allocate income and how much labor to supply by choosing between work and leisure. However, because prices are set by the central planning board arbitrarily, equilibrium between supply and demand is originally unlikely. To produce the correct amount of goods and services and create a balance, the Lange Model posits a trial-and-error method. If a supply surplus of a particular good occurs, the central planning board lowers the price of that good. If there is a shortage of a good, the price is raised by the central planning board. This process of price adjustments takes place until equilibrium between supply and demand is met. This argument relies heavily on the government's pursuit of efficiency.
The central planning board is responsible for the allocation of social dividends in addition to its price-setting role. Because all non-labor factors of production are state-owned, the distribution of the rents and profits of these resources becomes a decision of the state. If these profits are distributed in the form of public services, it is the allocation decision of the highest decision-making power. Should the allocation be investment, that decision is made by the central planning board in conjunction with the industrial authorities. The state has significant power over the magnitude and direction of investment, with the central planning board maintaining considerable central control over the economic system. Lange argued that investment funds should be allocated to equalize marginal rates of return in different applications.
[edit] Advantages of the Lange Model
An advantage is state control over investment. The rate of economic growth would be largely state-determined due to the investment ratio being one of its major determinants. In addition, Lange argued that externalities could be better accounted for as a result of the state’s ability to manipulate resource prices. Because the state controls all firms, they could easily factor the cost of an externality into the price of a certain resource. Because the decisions are made by higher rather than lower levels, it is argued that these decisions are less likely to have undesirable environmental consequences.
Furthermore, because the state uses marginal cost pricing and determines entry, monopolies, and the accompanying lack of allocative efficiency and x-efficiency can be avoided under Langean socialism.
Finally, the Lange model claims to solve another main criticism of capitalism. Lange believed that his model would reduce cyclical instability because states control savings and investment, consequently eliminating a major source of inefficiency, inequality and social strife that arises due to violent cyclical shifts under capitalism.
[edit] Criticisms of the Lange Model
Economist Paul Craig Roberts has criticized Lange’s theory of socialist planning, saying that it is only an effort at market simulation and is not the socialist alternative it claims to be. Roberts argues that the Lange model abandons the intentions of socialist planning disregards the hierarchical prerequisites of socialist organization. He claims that the model includes only commodity production as an organizational structure and defines socialism only in terms of property rights. According to Roberts, the commodity production embodied in the system of exchange of Lange’s model is exactly what was intended to be eliminated by socialist planning.
Recently the economist Joseph Stiglitz has criticized the theorem for replicating many of the alleged errors of neoclassical economics. He suggests that because of economic problems resulting from costs of information and missing markets, market economies solve problems in a manner different from that described by the neoclassical analysis. Therefore, according to Stiglitz, the Lange Model is a poor description of how the price mechanism will work in a market socialist economy to the same extent that neoclassical economics is a poor description of market capitalism.
Economists Don Lavoie and Israel Kirzner claim that Lange proposed an illegitimate simulation of markets. Markets cannot function without genuine rivalry in in real markets, and between actual entrepreneurs. Simulated markets cannot match real markets.
Economist DW MacKenzie claims that the Lange model has been misunderstood. The trial and error model aims at simulating spot markets. Mises (1920) suggested that socialist officials could simulate pricing in spot market. The trial and error proposal is irrelevant to the real problem of planning investment because inventories of future goods never exist.
The primary criticism against socialism is that it could not direct investment efficiently without speculation in financial markets. Ludwig von Mises denied that socialist officials could simulate the pricing of future capital goods in financial markets. The Lange model focuses on central planning of investment and social dividend payment. Citizens in Lange's proposed state are paid a "social dividend" as equal owners of capital. The absence of private dividends means that there is no stock market to regulate industry. Lange admitted in several places that socialist officials would direct investment arbitrarily. Lange also admitted that arbitrary investment would come at the expense of consumer welfare. Lange effectively admitted defeat to Mises's and Hayek's aforementioned remarks. Socialism allocates investment according to the dictates of a few political elites.
Lange compensated for his concessions by arguing that capitalism also leads to arbitrary investment. According to Lange, capitalism is arbitrary in the way it concentrates wealth in the hands of a few. Since investment is directed by the savings of the rich, capitalism allocates investment according to the arbitrary dictates of a few economic elites.
Finally, the Lange model should be thought of as the "Lange-Lerner" model. Abba Lerner wrote a series of articles that had great influence over Lange's thinking. For example, Lerner (1938) caused Lange to re-write his 1936 and 1937 articles on market socialism, before they were re-published as chapters in a 1938 book. Lerner (1938) influenced Lange's thinking on social dividend payment. Lerner (1944) argued that socialist investment would be politicized.
Lavoie and Kirzner both argue that Lange's trial and error proposal is illegitimate. Mackenzie argues that the trial and error proposal is irrelevant: the Lange model fails because it aims at simulating the wrong markets.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
Gregory, Paul R.; Robert C. Stuart (2004). Comparing Economic Systems in the Twenty-First Century. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Company. ISBN 0-618-26181-8.
Kowalik, Tadeusz (1987). "Lange-Lerner mechanism," The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics, v. 3, pp. 129-30.
Roemer, John (1994). A Future for Socialism, Verso Press.
Stiglitz, Joseph E. (1994). Whither Socialism?. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. 0-262-19340-X.
Lo, Dic; Russell Smyth (2004). "Towards a Re-interpretation of the Economics of Feasible Socialism". Cambridge Political Economy Society 28 (6).
Lange, O 1935 Marxian Economics and Modern Theory Review of Economic Studies V2 N3 pp 189-201
Lange, O 1936 On the Economic Theory of Socialism I The Review of Economic Studies V4 N1 53-71
Lange, O 1937 On the Economic Theory of Socialism II The Review of Economic Studies V4 N 123-142
Lange, O 1938 On the Economic Theory of Socialism B Lippincott ed. University of Minnesota Press
Lange, O 1940 Letter to FA Hayek, translated by Thadeusz Kowalik
Lange, O 1942 Economics of Socialism Journal of Political Economy V50 N2 299-303
Lange, O 1957a Political Economy of Socialism, reprinted in Kowalik 1994
Lange, O 1957b. Role of Planning in a socialist economy, reprinted in Kowalik 1994
Lange, O 1967 The Computer and the Market in Socialism, Capitalism, and Economic Growth Feinstein Ed. Reprinted in Economic Theory and Market Socialism T Kowalik ed. Edward Elgar pub.
Lerner, A 1934 Economic Theory and Socialist Economy The Review of Economic Studies V2 N1 51-61
Lerner, A 1936 A note on Socialist Economics The Review of Economic Studies V4 N1 72-76
Lerner, A 1937 Statics and Dynamics in Socialist Economics The Economic Journal V47 N186 253-270
Lerner, A 1938 Theory and Practice in Socialist Economics The Review of Economic Studies V6 N1 71-5
Lerner, A 1944 The Economics of Control
Lerner, A 1972 The Economics and Politics of Consumer Sovereignty The American Economic Review V62 N ½ 258-266
Lerner, A 1977 Marginal Cost Pricing in the 1930’s The American Economic Review V67 N1 p235-243
MacKenzie, DW, 2006 Oscar Lange and the Impossibility of Economic Calculation, Studia Economicze
MacKenzie, DW Social Dividends, Entrepreneurial Discretion, and Bureacratic Rules
MacKenzie, DW Capital and Income in Democratic Socialism
MacKenzie, DW Trial and Error in the Socialist Calculation Debate
Roberts, Paul Craig (May 1971). "Oskar Lange's Theory of Socialist Planning". Journal of Political Economy 79 (3): pp. 562-577. doi: .
Rosefielde, Steven (October 1973). "Some Observations on the Concept of 'Socialism' in Contemporary Economic Theory". Soviet Studies 25 (2): pp. 229-243.
Shleifer, Andrei; Robert W. Vishny (1994). "The Politics of Market Socialism". The Journal of Economic Perspectives 8 (2): pp, 165-176.
[edit] External links
- Oskar Lange and the Impossibility of Economic Calculation by D.W. MacKenzie
- Capital and Income in Democratic Socialism by D.W. MacKenzie
- Trial and Error in the Socialist Calculation Debate by D.W. MacKenzie