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14 - Walras versus Edgeworth on tatonnement processes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 May 2010

Donald A. Walker
Affiliation:
Indiana University of Pennsylvania
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Summary

This chapter evaluates Francis Y. Edgeworth's criticisms of Walras's mature work on tatonnement as expressed in his mature model of nondurable consumer commodities and his mature comprehensive model. The reason for undertaking the evaluation is that Edgeworth's criticisms deal with basic issues in the interpretation of Walras's ideas about adjustment processes, their importance within his general-equilibrium model and to the economic theory of his time, their methodological soundness, and the breadth of their applicability. An examination of Edgeworth's criticisms therefore contributes to an understanding of the characteristics, function, and value of the mature comprehensive model.

Introduction

Walras had developed the major outlines and the details of his mature conception of the adjustment process of a competitive market system by 1889, when he published the second edition of the Eléments. Edgeworth's criticisms were first presented in his review (1889a) of that edition. He had warned that Walras might not like the review (Edgeworth to Walras, August 20, 1889, in 1965, 2, letter 910, pp. 338–39), but Walras feigned unconcern about the matter, commenting that because he expected some more or less lively criticisms, he had been careful not to go to the library in Lausanne to read them (Walras to Charles Gide, September 20, 1889, in 1965, 2, letter 923, 2, p. 357; and see Walras to Luigi Perozzo, October 13, 1889, in 1965, 2, letter 925, p. 359). Of course, he soon succumbed to temptation, and became involved in a vigorous and sometimes acrimonious controversy with Edgeworth.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1996

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