A Rehabilitation of Say's Law

William H. Hutt

With A Rehabilitation of Say's Law, Professor William H. Hutt produced a magnificent work that Austrians would love to claim as one of their own, but that Hutt himself viewed as thoroughly classical in nature. The topic addressed here is Say's law: the view that macroeconomic activity tends toward stability — which is to say, under a free market there will be no systemic gluts or shortages absent government intervention.

J.M. Keynes considered the foundation of his own work his refutation of Say's law, for which (according to Hutt) he coined the phrase "supply creates its own demand." Hutt formulates the law, which he says is fundamental to all economic thinking, that "all power to demand is derived from production and supply." Hutt argues that there is no inherent flaw in the market that leads it to provide a deficiency in aggregate demand, contrary to what Keynes claimed.

Hutt's argument is that Say's law must be completely restored before the root of the Keynesian error can be seen and understood.

This book was originally published in 1974 and appears again in this edition for the first time.

A Rehabilitation of Say's Law by William H. Hutt
Meet the Author
William H. Hutt

Hutt was an economist of the classical tradition who identified himself with the Austrian School. He studied at the London School of Economics and became a professor at the University of Cape Town. He is particularly known for his works "The Factory System of the Early Nineteenth Century" (1925), The Theory of Collective Bargaining (1930), and The Strike-Threat System (1973).

Mises Daily William H. Hutt
The early British factory system may be said to have been the most obvious feature of the Industrial Revolution. W.H. Hutt writes that there has been a general tendency to exaggerate the "evils" which characterized the factory system before the abandonment of laissez faire. Also, factory legislation was not essential to the ultimate disappearance of those "evils." Conditions which modern standards would condemn were then common to the community as a whole, and legislation not only brought with it other disadvantages, not readily apparent in the complex changes of the time, but also served to obscure and hamper more natural and desirable remedies.
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References

Columbus: Ohio University Press, 1974.