Abstract
It is well known since Phillips (1955) that the Formule du Tableau Economique can be translated into an input–output table. Phillips's translation is however far from faithful. We propose a more accurate translation that attempts to take seriously all the features of Quesnay's formalism, by considering in particular its clear, although tacit, distinction between current and capital accounts. This formalism is first approached as an autonomous object of analysis, and then serves as the basis for discussing the imputation of the net product, by considering successively three candidates to that imputation (other than the productive class): the class of landowners, the sterile class and nature.
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Notes
See Dupuy et al. (2020) for a recent assessment of the Tableau as an anticipation of national accounting.
See Gehrke and Kurz (1995).
Two conceptions of the Tableau Economique, one corresponding to the zigzag version of 1758–9, the other to the Formule of 1766–8, are confronted by Herlitz (1996).
At the same time, the highly abstract nature of the Tableau Economique, together with the closed character of physiocratic theory, may have played the role of a barrier to entry and consequently been an obstacle to its diffusion (see Argemi, Cardoso and Lluch 1995).
Charles (2003) also insists on the visual rhetoric of the Tableau and stresses the fact that “the history of the Tableau as an image cannot be equated with that of Quesnay’s abstract economic model” (pp.549–550). He further comments that “the style of formalization he eventually selected was primarily visual and not mathematical” (p.543). Although this remark may apply to the successive versions of the zigzag, we believe that the final formalism displayed by the Formule is much more than an image and can be fully transcribed into the algebraic Leontief formalism.
Steenge and van den Berg (2007) propose a transcription of the Tableau Economique into an input–output model doing “more justice to Quesnay’s intentions” by allowing “for a specification of differing productive capacities of sectors and for disequilibrium approaches” (op. cit., p.332). We do not try to cover in this paper the disequilibrium trajectories considered by Quesnay and we are in general critical of the idea of attributing to specific sectors of an integrated system an inherent capacity to generate a net product. In any case, the transcription we propose here means to be literal to begin with, independently of Quesnay’s intentions.
The “dynamic” multiplier results from the expansion of the static (Keynesian) multiplier (1 – c)−1 in the power series 1 + c + c2 + c3 + …, where the propensity to consume c is iteratively applied to the (unit) income. The expansion of the Leontief inverse (I – A)−1 in the Neumann series I + A + A2 + A3 + …, with A as the Leontief matrix of (unit) productive consumptions, generalises the preceding result. A similar expansion can be found in the Grand Tableau of the Philosophie Rurale (Mirabeau and Quesnay 1763), where half of the revenue of each of the two production sectors is iteratively spent in purchases to the other sector, represented by dotted lines drawing a double zigzag. In all these three series expansions, the “dates” do not succeed in real time and can only be used as a heuristic device. The pseudo-dynamics of the zigzag are fully abandoned in the Formule in favour of a stationary equilibrium approach. Some of the Observations which conclude the Formule evoke deviations from this stationary equilibrium but do not engage in dynamics proper.
Steenge and van den Berg (2007, p. 341) transcribe the Tableau Economique into a 2 × 2 Leontief matrix A, opening up the model. They thus step aside from Phillips in the same terms as we do. By contrast, they keep positive the diagonal entry of the productive class, without further discussion.
“On the right [read “on the left”], at the top, is the sum of the advances of the productive class, which were spent in the preceding year, in order to give rise to the harvest of the present year. Below this sum is a line which separates it from the column of the sums that this class receives” (Quesnay 1766 [1768, p. 62]).
The interest on the primitive advances does however not appear as one of the items above the horizontal line of the productive class column, together with the annual advances. By contrast, the advances of the sterile class, at the upper end of the oblique line originating in the productive class, do appear as such an item. This discrepancy thus appears as an anomaly.
The reader will find in van den Berg (2006) a detailed introduction to the life and work of Achille Nicolas Isnard (1748–1803). Also, for a discussion of Isnard’s criticism of physiocracy along the same lines as those of our own analysis, see Steenge and van den Berg (2001). More specifically, for a parallel discussion of Isnard’s example highlighted in this paper, see van den Berg (2002).
Isnard applies the notation N to what he calls the mass of “richesses foncières”, the equivalent of Quesnay’s “avances primitives” or “fonds de richesses d’exploitation.”.
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An early, close, version of this paper was presented at the annual Conference of the European Society for the History of Economic Thought in Graz (24-27 February 2000) and had then and during the following couple of years a limited circulation. The present version went through several improvements, some of them suggested by the detailed comments of two anonymous referees to whom the authors are quite grateful.
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Dos Santos Ferreira, R., Ege, R. The net product in the Formule du Tableau Economique: Lessons from a formalism. Port Econ J 21, 383–399 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10258-022-00212-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10258-022-00212-3