2
The Illusion of the Circular Flow
ECON000 Lesson 10
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Joseph Schumpeter begins his critique by dismantling the economic obsession with equilibrium. He frames the Circular Flow of economic life not as a vibrant reality, but as a theoretical ghost. While the Classical giantsβ€”David Ricardo, Thomas Malthus, and John Stuart Millβ€”envisioned a "stationary state" where the economy eventually settles into a routine, Schumpeter argues this is a fatal misunderstanding of the system's nature.

RICARDO & MALTHUS Population Growth Diminishing Returns Subsistence Wages Land Limits The Stationary State Endless cycle leading to stagnation VS INNOVATION Wave 1 Wave 2 Wave 3 Dynamic Capitalism Continuous waves of creative destruction

The Classical Trap

Classical economists viewed capitalism through a science of scarcity. They believed that atomistic market capitalism would inevitably reach a dead-end of zero growth. In this view, tomorrow is merely a repetition of today. Schumpeter calls this the static economyβ€”a useful mathematical model for textbooks, but a failure at describing reality.

The Profitless Routine

Schumpeter’s most radical claim is this: "In a static economy there is no place for profit!" In a Circular flow that never alters or expands its creation of wealth, prices perfectly equal costs. What we perceive as profit is merely the "wages of management" or rent. True economic surplus only arises when the flow is broken by change.

The Dynamic Truth
Schumpeter identifies Capitalism as intrinsically dynamic and growth-oriented. It is not a system that settles; it is a system that explodes. The internal forces of the entrepreneur ensure the circle never remains closed.