Electronic ratchets transduce local spatial asymmetries into directed currents in the absence of a global drain bias by rectifying temporal signals that reside far from the thermal equilibrium. We show that the absence of a drain bias can provide distinct energy advantages for computation, specifically, reducing static dissipation in a logic circuit. Since the ratchet functions as a gate voltage-controlled current source, it also potentially reduces the dynamic dissipation associated with charging/discharging capacitors. In addition, the unique charging mechanism eliminates timing-related constraints on logic inputs, in principle allowing for adiabatic charging. We calculate the ratchet currents in classical and quantum limits, and show how a sequence of ratchets can be cascaded to realize universal Boolean logic.