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Classical – Neoclassical Economics: An AsideClassical Economics
Smith – RicardoRicardo/Malthus – Mill • Labor theory of value• Malthusian population• Say’s law• Quantity theory of money
Physiocrats – Marx• Balanced growth/imbalance
Concern: consequences of consequences of capitalist accumulationcapitalist accumulation
First Principles:• Price independent of demand
» Labor theory of value
• Natural (long-run) prices equalize rates of profit
• Real wage = “subsistence”» Wage fund – Iron Law
Neoclassical Economics• Marshallian economics
• Gossen/Jevons/Edgeworth• MicroeconomicsMicroeconomics
Concern: allocationallocation of scarce resources
First Principles:• Decision at margin
• Prices determined by interaction of supply (costs) and demand (utilities)
• Distribution accords with marginal productivities
• Contributions to price theory• Consumption indifference curves/”utils” + Production possibilities frontier
• Market equilibrium: MRT = dy/dx = px / py = MUx / MUy = MRS
• Contributions to monetary economics• Ideal index numbers: geometric mean of Paasche and Laspeyres
• Fisher effect: Nominal interest rate = Real rate + expected inflation (e)
• Quantity Theory of Money: MV = PT
» VVelocity and TTransactions independent of MMoney
» If M up, P up, ceteris paribus
» expectations lag sticky nominal interest rate (stickier than Price)
M up P up Real rate down Investment spend up EXPANSION
Irving Fisher1867 – 1947
Rags – Riches – Rags (not quite)•Top Yale graduate (math) and Professor•Married rich Europe tour – networking/New Haven house•Illness Health fetish (corn flakes!)•Inventor (card index system) – merged into Remington Rand $$$$•Stock market speculation Crash $
•Crusader: stable money, League of Nations, calendar reform, spelling reform, Esperanto, environmental protection, prohibition•Leading US economist/Public advocate/Government advisor
•First President of Econometric Society, 1930
Fisher’s Debt Deflation Theory of Depression• Easy money over-indebtedness/speculation/boom – bubble • Bubble bursts Debt liquidation distressed sale of assets• Contraction of bank balance sheets M down• M down P down• P down Profits down Business net worth down
• Liquidation does not liquidate but rather aggravates debt
“The debtors pay the more they owe.”• Output down / Employment down / Income down
• Depression• Hoarding / reduced velocity of money / P down
• Vicious spiral of deflation
Institutionalist Aside• Thorstein Veblen (1857 – 1929)
– Conspicuous consumption – Conspicuous leisure• Rick Tilman – Veblen Incarnate
• Wesley Clair Mitchell (1874 – 1948)— NBER / New School
• Simon Kuznets—National Income Accounting• Arthur F. (Fluctuations) Burns
Eisenhower Advisor—Nixon Fed Chair
• John Kenneth Galbraith (1908 – 2006)• Office of Price Administration (OPA) / Miracle of the Deutschemark
Galbraith: A “Policy Entrepreneur” (Paul Krugman)• American Capitalism: The Concept of Countervailing Power (1952)• The Great Crash, 1929 (1954)• The Affluent Society (1958)• New Industrial State (1967)• Ambassador’s Journal (1969)
Monetary Theory• David Hume – specie flow, prices, and trade balance• David Ricardo – The High Price of Corn
:
• Alfred Marshall – Cambridge oral tradition: M = kk PYProfessor Irving Fisher has been the first, in several instances, to publish in book form
ideas analogous to those which had been worked out by Marshall at much earlier dates.
J.M. Keynes, Alfred Marshall, 1842 – 1924, p. 336 fn.
• Irving Fisher – Quantity Theory and Real Interest Rate• Knut Wicksell – Natural rate of interest/cumulative process• Gustav Cassel – Quantity Theory Purchasing Power Parity• Gunnar Myrdal – Monetary Equilibrium: Ex ante – ex post• John Maynard Keynes
– Tract on Monetary Reform (1924)– Treatise on Money (1930)– The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936)– The General Theory of Employment, QJE, 1937.
• Interest and Prices, 1924: Cumulative processCumulative process in full-employment economy using bank money … Say’s Law holds real GDP steadyi = market rate of interest set by banks…credit and Ms adjust to Md at market rate ir = “normal” rate of interest—keeps P steady = “natural rate” = return on capitalI/Y = Investment/Real GDP = F(i – r) demand for credit (remember, Y is fixed)
$Y = $C + $I = PYSteady-state equilibrium ($I = 0): $Y = $C = $Yt-1 Disequilibrium (r rises; i steady): $Y = $C + $I = $Yt-1+ $I $I = Δ$Y = ΔPY = $S
Investment is financed out of forced saving owing to inflation (real C down)$I = PI = ΔPY ΔP/P = I/Y = F(i – r)
If i<r, firms demand credit to finance investment, banks create money to meet demand for credit
Prices (and wages) rise Profit expectations Demand for Credit UpMonetary equilibrium requires i = r.
Role for Central Bank to manage i.
Knut Wicksell1851 – 1926
•Professional student – first job as economist at age 48•Career at University of Lund
•Social radical serving conservative (neoclassical) science•Champion of birth control, women’s rights, free love•Military nihilist (Sweden can’t defend self disband army)•Jailed for sacrilege•Established marginal productivity theory of distribution
• Competition: Linear homogeneous (Cobb-Douglas) production function•Proposed Pareto optimal log-rolling before Pareto
Fiscal packages where everyone gains•Level the playing field: inheritance tax; public education!
Wicksell’s interest rate rule for monetary equilibrium: Precursor of inflation targeting
So long as prices remain unaltered the (central) bank’s rate of interest is to remain unaltered. If prices rise, the rate of interest is to be raised; and if prices fall, the rate of interest is to be lowered; and the rate interest is henceforth to be maintained at its new level until a further movement of prices calls for a further change in one direction or another.
Wicksell, Interest and Prices, p. 189
quoted in Michael Woodford, Interest and Prices: Foundations of a Theory of Monetary Policy, p. 38
Gustav Cassel1866 – 1945
The Stockholm School
Eli Heckscher1879 – 1952
Economichistorian at
University ofStockholm
Ohlin-HecksherTrade Theory
(Factor Endowments)
Purchasing Power ParityGeneral equilibrium … extension of Walras
A writer less generous than Cassel would be hard to find. Marx at least paid tribute to Quesnay and Ricardo. Casselpaid tribute to nobody. Walras had written the first system ofsimultaneous equations of general equilibrium. Pareto had purged it of any measure of sensations. Cassel followed both but mentioned neither…
“Classical” theory of interest: rate that equates saving & investmentFoil for Keynes in General Theory
Teacher of Myrdal, Ohlin
The Stockholm School, 1927 – 1937Extending Wicksell’s Cumulative Process
Eric Lindahl, 1891 – 1960 General equilibrium theory
• Myrdal, Monetary Equilibrium, 1933• Ex ante intentions drive macro-performance.
• Ex post results are basis for next period’s
intentions.
• S = I ex post, but not necessarily ex ante.
Dag Hammarskjöld1905 – 1961
UN Secretary General
Gunnar Myrdal1898 – 1987
Bertil Ohlin1899 – 1979
•Autonomous changes in consumptionExtension of Wicksell model.
The Stockholm SchoolBeyond Macrodynamics
• Dag Hammarskjold – Secretary General of UN• Gunnar Myrdal … extensions of cumulative process
• Cumulative causation – vicious circles» An American Dilemma, 1944 Brown v. Board of Education» Rich Lands and Poor, 1957» Asian Drama, 1968
• Wife, Nobel Laureate Alva Myrdal» Director of UNESCO» Swedish Ambassador to India
• Bertil Ohlin• Transfer problem (1929): income adjustment
» Keynesian analysis vs. pre – General Theory Keynes • Head of opposition social – liberal People’s Party
Sweden’s Commission on Unemployment • 1924: Return to gold standard at overvalued rate• 1927: Recession … formation of Commission• Ohlin (1934) Monetary Policy, Public Works, Subsidies
and Tariffs as Means for Reducing Unemployment• Focus on Aggregate Demand, not wage reduction to get out of
depression• Deficit finance of Public Works + Easy Money for Investment
+ Price Supports for FarmersSpending Multiplier and Investment Spending Multiplier and Investment
AcceleratorAccelerator
• Myrdal (1934) The Effects of Fiscal Policy• Countercyclical policies … balance budget over cycleCountercyclical policies … balance budget over cycle
» Build infrastructure in depression … not US “leaf-raking”» Easy money in recession … tight money in expansion
• 1936: Swedish depression ended
Vicious Spirals of Note
• Fisher – Minsky: Debt Deflation Spiral• Foreclosure “Death Spiral”
• Wicksell: Loan rate < Real rate hyperinflation
• J.H. Williams: Depreciation – Inflation Spiral
• Myrdal: Discrimination – Poverty Spiral
• Debtor “Death Spiral”• Budget “Death Spiral”
• Insurance “Death Spiral”
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