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1' THE KEYNESIAN REVOLUTION

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Title: 1' THE KEYNESIAN REVOLUTION


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1. THE KEYNESIAN REVOLUTION
  • The birth of macroeconomics J.M. Keynes,
    General Theory of Employment, Interest and
    Money, 1936 (towards the end of Depression)
  • Keynes was a man of many talents
  • - during the First World War he had worked in
    the UK treasury
  • - he criticized the harsh reparations imposed on
    Germany, arguing that Germany could not pay for
    the war and would be destabilized by the economic
    burden of the Treaty

3
1. THE KEYNESIAN REVOLUTION
  • He assembled a group of brilliant economists at
    Cambridge University
  • One important message fiscal policy can be used
    to fight recessions in particular when monetary
    policy is ineffective
  • In most of Europe, Keynesian ideas are very much
    alive, although their limits are generally well
    recognized
  • Keyness theory was not fully workout
  • - his book is difficult to read
  • - it frequently lacks precision
  • - it can be confusing

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1. THE KEYNESIAN REVOLUTION
  • European macroeconomists were not particularly
    productive during this period
  • Exceptions the Mundell-Fleming model (Marcus
    Fleming (1911-1976), a British economist working
    in the IMF, and Robert Mundell (1932-), inspired
    by the smallness and openness of his native
    Canada and Switzerland)
  • An important implication of Keynesian economics
    countries as a whole could be a research subject
  • Pre-Keynesian economics was mostly preoccupied
    with sectors and firms, and had little to say
    about questions such as growth or employment
  • Aggregate data (GDP, the unemployment rate, the
    CPI) were sporadically collected and very rarely
    the subject of research

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1. THE KEYNESIAN REVOLUTION
  • The rise of Keynesian economics started in the
    late 1930s
  • The main contributions USA and Great Britain
    (Simon Kuznets (1901-1985), from Columbia
    University and Richard Stone (1913-1991), a
    Keynes student from Cambridge)
  • Once data were available and with the
    introduction of the first computers, economists
    started to build large-scale models that mimic
    the economy.
  • Despite the subsequent decline of Keynesian
    economics, these models continues to influence
    considerably day-to-day decisions by government,
    banks and businesses

6
1. THE KEYNESIAN REVOLUTION
  • The neoclassical theory - the Keynesian
    equilibrium is a special case, which occurs when
    prices are sticky
  • The next task to explain how prices move, when
    they eventually do
  • The missing equation discovered by Phillips
    (1914-1975) at the London School of Economics
  • The next question what is the theory behind the
    Phillips curve?
  • The curve started to vanish the disappearance of
    the Phillips curve, predicted by Friedman in the
    late 1960s, paved the way for the rise of the
    monetarists.they exposed what was seen as
    fundamental flaws in Keynesian economics

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2. THE MONETARIST REVOLUTION
  • By the late 1940s, the Keynesian school was
    strong in the USA, where most of macroeconomic
    research was conducted
  • The University of Chicago (Chicago School) led
    against the Keynesians an intellectual attack
  • The success of the Chicago School is due to
    MILTON FRIEDMAN extraordinary intellectual
    vigor, leadership charisma, government
    experience, communication skills
  • He assembled a group of young economists
    Workshop in Money and Banking
  • He devoted much time and effort to popularize his
    ideas

8
2. THE MONETARIST REVOLUTION - Friedmans main
ideas
  • 1. A strong defender of free markets. He actively
    promoted the view that governments are a threat
    to freedom, and not just in economic matters.
  • 2. He confronted Keyness view that fiscal policy
    is a useful tool for macroeconomic stabilization
    and that monetary policy is useless - MONETARIST
  • A Monetary History of the United States,
    1867-1960
  • - it fundamentally changed the way we look at
    monetary policy
  • - at empirical level, it attributes the Great
    Depression to bad monetary policies (Keynes
    blamed procyclical fiscal policies)
  • - at theoretical level, it reestablished the
    classic quantity equation MVPY, the
    NEUTRALITY OF MONEY

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2. THE MONETARIST REVOLUTION - Friedmans main
ideas
  • 3. A study of consumption patterns in the USA A
    Theory of the Consumption Function (1956)
  • - he argued that Keynes consumption function had
    little theoretical foundation and questionable
    empirical validity
  • - he put forward the permanent income hypothesis
  • - he weakened the significance of the Keynesian
    multiplier and the view that fiscal policy can be
    a tool for output stabilization
  • 4. Friedman explained why the Phillips curve
    would vanish as soon as the authorities attempted
    to exploit the output-inflation trade-off

10
2. THE MONETARIST REVOLUTION - Friedmans main
ideas
  • - He restored the importance of expectations (the
    expectations-augmented Phillips curve) and he
    invented the long-run vertical aggregate supply
    schedule
  • In general, Europe was slow to recognize the
    power of the monetarists attack and did not
    contribute much to the research effort.
  • UK was dominated by Keynesians, until Mrs.
    Thatcher was elected and she brought in Friedman
    as an advisor.
  • The Chicago school also contributed much to our
    understanding of the open economies much of
    Mundells work was produced when he was in
    Chicago (the monetary approach to the exchange
    rate)

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3. THE RATIONAL EXPECTATIONS REVOLUTION
  • Another attack on Keynesian economics the
    rational expectations revolution
  • The expectations-augmented Philips curve of
    Friedman had left an important question
    unanswered what drives expectations?
  • Most economists expectations are gradually
    catching up with actually observed inflation
    (adaptive expectations)
  • A major step Robert E.Lucas Jr. (Nobel prize
    laureate), a student of Friedman, led the
    rational expectations revolution
  • They noted that if the forward-looking component
    dominates and if expectations are not
    systematically biased, the Phillips curve is
    always vertical and systematic policy does not
    work

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3. THE RATIONAL EXPECTATIONS REVOLUTION
  • Their conclusion monetary policy only affects
    output and employment if and only if it creates
    inflation surprises
  • The RE revolutions message macroeconomic
    policies should not be used on and off with
    complete discretion. Policy should obey rules and
    aim at establishing credibility by sticking to
    these rules.

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4. THE MICROFOUNDATIONS OF MACROECONOMIS
  • The RE hypothesis attracted huge interest and
    opened the way for further innovations
  • Question if it is appropriate to assume that
    expectations are rational, then why shouldnt all
    other economic decisions be rational as well?
  • Researchers at some universities in the USA
    (Chicago, Minnesota, Rochester, Carnegie-Mellon,
    Pennsylvania) established the microeconomic
    foundations of consumption, investment, etc.

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4. THE MICROFOUNDATIONS OF MACROECONOMIS
  • However, business cycles remain a fact of life
    that must be explained
  • Neoclassical economists created the Real Business
    Cycles (RBC) research programme (Kydland and
    Prescott, Nobel prize in 2004).
  • Its aim to show that models with flexible prices
    and fully rational agents can reproduce the key
    features of actual business cycles.
  • However, this has not been an empirical success.
    Many of the most important stylized facts remain
    unaccounted for (price stickiness simply appears
    to be a fact)

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4. THE MICROFOUNDATIONS OF MACROECONOMIS
  • New Keynesians wanted to show that price
    stickiness is not incompatible with microeconomic
    foundations and full rationality. They produced a
    new synthesis, which fully rests on rational
    behavior but deliver the traditional Keynesian
    results
  • The RBC school reached the same conclusion
  • In the end, the IS-LM model is alive and well.
    From the policy perspective, the view that fiscal
    and monetary policies can be used as tools for
    output and employment stabilization is now
    generally accepted.
  • It is also recognized that the role of
    expectations requires much more prudence and care
    than the traditional Keynesians dared to admit.

16
5. GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT
  • One of the most important issues the wealth and
    poverty of nations
  • The neoclassical growth model (Robert Solow,
    Nobel prize) has two implications
  • 1. Capital is more productive where it is
    scarce
  • 2. The key source of sustained growth is
    unexplained technological progress
  • Both implications were unsatisfactory..

17
5. GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT
  • 1. Robert E. Lucas Jr. - explain why capital does
    not flow from rich to poor countries
  • - poor countries are characterized by low capital
    intensity and in theory must have a much higher
    marginal productivity of capital than rich
    countries
  • - productivity may be high in theory, but in
    reality is significantly reduced by poor
    institutions that allow corruption, instability
    and war to discourage investment

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5. GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT
  • 2. Technological progress could be treated as
    endogenous - Paul Romer (1955- )
  • Education is an investment in human capital, and
    is deterred by poor institutions, like investment
    in physical capital
  • Other contributions Robert Barro (1944- ,
    Harvard University), Xavier Sala-i-Martin (1963-
    , Columbia University)
  • The result of this research a thorough
    understanding of underdevelopment and of policies
    that try to deal with extreme poverty in many
    parts of the world
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