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Why Keynesianism Failed

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It wasn't until the start of the 1940s that early monetarists began to realize ... believes that government spending will fall (i.e., that it really is a tax cut) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Why Keynesianism Failed


1
Why Keynesianism Failed
  • Victor V. Claar, Ph.D.
  • Hope College
  • Acton University
  • June 11, 2008

2
Remarks based on . . .
Chapter 7 of Economics in Christian Perspective
Theory, Policy and Life Choices by Victor V.
Claar and Robin J. Klay. IVP Academic, 2007.
3
John Maynard Keynes
  • British economist, 1883-1946
  • Fatherand namesakeof Keynesian macroeconomics
  • Began with his 1936 book, The General Theory of
    Employment, Interest, and Money

4
Pre-Keynesian Macroeconomics
  • Classical Macroeconomics
  • The first classical macroeconomists worked
    primarily in the 18th and 19th centuries
  • Included
  • Adam Smith David Ricardo J.S. Mill

5
The Classical View
  • Markets work well (Smiths invisible hand)
  • Economies fluctuate, and growth rates will both
    rise and slow over time
  • Government intervention cannot improve upon the
    spontaneous ordering of markets in their
    movements of resources from less-valued to
    more-valued uses

6
Doubt Shadows Classical Macro
  • Great Depression, 1929-39
  • In 1933, the US economy operated at about 70
    percent of capacity
  • 25 percent unemployment in the same year

7
Doubt Shadows Classical Macro
8
Doubt Shadows Classical Macro
  • Extreme pessimism about the self-correcting power
    of market forces
  • State ownership and planning began to look
    increasingly attractive as an alternative
  • While classical macro suggested the depression
    would end, it offered no quick fixes

9
Keynesian Economics
  • Stresses the inherent instability of an market
    economy, and the need for active policy
    intervention to achieve . . .
  • Full employment of resources
  • Sustained growth

10
Keynesian Economics
  • The intuition
  • Recession and high unemployment are due to
    insufficient spending in the private sector by
  • Firms, on new capital and equipment
  • Consumers, on goods and services

11
Keynesian Economics
  • The remedy
  • The appropriate role of government is to step in
    and shore up the gap in spending, using deficit
    financing if necessary
  • That is, if people are hurting today, and we
    have the power to relieve their suffering through
    policy, then we must do so

12
Obvious Keynesian Downsides
  • Critics of Keynes knew such actions while
    pain-reducing in the short-run, would inevitably
    lead to two longer-term macro problems
  • Inflation
  • Slower rates of long-term growth
  • Keynes had already admitted as much in his Tract
    on Monetary Reform (1923), but In the long run
    we are all dead (p.65).

13
Inertia of Keynesian Thought
  • Gained inertia, and by the 1950s had evolved into
    the mainstream in macroeconomic thought
  • Major Keynesian figures include
  • John Kenneth Galbraith (Harvard)
  • James Tobin (Yale)
  • Famous misquoting of Milton Friedman in Time
  • We are all Keynesians now. (Dec. 31, 1965)

14
But Keynesianism Has Failed
  • Keynesian policy recommendations have proved to
    be bad advice
  • Further, Keynesianism has failed as an accurate
    macroeconomic model
  • So why has it failed on both counts? Lets look
    at each

15
Why Keynesianism Failed
  • Keynesian economics is bad policy advice because
    of
  • Crowding out
  • gt Slower long-term growth of the economy
  • A poor mix of goods during recession, and excess
    capacity in some industries after the recession
    ends
  • Potentially poor timing of actions

16
Why Keynesianism Failed
  • Keynesian economics oversimplifies macroeconomic
    dynamics
  • In the Keynesian view, it should be possible to
    reduce unemployment by increasing government
    spending on goods and services (and/or increasing
    the money supply)
  • gt there should be an empirically observable
    tradeoff between inflation and unemployment

17
The Phillips Curve
  • This expected inverse relationship between
    unemployment and inflation rates is named for New
    Zealand economist A.W. Phillips

18
The Breakdown of the Phillips Curve
  • Inflation and unemployment rates in the U.S.,
    1970-2000

19
The Breakdown of the Phillips Curve
  • What had the Keynesians missed?
  • Simply put, for active policy to be effective, it
    must be unanticipated
  • When Keynesian-style policy actions are
    anticipated, people take actions that frustrate
    the policymakers intentions
  • The policy ineffectiveness proposition

20
The Policy Ineffectiveness Proposition
  • Keynesians believed they could stimulate demand
    for good and services, and that firms would then
    hire, for example, more workers at an unchanging
    wage rate
  • But if workers anticipate such actions, and
    understand that they create inflation, theyll
    begin asking for higher wages
  • Faced with higher labor costs, firms wont be
    able to hire back workers and increase output
    after all

21
Why Did Keyness Ideas Catch On?
  • Very bad, never before seen, economic times
  • Politicians embraced Keynesian ideas quickly
    because they promised a silver bullet, and also
    gave them another argument for why we need them
  • 3. Sir John Hicks interpreted the General Theory
    for the profession, and later confessed he may
    have misunderstood what it was stating

22
Why Did Keyness Ideas Catch On?
  • The trend increased the mathematical rigor in
    economics probably a useful development on
    balance, though the Keynesian models lacked
    serious microfoundations
  • It wasnt until the start of the 1940s that early
    monetarists began to realize that money was an
    active factor in the downswing of the early 1930s
  • 6. Keyness peers were either too easily swayed
    or not vocal enough in their reservations

23
Has Keynes Sufferedan Ideological TKO?
  • In the 1970s we got in serious trouble by being
    good Keynesians when we increased the money
    supply in response to a slowdown caused by OPEC
    oil shocks
  • gt rapid inflationary spirals
  • What are we doing today as oil prices rise? Have
    we learned our lesson?

24
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25
Has Keynes Sufferedan Ideological TKO?
  • What is the motivation behind the stimulus
    checks we are receiving in the U.S.?
  • One could argue that it is a supply-side effort
    if one believes that government spending will
    fall (i.e., that it really is a tax cut)
  • But otherwise, this is a Keynesian attempt to use
    government spending to purchase more good and
    services but at least we are deciding what to
    buy on the behalf of policymakers

26
Has Keynes Sufferedan Ideological TKO?
  • Basic Information on the Stimulus Payments
  • Updated April 17, 2008
  • You've heard about it. Now find out how to get
    yours.
  • What is it? It's an economic stimulus payment
    that more than 130 million households will
    receive starting in May. It's not taxable, and it
    won't reduce your 2007 or 2008 refund or increase
    the amount you owe when you file your 2008 return.

27
Conclusion
  • Has Keynesianism failed?
  • Yes
  • Is it still alive and well as a policy crutch?
  • Yes
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