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The sorry history of Macroeconomics

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Title: The sorry history of Macroeconomics


1
The sorry history of Macroeconomics
  • Steve Keen

2
In the beginning
  • Were the Physiocrats!
  • First school of thought with clear macro-economic
    concepts
  • Circular flow of income
  • Production distribution of surplus
  • Multiplier effects from change in investment
  • With Smith, a great leap backward
  • Macro issues almost completely disappeared
  • Belief market system would not suffer from
    permanent glut
  • Invisible hand comment misinterpreted, but gist
    correct as statement of belief
  • Ricardos framework admitted macro issues, but
    bizarrely

3
Was Jean Baptiste Say
  • Accepted Says macro vision (no general glut)
    even though value systems fundamentally different
  • Ricardo heir to Smith in classical scheme
  • Value reflects effort, not utility
  • everything rises or falls in value, in
    proportion to the facility or difficulty of
    producing it, or, in other words, in proportion
    to the quantity of labour employed on its
    production. (Ricardo, Principles)
  • Utility a pre-requisite for exchange, but plays
    no role in setting value

4
Was Say
  • Utility then is not the measure of exchangeable
    value, although it is absolutely essential to
    it. Ricardo, Principles.
  • Caveat that If a commodity were in no way useful
    it would be destitute of exchangeable value,
    however scarce it might be, or whatever quantity
    of labour might be necessary to procure it.
  • Changes in perceived utility/demand may change
    temporary market price, but ultimately when
    equilibrium restored, value determines price
  • Despite this very non-neoclassical
    microfoundation, Ricardo accepted Says
    microeconomic argument that there could not be
    macroeconomic problems

5
Was Say
  • M. Say has, however, most satisfactorily shewn,
    that there is no amount of capital which may not
    be employed in a country, because demand is only
    limited by production. No man produces, but with
    a view to consume or sell, and he never sells,
    but with an intention to purchase some other
    commodity, which may be immediately useful to
    him, or which may contribute to future
    production. By producing, then, he necessarily
    becomes either the consumer of his own goods, or
    the purchaser and consumer of the goods of some
    other person (Ricardo Principles emphasis
    added)

6
Was Say
  • Productions are always bought by productions, or
    by services money is only the medium by which
    the exchange is effected. Too much of a
    particular commodity may be produced, of which
    there may be such a glut in the market, as not to
    repay the capital expended on it but this cannot
    be the case with respect to all commodities the
    demand for corn is limited by the mouths which
    are to eat it, for shoes and coats by the persons
    who are to wear them but though a community, or
    a part of a community, may have as much corn, and
    as many hats and shoes, as it is able or may wish
    to consume, the same cannot be said of every
    commodity produced by nature or by art.
  • So according to Ricardo, following Say, there
    cannot be insufficient aggregate demand

7
Says Law
  • Say (writing 1821-34)
  • Utility theory of value (contra. Smith
    Ricardo)
  • Give to a thing, to a material which has no
    value, utility, and you give it a value that
    is, you create wealth. (Catechism of Political
    Economy)
  • Utility subjective
  • you call only useful that which is so to the eye
    of reason, but you ought to understand by that
    word whatever is capable of satisfying the wants
    and desires of man such as he is... He is the
    sole judge of the importance that things are of
    to him,... We cannot judge of it but by the price
    he puts on them.

8
Says Law
  • Crises caused by disproportionality only
  • Excess supply in one market, excess demand in
    others
  • General gluts or general slumps impossible
  • Argument
  • Money only an intermediary in barter
  • People sell only to buy again (increase in
    utility the object)
  • Each persons supply is matched to his/her demand
  • Sum of all supply thus cannot exceed sum of all
    demand (no general gluts) but

9
Says Law
  • Slumps in one market can occur if supply of X
    exceeds demand for X at price producers of X
    want however
  • Unless government regulations, monopolies
    intervene
  • Price of X falls, demand for X rises
    equilibrium
  • Basic logic micro in nature
  • Hypothesis about behaviour of each individual in
    market system (micro)
  • Aggregate hypothesis to overall economy (macro)
  • Argument also essential real rather than
    monetary

10
Says Law
  • Every producer asks for money in exchange for
    his products, only for the purpose of employing
    that money again immediately in the purchase of
    another product for we do not consume money, and
    it is not sought after in ordinary cases to
    conceal it . It is thus that the producers,
    though they have all of them the air of demanding
    money for their goods, do in reality demand
    merchandise for their merchandise.
  • So micro balance of each consumer/producer
    ensures overall macro balance
  • Some markets may have over-supply others will be
    under-supplied changes in prices will
    equilibrate.
  • All markets in aggregate balanced

11
Marx and the Circuits of Capitalism
  • Marx provides best rejection of Say
  • Not true that Every producer asks for money in
    exchange for his products, only for the purpose
    of employing that money again immediately in the
    purchase of another product
  • Some producers motivated not by consumption but
    by accumulation capitalists
  • Capitalist objective not commodities but
    money/wealth
  • Will withdraw from market if fear cant turn
    produced commodities into money profits
  • They do seek in ordinary cases to conceal
    money
  • Demand not merchandise for their merchandise
    but more money for their money
  • Says Law fits economy of simple commodity
    producersbut not capitalism

12
Marx and the Circuits of Capitalism
  • Marx worked out flaw while writing Rough Draft
    of Capital in 1857
  • The commodity is exchanged for money money is
    exchanged for the commodity. In this way,
    commodity is exchanged for commodity, except that
    this exchange is a mediated one. The purchaser
    becomes a seller again and the seller becomes
    purchaser again. In this way, each is posited in
    the double and the antithetical aspect, and hence
    in the living unity of both aspects. (Marx 1857
    197)
  • Circulation of commodity A to money to commodity
    B
  • One moment of circulation is that the commodity
    exchanges itself through money for another
    commodity. (204)
  • But there is a second, vital, unbalanced
    capitalist circuit

13
Marx and the Circuits of Capitalism
  • But there is, equally, the other moment, not
    only that commodity exchanges for money and money
    for commodity, but equally that money exchanges
    for commodity and commodity for money hence that
    money is mediated with itself by the commodity,
    and appears as the unity which joins itself with
    itself in its circular course.
  • Then it appears no longer as the medium, but as
    the aim of circulation (as e.g. with the merchant
    estate) (in commerce generally). If circulation
    is looked at not as a constant alternation, but
    as a series of circular motions which it
    describes within itself, then this circular path
    appears as a double one Commodity-Money-Money-Com
    modity and in the other direction
    Money-Commodity-Commodity-Money i.e. if I sell
    in order to buy, then I can also buy in order to
    sell.
  • In the former case money only as a means to
    obtain the commodity, and the commodity the aim
    in the second case the commodity only a means to
    obtain money, and money the aim. (Marx 1857
    201 emphases added).

14
Marx and the Circuits of Capitalism
  • Balance of value makes sense in 1st circuit
  • Exchange one commodity for another
  • Equivalents exchanged value of commodity A
    equals value of commodity B
  • Differences in qualitative utility the result
  • Seller of A/Buyer of B prefers B to A
  • Ditto in reverse
  • But balance doesnt make sense in 2nd circuit
  • Exchange of money for money only sensible if
    second quantity exceeds the first

15
Marx and the Circuits of Capitalism
  • Now one can say to exchange commodity for
    commodity makes sense, since commodities,
    although they are equivalent as prices, are
    qualitatively different, and their exchange
    ultimately satisfies qualitatively different
    needs.
  • By contrast, exchanging money for money makes no
    sense, unless, that is, a quantitative difference
    arises, less money is exchanged for more, sold at
    a higher price than purchased
  • In the real process of buying in order to sell,
    admittedly, the motive is the profit made
    thereby, and the ultimate aim is to exchange less
    money, by way of the commodity, for more money,
    since there is no qualitative difference between
    money and money.
  • All that given, it cannot be denied that the
    operation may come to grief and that hence the
    exchange of money for money without quantitative
    difference frequently takes place in reality.
    (Marx 1857 20102 emphases added)

16
Marx and the Circuits of Capitalism
  • Money incidental to barter merely makes it
    easier
  • But money essential to understanding capitalism
  • money functions neither only as measure, nor
    only as medium of exchange, nor only as both but
    has yet a third quality. It appears here firstly
    as a end in itself, whose sole realization is
    served by commodity trade and exchange.
  • Secondly, since the cycle concludes with it at
    that point, it steps outside it, just as the
    commodity, having been exchanged for its
    equivalent through money, is thrown out of
    circulation. It is very true that money, in so
    far as it serves only as an agent of circulation,
    constantly remains enclosed in its cycle.
  • But it appears here, also, that it is still
    something more than this instrument of
    circulation, that it also has an independent
    existence outside circulation, and that in this
    new character it can be withdrawn from
    circulation just as the commodity must definitely
    be withdrawn. We must therefore observe money in
    its third quality. (Marx 1857 202-03)

17
Marx and the Circuits of Capitalism
  • So one component of exchange is balanced
  • Of the part of the revenue in one branch of
    production (which produces consumable
    commodities) which is consumed in the revenue of
    another branch of production, it can be said that
    the demand is equal to its own supply (in so far
    as production is kept in the right proportion).
  • It is the same as if each branch itself consumed
    that part of its revenue. Here there is only a
    formal metamorphosis of the commodity C-M-C'
    Linen-money-wheat. (Marx 1861 233)
  • Second is necessarily not balanced

18
Marx and the Circuits of Capitalism
  • The circuit C-M-C starts with one commodity, and
    finishes with another, which falls out of
    circulation and into consumption. Consumption,
    the satisfaction of wants, in one word,
    use-value, is the end and aim.
  • The circuit M-C-M, on the contrary, commences
    with money and end with money. Its leading
    motive, and the goal that attracts it, is
    therefore mere exchange-value. (Marx 1867148)
  • Says Law is thus wrong from first principles
  • Capitalism is more complex than simple commodity
    production exchange
  • One vital class of agent in capitalism is
    motivated not by consumption but accumulation
  • Sum of demands of two circuits is aggregate
    demand
  • CAN be deficient if capitalist expectations of
    profit deflated

19
Marx and the Circuits of Capitalism
  • Possibility of aggregate, macroeconomic
    deficiencies/ excesses in demand come from M-C-M
    circuit neglected by Say (and subsequent
    neoclassicals)
  • Complexities of capitalist system arise from this
    second essentially capitalist circuit
  • Neoclassical failure to understand
  • cyclical nature of capitalism
  • Possibility of financial crises etc.
  • Arises from failure to appreciate existence of
    M-C-M circuit its fundamentally different
    nature to C-M-C

20
Marx and the Circuits of Capitalism
  • It must never be forgotten, that in capitalist
    production what matters is not the immediate
    use-value but the exchange-value, and, in
    particular, the expansion of surplus-value. This
    is the driving motive of capitalist production,
    and it is a pretty conception thatin order to
    reason away the contradictions of capitalist
    productionabstracts from its very basis and
    depicts it as a production aiming at the direct
    satisfaction of the consumption of the
    producers. (Marx 1861 495).
  • Marx puts motive of capitalist well (if
    verbosely)

21
Marx and the Circuits of Capitalism
  • The expansion of value, which is the objective
    basis or main-spring of the circulation M-C-M,
    becomes his subjective aim, and it is only is so
    far as the appropriation of ever more and more
    wealth in the abstract becomes the sole motive of
    his operations, that he functions as a capitalist
  • Use-values must therefore never be looked upon as
    the real aim of the capitalist. Neither must the
    profit on any single transaction. The restless
    never-ending process of profit making alone is
    what he aims at.
  • This boundless greed after riches, this
    passionate chase after exchange-value, is common
    to the capitalist and the miser but while the
    miser is merely a capitalist gone mad, the
    capitalist is a rational miser.
  • The never ending augmentation of exchange value,
    which the miser strives after, by seeking to save
    his money from circulation, is attained by the
    more acute capitalist, by constantly throwing it
    afresh into circulation. (Marx 1867 151
    emphases added)

22
Critique of Says Law
  • A capitalist economy is therefore the sum of two
    processes C-M-C and M-C-M
  • CommodityMoneyCommodity (CMC)
  • Objective to increase utility
  • Monetary value constant, utility (qualitative)
    increased
  • Says Law applies
  • MoneyCommodityMoney (MCM)
  • Objective to increase monetary-value
  • Utility irrelevant, monetary value increased,
    surplus produced
  • Says Law invalid in economy with accumulation
  • Aggregate Balance explicit in Says Law
    Walras Law does not apply in capitalism

23
Critique of Says Law
  • The capitalist throws less value in the form of
    money into the circulation than he draws out of
    it Since he functions as an industrial
    capitalist, his supply of commodity-value is
    always greater than his demand for it. If his
    supply and demand in this respect covered each
    other it would mean that his capital had not
    produced any surplus-value His aim is not to
    equalise his supply and demand, but to make the
    inequality between them as great as possible.
    (Marx 1885 120-121)
  • So if it is true that
  • There are capitalists in the capitalist system
  • Then
  • Modelling capitalism as if there arent any
    capitalists wont work

24
Critique of Says Law
  • In particular
  • Demand for labour a derived demand
  • Only hired if capitalists expect profit
  • Demand derived from
  • Demand from CMC circuit plus
  • Demand from MCM circuit
  • Former relatively stable latter very volatile
  • Only if sum of two equals supply of labour do we
    get full employment
  • Unemployment/underutilised capacity/cycles
    predictable features of capitalist economy
  • Interestingly, Keynes agreed with Marx on this
    issue

25
Critique of Says Law
  • One of the rare occasions in which Keynes
    praised Marx occurred in a 1933 draft of the
    General Theory. Here Keynes credits Marx with the
  • pregnant observation that the nature of
    production in the actual world is not CMC',
    i.e.. of exchanging commodity (or effort) for
    money in order to obtain another commodity (or
    effort). That may be the standpoint of the
    private consumer. But it is not the attitude of
    business, which is a case of MCM' , i.e.. of
    parting with money for commodity (or effort) in
    order to obtain more money (1971, Vol. 29, p.
    81, Keynes's emphasis).
  • Dillard 1984 Keynes and Marx a centennial
    appraisal Journal of Post Keynesian Economics p.
    424

26
Critique of Says Law
  • In the immediately following paragraphs, Keynes
    emphasized that business firms subordinate making
    goods to making money
  • An entrepreneur is interested, not in the amount
    of product, but in the amount of money which will
    fall to his share. The firm is dealing
    throughout in terms of money. It has no object in
    the world except to end up with more money than
    it started with. That is the essential character
    of an entrepreneur capitalist economy. (1971,
    Vol. 29, pp. 82, 89. Keynes's emphasis)
  • Favourable comments on Marx did not make it into
    General Theory as published (political reasons?)
    but
  • Keynes gave very similar but far more obscure
    analysis as basis for rejection of Says Law

27
Critique of Says Law
  • This theory can be summed up in the following
    propositions
  • (1)  In a given situation of technique, resources
    and costs, income (both money-income and real
    income) depends on the volume of employment N.
  • (2)  The relationship between the community's
    income and what it can be expected to spend on
    consumption, designated by D1, will depend on the
    psychological characteristic of the community,
    which we shall call its propensity to consume.
    That is to say, consumption will depend on the
    level of aggregate income and, therefore, on the
    level of employment N, except when there is some
    change in the propensity to consume.  
  • (3)  The amount of labour N which the
    entrepreneurs decide to employ depends on the sum
    (D) of two quantities, namely D1, the amount
    which the community is expected to spend on
    consumption, and D2, the amount which it is
    expected to devote to new investment. D is what
    we have called above the effective demand.

28
Critique of Says Law
  • (4)  Since D1 D2    D    f(N), where f is the
    aggregate supply function, and since, as we have
    seen in (2) above, D1 is a function of N, which
    we may write c(N), depending on the propensity to
    consume, it follows that f(N) - c(N)    D2.
  • (5)  Hence the volume of employment in
    equilibrium depends on (i) the aggregate supply
    function, , (ii) the propensity to consume, and
    (iii) the volume of investment, D2.
  • This is the essence of the General Theory of
    Employment. (Keynes 1936 pp. 28-29 bold
    emphases added)
  • Reiterated in key 1937 paper The general theory
    of employment

29
Critique of Says Law
  • The theory can be summed up by saying that,
    given the psychology of the public, the level of
    output and employment as a whole depends on the
    amount of investment.
  • I put it in this way, not because this is the
    only factor on which aggregate output depends,
    but because it is usual in a complex system to
    regard as the causa causans that factor which is
    most prone to sudden and wide fluctuation.
  • More comprehensively, aggregate output depends on
    the propensity to hoard, on the policy of the
    monetary authority as it affects the quantity of
    money, on the state of confidence concerning the
    prospective yield of capital-assets, on the
    propensity to spend and on the social factors
    which influence the level of the money-wage.
  • But of these several factors it is those which
    determine the rate of investment which are most
    unreliable, since it is they which are influenced
    by our views of the future about which we know so
    little. (Keynes 1937, p. 221 emphases added)

30
Critique of Says Law
  • Micro fact that production is not solely
    motivated by consumption means that
  • Total employment depends on consumption demand
    and investment
  • Investment depends on volatile expectations of
    profit in an uncertain world
  • Involuntary unemployment can arise if low
    expectations of profit depress investment
  • Monetary nature of capitalism vs commodity nature
    of simple commodity production the key reason why
    unemployment exists
  • Not money is the problem but money is the
    object and employment incidental to making
    money
  • Expectations crucial here too

31
Expectations uncertainty
  • Previous (neo)classical theory ignored
    expectations, asserted Keynes
  • at any given time facts and expectations were
    assumed to be given in a definite and calculable
    form
  • The calculus of probability, tho mention of it
    was kept in the background, was supposed to be
    capable of reducing uncertainty to the same
    calculable status as that of certainty itself
    (1937 212-213)
  • I accuse the classical economic theory of being
    itself one of these pretty, polite techniques
    which tries to deal with the present by
    abstracting from the fact that we know very
    little about the future. (1937 215)

32
In Marshall ( Walras) We Trust
  • So what was classical economic theory?
  • Prior to Great Depression, neoclassicals simply
    assumed macro was scaled up micro
  • Aggregate balance assured by Says Law
  • Individual market could have excess supply but
  • Had to be balanced by other market(s) with excess
    demand
  • Solution was for price of good in excess supply
    to fall
  • If there were unemployed workers, it was because
    wages were too high
  • Cut wages
  • demand for labour would rise and
  • supply of labour would fall
  • Equilibrium restored

33
Neoclassical Macro
  • And then, a funny thing happened on the way to
    equilibrium

The Great Depression
Arguably began with Stock Market Crash
And just one week before, the leading
neoclassical economist said that
34
Irving Fisher
  • Stock prices have reached what looks like a
    permanently high plateau.
  • I do not feel that there will soon, if ever, be a
    fifty or sixty point break below present levels,
    such as Mr. Babson has predicted.
  • I expect to see the stock market a good deal
    higher than it is today within a few months.
    (Irving Fisher, October 15 1929)
  • In the next few years, Irving Fisher lost12
    million dollars!
  • Thats more than 100 million in 2000 prices
  • Crash occurred on October 23rd 1929

35
A 120 Point Break in just 15 Days...
Crash continued for another 3 years
36
The Great Wall Street Crash
and thats the index 1948 SP had many stocks
that didnt exist in 1929 while many of 1929
firms had gone bankrupt
SP 500 from 32 at its zenith
25 years to recover
To below 5at its nadir
in less than 3 years
Not only theStockmarketcrashed
37
The Great Depression
WW II
38
The Great Depression
To 25 in 3 years
WW II Brings Sustained Recovery
From effectively zero...
39
Pre-Keynesian Macro
  • After the event, neoclassicals tried to construct
    a truly macro rendition of their theory
  • Example Hickss typical classical theory
    (outlined in Mr Keynes and the Classics)
  • 2 industries Investment goods X consumption
    goods Y
  • 2 factors of production labor (variable)
    capital (fixed in short run)
  • Given capital stock in both industries

40
Hickss typical classical theory
  • Output a function of employment Nx Ny
  • Xfx(Nx) Yfy(Ny) where f has diminishing
    marginal productivity
  • Prices equal marginal costs marginal product of
    labour times wage rate (since labour is only
    variable input)
  • Marginal cost is increase in labor input (dNx
    dNy) for each increment to output (dx dy)
  • Pxw.dNx/dx Pyw.dNy/dy
  • Income value of output price times quantity
  • I Ix Iy w.(dNx/dx) .x w.(dNy/dy) .y

41
Hickss typical classical theory
  • Quantity of Money M a given, and fixed relation
    between M and income I (transactions demand for
    money only money a veil over barter)
  • M k.I (k constant velocity of money)
  • Demand for investment goods a function of
    interest rate
  • IxC(i)
  • Supply of savingsa function of interest rate
  • IxS(i)
  • Higher savings meanshigher investment (a
    familiar argument?)

Determines Nx
42
Hickss typical classical theory
  • Causal chain
  • M determines I (total output)
  • i determines Ix (output of investment goods)
  • Ix determines Nx (given w)
  • I-Ix determines Iy (output of consumption goods
    is a residual)
  • Iy determines Ny (given w)
  • Lower money wage means higher employment
  • Lower wage means lower prices
  • Unchanged money I means higher income relative to
    prices, so higher sales
  • Higher sales mean increased employment (and lower
    real wage due to diminishing marginal product)
  • Against which Keynes argued that

43
Expectations uncertainty
  • the level of output and employment as a whole
    depends on the amount of investment because
    this .. factor is most prone to sudden and wide
    fluctuation since it is influenced by our
    views of the future about which we know so
    little.
  • Investment undertaken in order to generate profit
  • Likelihood of profit depends on the future
  • Need expectations of future now to decide how
    much to invest
  • How do we form those expectations
  • By rational calculation?

No!
because you can't rationally calculate the future!
44
Expectations uncertainty
  • we have, as a rule, only the vaguest idea of any
    but the most direct consequences of our acts.
  • Sometimes we are not much concerned with their
    remoter consequences, even tho time and chance
    may make much of them.
  • But sometimes we are intensely concerned with
    them, more so, occasionally, than with the
    immediate consequences.
  • Now of all human activities which are affected by
    this remoter preoccupation, it happens that one
    of the most important is economic in character,
    namely, Wealth.
  • The whole object of the accumulation of Wealth is
    to produce results, or potential results, at a
    comparatively distant, and sometimes at an
    indefinitely distant, date.
  • Thus the fact that our knowledge of the future is
    fluctuating, vague and uncertain, renders Wealth
    a peculiarly unsuitable subject for the methods
    of the classical economic theory (213)
  • What does uncertain knowledge mean?

45
Expectations uncertainty
  • By uncertain knowledge, let me explain, I do
    not mean merely to distinguish what is known for
    certain from what is only probable.
  • The game of roulette is not subject, in this
    sense, to uncertainty nor is the prospect of a
    Victory bond being drawn. Or, again, the
    expectation of life is only slightly uncertain.
    Even the weather is only moderately uncertain.
  • The sense in which I am using the term is that in
    which the prospect of a European war is
    uncertain, or the price of copper and the rate of
    interest twenty years hence, or the obsolescence
    of a new invention, or the position of private
    wealth-owners in the social system in 1970.
  • About these matters there is no scientific basis
    on which to form any calculable probability
    whatever. We simply do not know. (214)
  • What do we do then? Can we use probability anyway?

No!
46
Expectations uncertainty
  • Imagine you are very attracted to someone
  • This person has accepted invitations from 1 in 5
    of the people who have asked him/her out
  • Does this mean you have a 20 chance of success?
  • Of course not
  • Each experience of sexual attraction is unique
  • What someone has done in the past with other
    people is no guide to what he/she will do with
    you in the future
  • His/her response not risky but uncertain.
  • Ditto to investments
  • success/failure of past instances give little
    guide to present odds

47
Expectations uncertainty
  • How to cope with relationship uncertainty?
  • We try to find out beforehand
  • ask friendseliminate the uncertainty
  • We do nothing
  • paralysed into inaction
  • We ask regardless
  • compel ourselves into action
  • We follow conventions
  • follow the herd of the social conventions of
    our society
  • play the game hope for the best
  • So what about investors?
  • Have to form some expectations of future

48
Expectations uncertainty
  • Nevertheless, the necessity for action and for
    decision compels us as practical men to do our
    best to overlook this awkward fact that we
    simply do not know and to behave exactly as we
    should if we had behind us a good Benthamite
    calculation of a series of prospective advantages
    and disadvantages, each multiplied by its
    appropriate probability, waiting to be summed.
  • How do we manage in such circumstances to behave
    in a manner which saves our faces as rational,
    economic men? We have devised for the purpose a
    variety of techniques, of which much the most
    important are the three following

49
Expectations uncertainty
  • (1) We assume that the present is a much more
    serviceable guide to the future than a candid
    examination of past experience would show it to
    have been hitherto.
  • In other words we largely ignore the prospect of
    future changes about the actual character of
    which we know nothing.
  • (2) We assume that the existing state of opinion
    as expressed in prices and the character of
    existing output is based on a correct summing up
    of future prospects,
  • so that we can accept it as such unless and until
    something new and relevant comes into the picture.

50
Expectations uncertainty
  • (3) Knowing that our own individual judgment is
    worthless, we endeavor to fall back on the
    judgment of the rest of the world which is
    perhaps better informed.
  • That is, we endeavor to conform with the behavior
    of the majority or the average. The psychology of
    a society of individuals each of whom is
    endeavoring to copy the others leads to what we
    may strictly term a conventional judgment. (214)
  • As a result, expectations are
  • subject to sudden and violent changes. All
    these pretty, polite techniques, made for a
    well-panelled Board Room and a nicely regulated
    market, are liable to collapse (214-15)

51
Expectations uncertainty
  • As a result investment is volatile
  • It is not surprising that the volume of
    investment, thus determined, should fluctuate
    widely from time to time. For it depends on two
    sets of judgments about the future, neither of
    which rests on an adequate or secure
    foundationon the propensity to hoard and on
    opinions of the future yield of capital-assets.
  • Nor is there any reason to suppose that the
    fluctuations in one of these factors will tend to
    offset the fluctuations in the other. When a more
    pessimistic view is taken about future yields,
    that is no reason why there should be a
    diminished propensity to hoard which would
    reduce the rate of interest.
  • Indeed, the conditions which aggravate the one
    factor tend, as a rule, to aggravate the other.
    For the same circumstances which lead to
    pessimistic views about future yields are apt to
    increase the propensity to hoard driving up the
    rate of interest. (218)
  • So investment cant be regulated by the rate of
    interest

52
Expectations uncertainty
  • Key aspects of Keyness arguments include
  • Uncertainty
  • Volatility of investment
  • Impossibility of regulating investment using
    interest rate
  • So how on earth did we get from this to IS-LM???
  • Because Hickss review of the General Theory
    presented an entirely different model
  • review taken as convenient summary of Keynes
  • But omitted uncertainty entirely
  • Presumed investment demand for money were
    stable functions of the rate of interest

53
Keynes according to Hicks
  • Mr Keynes begins with three equations,
  • ML(i), IxC(i), IxS(I)
  • in contrast to (neo)classical theory ... the
    demand for money is conceived as depending upon
    the rate of interest (Liquidity Preference).
  • On the other hand, any possible influence of the
    rate of interest on the amount saved out of a
    given income is neglected. Although it means that
    the third equation becomes the multiplier
    equation, which performs such queer tricks,
    nevertheless this second amendment is a mere
    simplification, and ultimately insignificant.

54
Keynes according to Hicks
  • In this model
  • Money demand/supply determines i

Ms
i
  • i determines Ix
  • Ix determines I via the multiplier
  • Increase Ms-gtincrease I
  • Increase propensity to invest, or to consume-gt
    increase I

Md
55
Keynes special theory, according to Hicks
Ms
i
Investment
Money marketdetermines int. rate
i
interest ratedetermines Investment
Md (liquidity preference)
Ixf(i)
Ix
M
I (output)
I (output)
Output determines employment
InvestmentdeterminesOutput
Ix
N (employment)
If(Ix)The multiplier
56
Keynes special theory, according to Hicks
Ms
i
Investment
Money marketdetermines int. rate
i
interest ratedetermines Investment
Increasing Ms increases N
Md (liquidity preference)
Ixf(i)
Ix
M
I (output)
I (output)
Output determines employment
InvestmentdeterminesOutput
Ix
N (employment)
Employment grows more than output because of
diminishing marginal product
If(Ix)The multiplier
57
Keynes special theory, according to Hicks
Ms
i
Investment
Money marketdetermines int. rate
i
interest ratedetermines Investment
Reducing LP increases N
Md (liquidity preference)
Ixf(i)
Ix
M
I (output)
I (output)
Output determines employment
InvestmentdeterminesOutput
Ix
N (employment)
If(Ix)The multiplier
Employment grows more than outputbecause of
diminishing marginal product
58
Keynes general theory, according to Hicks
  • something appreciably more orthodox
  • The dependence of the demand for money on
    interest does not ... do more than qualify the
    old dependence on income. However much stress we
    lay upon the 'speculative motive', the
    'transactions motive' must always come in as
    well.
  • Hickss version of Keyness GT
  • ML(I,i), IxC(i), IxS(I).
  • vs Hickss version of typical classical theory
  • Mk.I, IxC(i), IxS(i)

59
Keynes general theory, according to Hicks
  • The LL (LM) curve
  • Fixed Ms Md negative fn of i positive fn of I

The LM curve
Exogenous Ms
i
i
Md1 (I2)
Md1 (I1)
I
I2
I1
M
60
Keynes general theory, according to Hicks
I (income)
I (income)
IxS(I)
The IS curve Investment demand -ive fn of i
IxC(i) Savings supply ive fn of Income
IxS(I)
Savings a function of income
S
I (income)
i
Investment a function of interest rate
i
The IS curve
Multiplier
IxC(i)
I(output)
Ix (Investment)
61
Keynes general theory, according to Hicks
  • The product IS-LM analysis

i
LL (now LM)
IS
I (output)
62
Keynes general theory, according to Hicks
  • Keynes a neoclassical marginalist, according to
    Hicks
  • Income and the rate of interest are now
    determined together ... just as price and output
    are determined together in the modern theory of
    demand and supply.
  • Indeed, Mr Keynes's innovation is closely
    parallel, in this respect, to the innovation of
    the marginalists.
  • Integrating Keynes and the Classics
  • Slope of LM curve
  • almost horizontal for low levels of I
  • almost vertical for high levels of I

63
Keynes general theory, according to Hicks
  • In Keynesian region, rightward shift of IS
    curve (by fiscal policy, etc.) mainly boosts
    income
  • In Classical region, rightward shift of IS
    curve (by fiscal policy, etc.) mainly boosts
    interest rate
  • the General Theory of Employment is the
    Economics of Depression, Classical is Economics
    of full employment

i
LM
Classical region
IS
Keynesian region
I (output)
64
Nice theory, but is it Keynes?
  • Whatever Happened to Uncertainty Expectations?
  • Hicks Ixf(i) Investment demand a function of
    the rate of interest (and income in more general
    model)
  • Keynes Our knowledge of the factors which will
    govern the yield of an investment some years
    hence is usually very slight and often
    negligible
  • It would be foolish, in forming our
    expectations, to attach great weight to matters
    which are very uncertain therefore, we are
    guided by the facts about which we feel
    somewhat confident, the facts of the existing
    situation enter disproportionately, into the
    formation of our long-term expectations
  • Why not Ixf(i,I,E) where E is expectations?

65
Nice theory, but is it Keynes?
  • Keynesian Economics as practised
  • Keynes minus uncertainty expectations
  • Keynes without uncertainty is something like
    Hamlet without the Prince. (Minsky, John Maynard
    Keynes, 1975, p. 57)
  • Evolved towards the Neoclassical synthesis
  • IS-LM macro grafted onto neoclassical micro
  • Key architects Hicks Samuelson
  • Revival of neoclassical economics as Keynes
    criticised for having bad microfoundations
  • The accusation
  • Cant derive Keynesian results from micro
  • Therefore Keynesian macro at fault

66
Nice theory, but is it Keynes?
  • Versus Keynes neoclassical microfoundations at
    fault when applied to real world
  • I accuse the classical economic theory of being
    itself one of these pretty, polite techniques
    which tries to deal with the present by
    abstracting from the fact that we know very
    little about the future.
  • But Hicksian version of Keynes
  • Omits uncertainty, expectations, monetary nature
    of system
  • Accepts neoclassical marginalism
  • A straw man easily demolished in debate
  • Ultimate outcome the rational expectations
    revolution

67
Rational Expectations Macroeconomics???
  • Why rational expectations?
  • Because if you believe neoclassical economics,
    you have no choice!
  • Neoclassical vision micro explains macro
  • Micro in balancemacro must be in balance
  • Cycles, unemployment, etc. anomalies to be
    explained from within paradigm
  • Back to basic neoclassical vision
  • Demand derived from utility maximising
    individualS given budget constraint
  • Supply derived from profit maximising firmS given
    market demand
  • Equilibrium determines output AND relative prices

68
In Marshall ( Walras) We Trust
Z
X
Biscuits
q1
q2
q3
II
III
I
Wouldn't it be nice if macro was just...
Bananas
p1
Price Level
p2
Price of Bananas
p3
q1
Bananas
q2
q3
Output
69
In Marshall ( Walras) We Trust
  • Only conditions under which this applies are
  • When there are no aggregation issues
  • Deferred until later, but remember from Advanced
    Political Economy
  • Sonnenschein-Mantel-Debreu conditions
  • Theory of firm aggregation errors
  • When expectations equal predictions of model and
  • Predictions are correct
  • Prelude the Phillips curve
  • Focus of much of neoclassical critique of Keynes
  • So why did Phillips develop his curve?

70
Phillips Systems Engineering
  • A.W. Phillips originally an engineer
  • Learnt dynamic methods of engineering
  • Applied them to economics
  • Engineers model dynamics using time-varying
    equations
  • Ordinary Differential equations
  • Rate of change of variable(s) at time t functions
    of values at time t
  • Partial Differential equations
  • Rate of change of variable(s) at time t place p
    functions of values at t/p
  • Difference equations
  • Value of variable(s) at time t functions of
    values at previous discrete time intervals
  • Engineers add systems flavourmodel interacting
    systems of equations

71
Phillips Systems Engineering
  • Graduate British Institute of Electrical
    Engineers
  • Apprenticeship at NZ hydroelectric power station
  • Social policy interest after being Japanese POW
  • Applied Engineering training to social dynamics
  • Key question how to stabilise unstable economy
    at desired levels of output growth, employment
    etc.
  • The Phillips curve was not constructed by
    someone who regarded himself as a statistician,
    or an econometrician, or even an economist.
  • Phillips regarded himself (and was regarded by
    his contemporaries) as an engineer, constructing
    ingenious optimal control solutions to the
    stabilisation problem. (Leeson)

72
Phillips Systems Engineering
  • Key observation by Phillips from engineering
    perspective
  • The system has fairly satisfactory
    self-regulating properties when prices are
    moderately flexible but becomes unstable when
    there is a high degree of price flexibility.
    (1954, 313)
  • In other words, excessive flexibility
    destabilisingopposite to economics belief
  • Dynamic systems have tendency to overshoot
    equilibria if rate of adjustment too high
  • Phillipss dynamic models considered parameter
    values and policies that could lead to
    stabilisation rather than explosive cycles

73
Hydraulic Keynesianism
  • Work pre-dated availability of computers
  • Built first models as analog hydraulic computer
  • Models implemented differential equations
  • Rate of change of prices
  • Function of current level of stocks

74
Hydraulic Keynesianism
  • Derided as hydraulic Keynesianism by many
    economists, but in reality Phillips an early
    critic of comparative statics in economics
  • RECOMMENDATIONS for stabilising aggregate
    production and employment have usually been
    derived from the analysis of multiplier models,
    using the method of comparative statics.
  • This type of analysis does not provide a very
    firm basis for policy recommendations
  • First, the time path of income, production and
    employment during the process of adjustment is
    not revealed.
  • It is quite possible that certain types of policy
    may give rise to undesired fluctuations, or even
    cause a previously stable system to become
    unstable,
  • although the final equilibrium position as shown
    by a static analysis appears to be quite
    satisfactory (Phillips 1954, Stabilisation
    policy in a closed economy, Economic Journal p.
    290 e.a.)

75
Hydraulic Keynesianism
  • Phillipss dynamic model had proposition of
    nonlinear relationship between factor prices
    and output
  • We may therefore postulate a relationship
    between the level of production and the rate of
    change of factor prices, which is probably of the
    form shown in Fig. 11, the fairly sharp bend in
    the curve where it passes through zero rate of
    change of prices being the result of the greater
    rigidity of factor prices in the downward than in
    the upward direction (p. 308)
  • After postulating existence of relationship, went
    looking for it in the data
  • Intended purpose lost in subsequent debate
  • Wildly at variance with how applied in practice

76
A systems approach to economics
  • Phillipss ambition to wean economists off
    statics
  • Built dynamic systems model of macroeconomy
  • Time lags in adjustment of variables rather than
    comparative statics
  • Time path of system plotted and analysed
  • Basic model
  • Production (P) Consumption (E) start in
    equilibrium
  • Initial change in E
  • Lagged response in P
  • On the supply side, the rate of flow of
    current production is adjusted, after a time
    lag, to the rate of flow of aggregate demand
  • On the demand side, aggregate demand varies
    with real income or production, without
    significant time lag. (291)

77
A systems approach to economics
  • Time lag adjustment parameter of dynamic system
    to change in state
  • Simple time lag easily solved and given intuitive
    interpretation
  • Basic model the rate of flow of current
    production is adjusted, after a time lag, to
    the rate of flow of aggregate demand
  • Gap between P E
  • decays exponentially over time
  • by changes in P
  • Solving this symbolically

78
A systems approach to economics
  • Take equation
  • Rearrange to put Ps ts on either side
  • Integrate LHS w.r.t. P RHS w.r.t. t
  • LHS gives a log, RHS a constant time t
  • Take exponential
  • Rearrange

79
A systems approach to economics
  • Include initial condition of equilibrium so P(0)0
  • Solve for constant of integration C1
  • Substitute back into equation for P(t)
  • Plot the solution
  • We can now interpret a
  • Tangent to P at t0
  • Line through 0,0
  • with slope

80
A systems approach to economics
  • Find differential
  • At t0 this is
  • Equation of tangent is thus
  • Graphing this with P

81
A systems approach to economics
  • Tangent to P intersects E at t0.25 or t1/a
  • This is not an accident
  • Tangent from initial condition on function f(t)
    intercepts ultimate value of f f(8) at t1/a
  • where
  • Phillipss a4 means
  • Production adjusts to effective demand with a
    lag of ¼ of a year
  • Modern systems engineers state lag explicitly
  • Use a¼ write equation as
  • Well stick with Phillipss notation for now

82
A systems approach to economics
  • Phillips designed systems as engineering
    flowcharts
  • 50 years after Phillips, systems easily simulated

83
A systems approach to economics
  • As flowcharts

84
A systems approach to economics
  • Or as equations

85
A systems approach to economics
  • Phillips built complex model by series of
    extentions
  • Start with simply lagged response of P to ED
  • Add stabilisation policies
  • Expand model to multiplier-accelerator
  • Incorporate flexible prices
  • Model price level as response to income demands
  • Hence the Phillips curve
  • Discounted impact of marginal cost on prices
  • if factor prices are absolutely rigid,
    product prices, tending to move with marginal
    costs, will vary directly with the level of
    production.
  • This component of the change in product prices is
    probably not very large, and will be neglected in
    the following analysis. (307)

86
A systems approach to economics
  • Then provided rationale for factor price
    inflation in context of high demand
  • Even with flexible factor prices, there will be
    some level of production and employment which
    will just result in the average level of factor
    prices remaining constant, this level of
    production and employment being lower, the
    stronger and more aggressive the organisation of
    the factors of production.
  • If aggregate real demand is high enough to make a
    higher level of production than this profitable,
    entrepreneurs will be more anxious to obtain (and
    to retain) the services of labour and other
    factors of production and so less inclined to
    resist demands for higher wages and other factor
    rewards. Factor prices will therefore rise.
  • The level of demand being high, the rising costs
    will be passed on in the form of higher product
    prices (307 emphases added e.a.)

87
A systems approach to economics
  • Conversely, if aggregate real demand is so low
    that production at the level which would result
    in constant factor prices is unprofitable,
    entrepreneurs will be more anxious to force down
    factor prices, while at the lower level of
    employment factors will be less able to press for
    higher rewards and more inclined to accept lower
    rewards.
  • Factor prices will therefore gradually move
    downwards, and the level of demand being low, the
    falling costs will be reflected in falling
    product prices. (307 e.a.)
  • Then drew nonlinear relationship between level of
    production prices the (non-empirical) Phillips
    Curve

88
A systems approach to economics
  • Wrote 2 more systems papers then published
  • The Relation Between Unemployment and the Rate
    of Change of Money Wage Rates in the United
    Kingdom, 1861-1957
  • Went from this conjecture
  • To this estimation

89
A systems approach to economics
  • How Phillips Curve was used shortly
  • How Phillips intended to use it first
  • Control engineering background
  • Design systems to control fluctuating dynamic
    processes
  • Air conditioning systems amplifiers
  • First thought how to control fluctuations in
    dynamic changing economy
  • First additions control systems to stabilise
    output
  • Later addition nonlinear price relationship to
    increase realism of model
  • Crucially, model naturally cyclical

90
A systems approach to economics
  • Modern dynamics (later than Phillips) tells us
  • nonlinear dynamic models normally have endogenous
    fluctuations
  • fluctuations often chaotic

91
A systems approach to economics
  • Modern example of former Goodwins
    predator-prey model of cyclical growth
  • Predator-prey?
  • Fish eat seagrass (assumed unlimited supply)
  • Sharks eat fish
  • Together, a cycle
  • Low numbers of fish, sharks die off
  • Less sharks, more fish reproduce
  • More fish available, shark numbers rise
  • More sharks, fish population declines
  • Low numbers of fish, sharks die off
  • How to model it?
  • Use F for Fish and S for Sharks

92
Nonlinear Dynamic Systems
  • Simplest population growth model
  • (Fish) Population F grows at a p.a.
  • Formula is
  • Simulated as flowchart
  • Simulated as equation

93
Nonlinear Dynamic Systems
  • Similar relations apply for sharks
  • Formula is
  • Simulated as flowchart
  • Simulated as equation

94
Nonlinear Dynamic Systems
  • Simplest way to introduce interaction between
    fish sharks
  • Sharks reduce fish growth rate in proportion to
    number of sharks
  • Fish reduce shark death rate in proportion to
    number of fish
  • Now have to model populations as linked
  • Nonlinear relationships arise naturally
  • Fish numbers times shark numbers quasi-quadratic

Linear Bits...
Nonlinear bits...
95
Nonlinear Dynamic Systems
  • Generates system with endogenous cycles

96
Nonlinear Dynamic Systems
  • Simulated as equation
  • Similar logical chain generates cyclical growth
    model
  • With Phillips curve as essential component

97
A predator-prey cycle in capitalism
  • Goodwin (1967) implemented model of Marxs
  • a rise in the price of labor resulting from
    accumulation of capital implies accumulation
    slackens in consequence of
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