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Keynesian Economics:
    Revolution and
  Counterrevolution
• John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946)
  – Son of John Neville Keynes author of
    Scope and Method of Political
    Economy (1891)
  – Studied Math at Cambridge, resulted in
    Treatise on Probability (1921)
  – Attracted into economics by Marshall
  – Brief period at the India Office
  – Returned to Cambridge at Kings
    College
  – Worked mainly on monetary policy
  – Involved in post WWI peace
    conference and critical of the settlement
J. M. Keynes
– The Economic Consequences of the
  Peace (1919)
– Tract on Monetary Reform (1923)
– Treatise on Money (1930)
– Break with neoclassical theory
– The General Theory of Employment,
  Interest and Money (1936)
– Focus on employment levels and the
  possibility of an unemployment
  equilibrium
– General Theory—it includes full
  employment equilibrium as a special
  case
– Keynes a member of the Bloomsbury
  Group of artists, writers, and
  intellectuals
Keynes’ Critique of the
 “Classical” Postulates: I
• The Classical Labour Market
      – In classical and neoclassical
        economics the demand and supply
        of labour determines the real
        wage rate
      – Cannot be involuntary
        unemployment in equilibrium
W/P                        S

 w
 w’
                               D
                      D’
                                   N
             n’   n
Labour Markets
• The Keynesian Labour Market
  – Wage bargaining is about money
    wages not real wages
  – Wage bargaining cannot
    determine the real wage as price
    level changes may occur
  – Workers react differently to a cut
    in real wages caused by price
    level increases than to cuts in
    money wage rates
  – Workers resist money wage cuts
  – Importance of relative position,
    no union will want to accept wage
    cuts in case others do not
Keynesian Labour
           Market
Money wages
                               S



w

                           D
                      D’
                                         N
           n’     n

    Involuntary employment exists because of
    downwardly inflexible money wage rates.

    ISSUE: Is this assumption critical to the
    Keynesian analysis?
Keynes’ Critique of the
Classical Postulates: II
• The Classical theory of the
  interest rate, savings and
  investment
  – The real interest rate is
    determined by savings and
    investment
  – The real interest rate co-ordinates
    saving and investment
  – What is saved will be spent in the
    form of investment expenditure
Classical Interest Rate
            Theory
Real i rate
                                   S

                                       S’

i
i’

                                       I


                                                 S&I
    If the desire to save rises, interest rates fall
    and investment increases.
Keynesian Theory of
   Interest, Savings and
        Investment
• The interest rate is a monetary
  phenomenon determined in the
  money market
• Savings primarily a function of
  income and not very responsive to
  the interest rate
• Investment determined by the
  interest rate but, more importantly,
  by the state of business expectations
• The amount people wish to save at
  full employment levels of income
  may not equal the level of
  investment planned by businesses
Keynesian Theory of
     Interest, Savings and
          Investment
Money i rate                     S at FE




 i

                             I
                        I’


i is determined in the money market
Both S and I are interest inelastic
I can shift in due to adverse expectations so
That at i FE levels of S > I
Keynesian Critique of
 Classical Postulates: III
• Classical Theory of the Demand
  for Money
  – Demand for money for
    transactions purposes
  – M = PTk
• Keynesian Theory of the
  Demand For Money
  – Demand for money for
    transactions and as an asset
  – At certain times people may
    rather hold their assets as money
    than as stocks or bonds
Keynes and Say’s Law
• Keynes’ critique of the classical
  savings/investment theory and the
  classical demand for money theory
  constitute a rejection of Say’s law
• At full employment all income is not
  necessarily spent as desired saving
  may exceed desired investment or
  people may wish to increase their
  money holdings
• If this happens there is
  underconsumption in the sense that
  FE Agg S > Agg D
• QUESTION: are there adjustment
  processes that will lead back to FE?
The Keynesian Model
• Short run analysis, organization,
  technology and capital stock
  taken as given
• Aggregation of Marshallian
  concepts
• Aggregate supply and aggregate
  supply price
• Agg supply drawn as a function
  of employment
• Agg supply price is the amount
  of income factors would have to
  earn to maintain that level of
  employment
Aggregate Supply

Proceeds or income


                                    Z




                                         N

Z function rises at an increasing rate due to
diminishing returns—increasing marginal
supply price
Z function in money terms and so assumes
a given price level
Aggregate Demand
• Aggregate demand or aggregate
  demand price
• Agg D drawn as a function of
  employment
• As employment rises so does
  income and expenditure but
  expenditure rises by less than
  income
• The equilibrium level of
  employment is where Agg D =
  Agg S and this may or may not
  be full employment
Equilibrium
     Employment Level

Income and expenditure
                           Z
y*                              D=C+I




                           n*           N

To proceed Keynes examines the components
of D (C and I) more closely and as a function
of income rather than of employment
Consumption and
         Savings
• Keynes lists numerous factors both
  subjective and objective that might
  affect the “propensity to consume
  out of income”
• Keynes argues that consumption
  primarily a function of real income
• Propensity to consume and the
  marginal propensity to consume
• The consumption function—
  consumption as a function of income
• Keynes thought MPC would tend to
  decline with income but usually
  drawn as constant
Consumption and
            Savings
• APC = C/Y
• MPC = ΔC/ΔY
• C = a + bY where b =MPC

C                     450 or C = Y

                        C = a+ bY

                       Slope = b
    a


            y   yFE            Y
Consumption and
          Savings
• What is not consumed out of
  income is saved
• Y=C+S
• APC + APS = 1
• MPC + MPS = 1

S
                          S


                              Y
            y       yFE

 -a
Consumption and
         Savings
• Important to note that Keynes
  thought of the consumption
  function as very stable
• Changes in consumption and
  savings due to movements
  along the consumption function
  (due to changes in income) not
  due to shifts in the consumption
  function (which would be
  caused by changes in the
  propensity to consume out of
  income)
Investment Expenditure
• Investment depends on interest
  rate and the expected future
  earnings from the investment
• These are long term
  expectations
• Lack of a rational basis for
  expectations of earnings a long
  time in the future
• State of expectations has a
  conventional basis only and can
  change quite quickly
Investment Expenditure
i

                              Optimistic




       Pessimistic
                             MEI

                                           I


    MEI curve is very interest inelastic and is
    unstable—tends to shift with state of
    expectations
Equilibrium Income

For an equilibrium Agg D = Agg S
Y=C+I
                               450
Agg D
                                     C + I = Agg D
                           S         C



                           C


                      y*       FE         Y

At y* Agg D = Agg S and S = I
However y* need not be FE
If FE > y* then Aggs > Agg D and S > I
Firms will find inventories accumulating and will
reduce employment and income until S = I
The Multiplier
• R. F. Kahn (1931)
  – Changes in autonomous expenditures,
    such as investment, will have a
    multiplied impact on income
  – Initial expenditure change will affect
    incomes by that amount
  – Income change will then affect the
    consumption expenditures of those
    affected (by change in income x MPC)
  – This will affect other peoples’ incomes
    and will alter their expenditures in the
    same way
  – Ultimate effect will be the change in
    autonomous expenditure times the
    multiplier where M = 1/(1 – MPC)
Implications of the
      Analysis so Far
• Equilibrium is where Agg D = Agg
  S
• The consumption function is stable
  but the investment function is not
• Investment prone to shifts due to
  changes in business expectations
• Shifts in I have multiplied effect on
  income
• Economic instability due to real not
  monetary factors
• To complete the model need to look
  at interest rate determination in the
  monetary sector
Money and Interest
         Rates
• Savings depend on income but there
  is still a choice of how to hold ones
  savings
• Desire to hold bonds vs money
• Liquidity preference
   – Transactions demand for money
   – Precautionary demand for money
   – Speculative demand for money
• Speculative demand is an asset
  demand
• Will hold money if bond prices
  expected to fall and bonds if bond
  prices expected to rise
Money and Interest
         Rates
• Will expect bond prices to fall if
  interest rates are expected to
  rise and vice versa
• Different people may have
  different expectations but when
  interest rates are at very low
  levels most people will expect a
  rise rather than another fall and
  will want to hold money rather
  than bonds
Money and Interest
           Rates
• Speculative demand for money
  and the liquidity trap

 i
                     Ms



 i
                                      LP


                                      M
                        Spec Demand
     Trans and Precautionary Demand
The Complete
            Keynesian Model
                        i
i             Ms




i
                   LP            MEI

                    M                      I
                            I
                                     C+I
    Agg D

                                 C


    I

             450                           Y
                            y*
Adjustment Processes to
  Full Employment?
• If y* is at less than FE does anything
  happen to drive the economy back to
  FE?
• If wages and prices are inflexible
  downwards then nothing happens
• If wages and prices are flexible
  downward then the price level will
  fall
• This will increase the real money
  supply, reduce i rates, increase
  investment and increase Agg D and
  income
• Keynes Effect
Limitations to the
      Keynes Effect
• The Keynes effect will likely
  not be powerful enough to
  move the economy back to full
  employment
• Liquidity trap—increase in real
  money supply may simply be
  absorbed into speculative
  balances
• Interest inelasticity of
  investment
• Deflation would cause adverse
  shifts in business expectations
Policy Implications
• Prolonged recessions due to
  insufficient Agg D
• Low and stable interest rates to
  encourage private investment
• “Social control” over investment
  expenditures
• “Keynesian” policy after WWII
  became use of fiscal policy
  (government expenditure and tax
  policy) to maintain low levels of
  unemployment
• Abba Lerner, Joan Robinson and
  others, “Functional Finance” to
  maintain very low unemployment
  levels
Hicks/Hansen Model

• Problem with Keynesian model
  is that is goes sequentially from
  interest rate determination to
  income determination
• Level of income will also affect
  demand for money
• Need simultaneous
  determination of equilibrium
  levels of i and y
• Aggregated general equilibrium
  approach—LM and IS curves
LM and IS Curves
• IS curves shows all the
  combinations of i and y that will
  give I = S
• As i falls, I rises, so to maintain
  I = S income will have to be
  higher
• LM curve shows all
  combinations of i and y that will
  give Md = Ms (for a given Ms)
• As i falls, speculative demand
  for money rises, so to maintain
  Md = Ms, income will have to
  be lower to reduce transactions
  demand
LM and IS Curves
• LM and IS curves
i
                     LM



i


                          IS
                               Y
               y
Patinkin, Pigou, and the
  Real Balance Effect
• Critique of Keynes’ view that there
  could be an unemployment
  equilibrium
• Based on the idea that with flexible
  wages and prices unemployment will
  lead to falling prices and an increase
  in the value of money balances
• Eventually people will cease trying
  to increase their money holdings and
  will increase consumption
• Does not rely on interest rate
  declines or investment expenditure
Real Balance Effect
i


                            LM




                                      IS’
                            IS
                                        Y
                y* FE

Fall price level at y* leads to increase in the
Real value of peoples’ money holdings,
Eventually shifting the IS curve rightwards
Patinkin
• Patinkin’s argument was similar but
  explicitly included the labour market
• With y < FE both wages and prices
  fall
• As they fall in proportion, real wages
  remain unchanged and involuntary
  unemployment exists (does not deny
  the reality of involuntary
  unemployment even with flexible
  money wages)
• Wage and price declines will
  eventually shift IS curve rightward
  via real balance effect
• But long run and slow process
Post War
Keynesian/Neoclassical
      Synthesis
• Exemplified by Paul Samuelson
• Neoclassical microeconomics
• Keynesian macroeconomics
  treated as a short run model
  relying on inflexible wages and
  prices
• Keynesian model a special case
  but the relevant special case for
  policy purposes
Inflation and the Phillips
          Curve
• The standard Keynesian models
  did not incorporate the price
  level
• Low unemployment policy
  began to cause inflation
• A. W. Phillips (1958) empirical
  study on the relationship
  between unemployment and %
  change in wage rates
• Phillips curve led to notion of
  an unemployment/inflation
  trade off
Phillips Curve
Rate of change in wages




0



              5%
                              unemployment

    Idea of “buying” lower unemployment
    With higher rate of inflation
Phillips Curves and
       Expectations
• Difficulty with the trade off idea is
  that inflation seemed to get worse
• Notion of inflationary expectations
  being built into the next round of
  wage bargains
• Keeping unemployment below the
  “natural rate” (consistent with zero
  inflation) results in the long run in
  accelerating inflation
• Long run Phillips curve is vertical at
  the natural rate
• Rational expectations
The Policy Debate
• Keynesians who favored low
  unemployment targets argued
  for further government
  intervention in the form of wage
  and price controls
• Many countries experimented
  with wage and price guideposts
  or controls in the 1960s and 70s
• The policy alternative came
  from the Monetarists
• Milton Friedman and Chicago
Friedman and
        Monetarism
• Friedman’s critique of
  Keynesian economics had
  several dimensions
• Consumption expenditure
  responds to changes in
  permanent income not
  temporary changes in income
• Monetary factors have greater
  significance than Keynes or the
  Keynesians allowed
• Studies in the Quantity Theory
  of Money 1956
Friedman and
         Monetarism
• Restatement of the quantity theory in
  the framework of consumer choice
  theory
• Demand for money will depend on
  total wealth, the prices and returns
  on various types of assets, and
  consumer preferences
• Demand for real money balances is
  stable
• Increases in money supply will have
  only a temporary effect on i rates
  and expenditure
• Longer run effect on the price level
Friedman and
         Monetarism
• Monetary authorities cannot peg
  interest rates
• Monetary rule—keep the rate of
  growth of the money supply
  equal to the long run rate of
  growth
• This will generate price stability
• Monetarist policies introduced
  did eventually squeeze out
  inflation but at the cost of a
  significant recession and high
  interest rates in the short run
Keynesianism,
     Monetarism and
      Econometrics
• Keynes himself was skeptical
  about econometric methods
• But Keynesian models could be
  empirically estimated
• National income data etc
• Cowles Commission, and
  structural Keynesian Models
• Friedman’s critique—simple
  models and predictive ability
• Cowles versus Chicago
The Present State
• “Keynesian” models—short run
  models with various types of
  market imperfections
• Long run models of a more
  “classical” character—rational
  expectations, policy neutrality
• More emphasis on long run
  issues of government debt,
  growth, intergenerational issues
• Central banks and inflation
  targets

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Keynesian Economics: Revolution and Counterrevolution

  • 1. Keynesian Economics: Revolution and Counterrevolution • John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946) – Son of John Neville Keynes author of Scope and Method of Political Economy (1891) – Studied Math at Cambridge, resulted in Treatise on Probability (1921) – Attracted into economics by Marshall – Brief period at the India Office – Returned to Cambridge at Kings College – Worked mainly on monetary policy – Involved in post WWI peace conference and critical of the settlement
  • 2. J. M. Keynes – The Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919) – Tract on Monetary Reform (1923) – Treatise on Money (1930) – Break with neoclassical theory – The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936) – Focus on employment levels and the possibility of an unemployment equilibrium – General Theory—it includes full employment equilibrium as a special case – Keynes a member of the Bloomsbury Group of artists, writers, and intellectuals
  • 3. Keynes’ Critique of the “Classical” Postulates: I • The Classical Labour Market – In classical and neoclassical economics the demand and supply of labour determines the real wage rate – Cannot be involuntary unemployment in equilibrium W/P S w w’ D D’ N n’ n
  • 4. Labour Markets • The Keynesian Labour Market – Wage bargaining is about money wages not real wages – Wage bargaining cannot determine the real wage as price level changes may occur – Workers react differently to a cut in real wages caused by price level increases than to cuts in money wage rates – Workers resist money wage cuts – Importance of relative position, no union will want to accept wage cuts in case others do not
  • 5. Keynesian Labour Market Money wages S w D D’ N n’ n Involuntary employment exists because of downwardly inflexible money wage rates. ISSUE: Is this assumption critical to the Keynesian analysis?
  • 6. Keynes’ Critique of the Classical Postulates: II • The Classical theory of the interest rate, savings and investment – The real interest rate is determined by savings and investment – The real interest rate co-ordinates saving and investment – What is saved will be spent in the form of investment expenditure
  • 7. Classical Interest Rate Theory Real i rate S S’ i i’ I S&I If the desire to save rises, interest rates fall and investment increases.
  • 8. Keynesian Theory of Interest, Savings and Investment • The interest rate is a monetary phenomenon determined in the money market • Savings primarily a function of income and not very responsive to the interest rate • Investment determined by the interest rate but, more importantly, by the state of business expectations • The amount people wish to save at full employment levels of income may not equal the level of investment planned by businesses
  • 9. Keynesian Theory of Interest, Savings and Investment Money i rate S at FE i I I’ i is determined in the money market Both S and I are interest inelastic I can shift in due to adverse expectations so That at i FE levels of S > I
  • 10. Keynesian Critique of Classical Postulates: III • Classical Theory of the Demand for Money – Demand for money for transactions purposes – M = PTk • Keynesian Theory of the Demand For Money – Demand for money for transactions and as an asset – At certain times people may rather hold their assets as money than as stocks or bonds
  • 11. Keynes and Say’s Law • Keynes’ critique of the classical savings/investment theory and the classical demand for money theory constitute a rejection of Say’s law • At full employment all income is not necessarily spent as desired saving may exceed desired investment or people may wish to increase their money holdings • If this happens there is underconsumption in the sense that FE Agg S > Agg D • QUESTION: are there adjustment processes that will lead back to FE?
  • 12. The Keynesian Model • Short run analysis, organization, technology and capital stock taken as given • Aggregation of Marshallian concepts • Aggregate supply and aggregate supply price • Agg supply drawn as a function of employment • Agg supply price is the amount of income factors would have to earn to maintain that level of employment
  • 13. Aggregate Supply Proceeds or income Z N Z function rises at an increasing rate due to diminishing returns—increasing marginal supply price Z function in money terms and so assumes a given price level
  • 14. Aggregate Demand • Aggregate demand or aggregate demand price • Agg D drawn as a function of employment • As employment rises so does income and expenditure but expenditure rises by less than income • The equilibrium level of employment is where Agg D = Agg S and this may or may not be full employment
  • 15. Equilibrium Employment Level Income and expenditure Z y* D=C+I n* N To proceed Keynes examines the components of D (C and I) more closely and as a function of income rather than of employment
  • 16. Consumption and Savings • Keynes lists numerous factors both subjective and objective that might affect the “propensity to consume out of income” • Keynes argues that consumption primarily a function of real income • Propensity to consume and the marginal propensity to consume • The consumption function— consumption as a function of income • Keynes thought MPC would tend to decline with income but usually drawn as constant
  • 17. Consumption and Savings • APC = C/Y • MPC = ΔC/ΔY • C = a + bY where b =MPC C 450 or C = Y C = a+ bY Slope = b a y yFE Y
  • 18. Consumption and Savings • What is not consumed out of income is saved • Y=C+S • APC + APS = 1 • MPC + MPS = 1 S S Y y yFE -a
  • 19. Consumption and Savings • Important to note that Keynes thought of the consumption function as very stable • Changes in consumption and savings due to movements along the consumption function (due to changes in income) not due to shifts in the consumption function (which would be caused by changes in the propensity to consume out of income)
  • 20. Investment Expenditure • Investment depends on interest rate and the expected future earnings from the investment • These are long term expectations • Lack of a rational basis for expectations of earnings a long time in the future • State of expectations has a conventional basis only and can change quite quickly
  • 21. Investment Expenditure i Optimistic Pessimistic MEI I MEI curve is very interest inelastic and is unstable—tends to shift with state of expectations
  • 22. Equilibrium Income For an equilibrium Agg D = Agg S Y=C+I 450 Agg D C + I = Agg D S C C y* FE Y At y* Agg D = Agg S and S = I However y* need not be FE If FE > y* then Aggs > Agg D and S > I Firms will find inventories accumulating and will reduce employment and income until S = I
  • 23. The Multiplier • R. F. Kahn (1931) – Changes in autonomous expenditures, such as investment, will have a multiplied impact on income – Initial expenditure change will affect incomes by that amount – Income change will then affect the consumption expenditures of those affected (by change in income x MPC) – This will affect other peoples’ incomes and will alter their expenditures in the same way – Ultimate effect will be the change in autonomous expenditure times the multiplier where M = 1/(1 – MPC)
  • 24. Implications of the Analysis so Far • Equilibrium is where Agg D = Agg S • The consumption function is stable but the investment function is not • Investment prone to shifts due to changes in business expectations • Shifts in I have multiplied effect on income • Economic instability due to real not monetary factors • To complete the model need to look at interest rate determination in the monetary sector
  • 25. Money and Interest Rates • Savings depend on income but there is still a choice of how to hold ones savings • Desire to hold bonds vs money • Liquidity preference – Transactions demand for money – Precautionary demand for money – Speculative demand for money • Speculative demand is an asset demand • Will hold money if bond prices expected to fall and bonds if bond prices expected to rise
  • 26. Money and Interest Rates • Will expect bond prices to fall if interest rates are expected to rise and vice versa • Different people may have different expectations but when interest rates are at very low levels most people will expect a rise rather than another fall and will want to hold money rather than bonds
  • 27. Money and Interest Rates • Speculative demand for money and the liquidity trap i Ms i LP M Spec Demand Trans and Precautionary Demand
  • 28. The Complete Keynesian Model i i Ms i LP MEI M I I C+I Agg D C I 450 Y y*
  • 29.
  • 30.
  • 31. Adjustment Processes to Full Employment? • If y* is at less than FE does anything happen to drive the economy back to FE? • If wages and prices are inflexible downwards then nothing happens • If wages and prices are flexible downward then the price level will fall • This will increase the real money supply, reduce i rates, increase investment and increase Agg D and income • Keynes Effect
  • 32. Limitations to the Keynes Effect • The Keynes effect will likely not be powerful enough to move the economy back to full employment • Liquidity trap—increase in real money supply may simply be absorbed into speculative balances • Interest inelasticity of investment • Deflation would cause adverse shifts in business expectations
  • 33. Policy Implications • Prolonged recessions due to insufficient Agg D • Low and stable interest rates to encourage private investment • “Social control” over investment expenditures • “Keynesian” policy after WWII became use of fiscal policy (government expenditure and tax policy) to maintain low levels of unemployment • Abba Lerner, Joan Robinson and others, “Functional Finance” to maintain very low unemployment levels
  • 34. Hicks/Hansen Model • Problem with Keynesian model is that is goes sequentially from interest rate determination to income determination • Level of income will also affect demand for money • Need simultaneous determination of equilibrium levels of i and y • Aggregated general equilibrium approach—LM and IS curves
  • 35. LM and IS Curves • IS curves shows all the combinations of i and y that will give I = S • As i falls, I rises, so to maintain I = S income will have to be higher • LM curve shows all combinations of i and y that will give Md = Ms (for a given Ms) • As i falls, speculative demand for money rises, so to maintain Md = Ms, income will have to be lower to reduce transactions demand
  • 36. LM and IS Curves • LM and IS curves i LM i IS Y y
  • 37. Patinkin, Pigou, and the Real Balance Effect • Critique of Keynes’ view that there could be an unemployment equilibrium • Based on the idea that with flexible wages and prices unemployment will lead to falling prices and an increase in the value of money balances • Eventually people will cease trying to increase their money holdings and will increase consumption • Does not rely on interest rate declines or investment expenditure
  • 38. Real Balance Effect i LM IS’ IS Y y* FE Fall price level at y* leads to increase in the Real value of peoples’ money holdings, Eventually shifting the IS curve rightwards
  • 39. Patinkin • Patinkin’s argument was similar but explicitly included the labour market • With y < FE both wages and prices fall • As they fall in proportion, real wages remain unchanged and involuntary unemployment exists (does not deny the reality of involuntary unemployment even with flexible money wages) • Wage and price declines will eventually shift IS curve rightward via real balance effect • But long run and slow process
  • 40. Post War Keynesian/Neoclassical Synthesis • Exemplified by Paul Samuelson • Neoclassical microeconomics • Keynesian macroeconomics treated as a short run model relying on inflexible wages and prices • Keynesian model a special case but the relevant special case for policy purposes
  • 41. Inflation and the Phillips Curve • The standard Keynesian models did not incorporate the price level • Low unemployment policy began to cause inflation • A. W. Phillips (1958) empirical study on the relationship between unemployment and % change in wage rates • Phillips curve led to notion of an unemployment/inflation trade off
  • 42. Phillips Curve Rate of change in wages 0 5% unemployment Idea of “buying” lower unemployment With higher rate of inflation
  • 43. Phillips Curves and Expectations • Difficulty with the trade off idea is that inflation seemed to get worse • Notion of inflationary expectations being built into the next round of wage bargains • Keeping unemployment below the “natural rate” (consistent with zero inflation) results in the long run in accelerating inflation • Long run Phillips curve is vertical at the natural rate • Rational expectations
  • 44. The Policy Debate • Keynesians who favored low unemployment targets argued for further government intervention in the form of wage and price controls • Many countries experimented with wage and price guideposts or controls in the 1960s and 70s • The policy alternative came from the Monetarists • Milton Friedman and Chicago
  • 45. Friedman and Monetarism • Friedman’s critique of Keynesian economics had several dimensions • Consumption expenditure responds to changes in permanent income not temporary changes in income • Monetary factors have greater significance than Keynes or the Keynesians allowed • Studies in the Quantity Theory of Money 1956
  • 46. Friedman and Monetarism • Restatement of the quantity theory in the framework of consumer choice theory • Demand for money will depend on total wealth, the prices and returns on various types of assets, and consumer preferences • Demand for real money balances is stable • Increases in money supply will have only a temporary effect on i rates and expenditure • Longer run effect on the price level
  • 47. Friedman and Monetarism • Monetary authorities cannot peg interest rates • Monetary rule—keep the rate of growth of the money supply equal to the long run rate of growth • This will generate price stability • Monetarist policies introduced did eventually squeeze out inflation but at the cost of a significant recession and high interest rates in the short run
  • 48. Keynesianism, Monetarism and Econometrics • Keynes himself was skeptical about econometric methods • But Keynesian models could be empirically estimated • National income data etc • Cowles Commission, and structural Keynesian Models • Friedman’s critique—simple models and predictive ability • Cowles versus Chicago
  • 49. The Present State • “Keynesian” models—short run models with various types of market imperfections • Long run models of a more “classical” character—rational expectations, policy neutrality • More emphasis on long run issues of government debt, growth, intergenerational issues • Central banks and inflation targets