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John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946)

History of Modern Macroeconomics Lecture 2. The Great Depression: Keynes and His Critics (the 1930s) Kevin D. Hoover Department of Economics Department of Philosophy Center for the History of Political Economy Duke University. John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946).

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John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946)

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  1. History of Modern MacroeconomicsLecture 2. The Great Depression: Keynes and His Critics (the 1930s)Kevin D. HooverDepartment of EconomicsDepartment of PhilosophyCenter for the History of Political EconomyDuke University Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  2. John Maynard Keynes(1883-1946) Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  3. Keynes is the Most Influential Economist of the 20th Century(by articles in JSTOR) Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  4. Keynes’s Paternity: Natural and Academic Alfred Marshall (1842-1924) John Neville Keynes (1852-1949) Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  5. Some Bloomsburies Lytton Strachey1880-1932 (by Dora Carrington) Duncan Grant1885-1978 (Self-portrait) Virginia Woolf1882-1941 E.M. Forster1882-1941 Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  6. Keynes and the Arts Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  7. Maynard and Lydia Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  8. Keynes’s Books circa 1930 1919 1921 1930 1923 Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  9. If the books seem dry . . . Maynard and Lydia again Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  10. Now “in the long run’ [the neutrality of money] is probably true. If, after the American Civil War, the American dollar had been stabilized and defined by law at 10 per cent below its present value, it would be safe to assume that . . . p would be just 10 per cent greater than [it] actually [is] and that the present values of k [and y] would be entirely unaffected. But this long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead. Economists set themselves too easy, too useless a task if in tempestuous seasons they can only tell us that when the storm is long past the ocean is flat again. Keynes, A Tract on Monetary Reform A Doctrinaire Quantity Theorist and the Urgency of the Present Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  11. Malthus as a Precursor to Keynes Theoretical writers are too apt, in their calculations, to overlook these intervals [i.e., trade cycles]; but eight or ten years, recurring not unfrequently, are serious spaces in human life. They amount to a serious sum of happiness or misery, according as they are prosperous or adverse, and leave the country in a very different state at their termination. T. Robert Malthus, Principles of Political Economy Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  12. Perfectionist and Imperfectionists Accounts of the Business Cycle • Ricardo-Malthus debate as a prelude • Say’s Law: • Supply creates its own demand • Capital always finds productive uses • No natural barriers to full employment • No general gluts • Imperfectionist: Labor resistance (implicit or explicit) to real wage cuts the source of unemployment • Perfectionist (Keynes): unemployment in the nature of the economy Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  13. The General Theory of Employment Interest and Money (1936) • “Monetary theory of production” • Perfectionist account of the business cycle • Real output not prices the central theoretical focus Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  14. “Mr. Keynes and the Classics”: The Most Influential Interpretation of the General Theory Sir John Hicks(1904-1989) IS-LM Model Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  15. The IS-LM (originally IS-LL) Model – 1 Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  16. The IS-LM (originally IS-LL) Model – 1 Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  17. Hick’s IS-LM Interpretation of Keynes Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  18. Keynes: Heterogeneity • Relative social position in labor markets and aggregate supply • Coordination failure (ex ante and ex post) • Fallacies of composition • Monetary economy Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  19. Risk vs. Uncertainty (Treatise on Probability) “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 of 1970. About these matters there is no scientific basis on which to form any calculable probabilities whatever. We simply do not know.” [Keynes 1937, pp. 113-14; Collected Works, vol. 14.] Uncertainty and Rationality – 1 Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  20. Uncertainty and Rationality – 2 • Conventions as a solution to uncertainty “a convention . . . assuming that the existing state of affairs will continue indefinitely, except in so far as we have specific reasons to expect a change . . .” Keynes General Theory, p. 152 Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  21. Uncertainty and Rationality – 3 • Room for psychology and temperament (“animal spirits”) but not irrationality: “. . . it is our innate urge to activity which makes the wheels go round, our rational selves choosing between the alternatives as best we are able, calculating where we can, but often falling back for our motives on whim or sentiment or chance.” Keynes, General Theory, p. 163 • Rationality requires decision Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  22. Implications of Uncertainty Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  23. The Trade Cycle • Investment major source of fluctuations • marginal efficiency naturally falls as boom progresses • large shifts from reassessments of future profits – dimmed animal spirits • firms hesitate to cut wages • wage cuts reduce income and have adverse multiplier effects Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  24. Policy to Fight a Slump • Government expenditure (especially public works) can replace investment = socialization of investment • Indirect effect on expected future profits and firms confidence (animal spirits) dominate Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  25. Policy to Maintain a Boom • Predictable and consistent monetary and fiscal policy supports conventional response to uncertainty • “In estimating the prospects of investment, we must have regard . . . to the nerves and hysteria of those upon whose spontaneous activity it largely depends.”Keynes, General Theory, p. 162 Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  26. The Central Message (or Central Innovation) of The General Theory • Perfectionist account of the failure of real wage changes to clear the labor market • Distinction between aggregate supply and demand • The multiplier • Liquidity preference • The liquidity trap • Activitist (fiscal) policy • Focus on uncertainty Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

  27. Thanks  The End Center for the History of Political Economy Summer School, June 2014

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