
Working Paper No. 72 - Levy Economics Institute of Bard College
... assets over their whole life, it is by no means always the case that speculation predominates over enterprise. As the organization of investment markets improves, the risk of the predominance of speculation does however ...
... assets over their whole life, it is by no means always the case that speculation predominates over enterprise. As the organization of investment markets improves, the risk of the predominance of speculation does however ...
CHAPTER #25 FREE RESPONSE SOLUTIONS
... We could assume that the minimum wage might be set at Wu or Wc, which although represent higher levels of output, but result in lower employment. Regarding the minimum wage controversy, economists do think that at some point as minimum wage increases employment will drop. Evidence is scant though in ...
... We could assume that the minimum wage might be set at Wu or Wc, which although represent higher levels of output, but result in lower employment. Regarding the minimum wage controversy, economists do think that at some point as minimum wage increases employment will drop. Evidence is scant though in ...
Market demand is simply a horizontal summation
... According to Alfred Marshall, demand schedule shows the amounts of a good that consumers are willing to purchase at various prices. Later, the term “demand schedule’ was changed to “demand curve.” It is not a single number. It depends on many variables. However, we focus on relevant economic variabl ...
... According to Alfred Marshall, demand schedule shows the amounts of a good that consumers are willing to purchase at various prices. Later, the term “demand schedule’ was changed to “demand curve.” It is not a single number. It depends on many variables. However, we focus on relevant economic variabl ...
New Growth Theory
... been rejected by major advocates of new growth theory, it recently had a comeback in an augmented form. Interestingly, it was not rejected because of a lack of solid micro foundations of its technology and production side. This is somewhat surprising because one criticism levelled at it was that its ...
... been rejected by major advocates of new growth theory, it recently had a comeback in an augmented form. Interestingly, it was not rejected because of a lack of solid micro foundations of its technology and production side. This is somewhat surprising because one criticism levelled at it was that its ...
A Why the PPF Might Be Bow
... d. An increase in the price of gasoline will cause an increase in consumer demand for video rentals. ...
... d. An increase in the price of gasoline will cause an increase in consumer demand for video rentals. ...
The Methodology of Profit Maximization: An Austrian
... Lowes, which purchased the goods from the manufacturers, had a number of decisions, the most important being how many to buy. Whether the purchasing agents were depending upon the Farmers’ Almanac or an “authoritative” source on the weather, they had to decide long before winter just what they might ...
... Lowes, which purchased the goods from the manufacturers, had a number of decisions, the most important being how many to buy. Whether the purchasing agents were depending upon the Farmers’ Almanac or an “authoritative” source on the weather, they had to decide long before winter just what they might ...
The fallacy of the invisible hand
... If we analyse the reasoning of classical economists, the inference that everyone reacts in the same way is based on the assumption that every market participant has such a small relative impact that his or her specific features are insignificant. From this they concluded that it is fair to assume th ...
... If we analyse the reasoning of classical economists, the inference that everyone reacts in the same way is based on the assumption that every market participant has such a small relative impact that his or her specific features are insignificant. From this they concluded that it is fair to assume th ...
Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics
... Defining Poverty Poverty in the US • Poverty was defined by Mollie Orshansky of the SSA in 1964 as 3 times the cost of the Dept. of Agriculture’s “economy food plan” • Since 1964, that number has been updated annually for changes in inflation • Currently, the poverty line is $9,359/yr for a single ...
... Defining Poverty Poverty in the US • Poverty was defined by Mollie Orshansky of the SSA in 1964 as 3 times the cost of the Dept. of Agriculture’s “economy food plan” • Since 1964, that number has been updated annually for changes in inflation • Currently, the poverty line is $9,359/yr for a single ...
Int. trade 4- answers
... down the existing demand curve for Honda motorbikes and for providing an explanation that the lower price for Honda motorbikes will lead to an increase in the quantity demanded (expansion in demand) for this product in Vietnam. Demand does not increase and so the demand curve does not shift. ...
... down the existing demand curve for Honda motorbikes and for providing an explanation that the lower price for Honda motorbikes will lead to an increase in the quantity demanded (expansion in demand) for this product in Vietnam. Demand does not increase and so the demand curve does not shift. ...
History of macroeconomic thought

Macroeconomic theory has its origins in the study of business cycles and monetary theory. In general, early theorists believed monetary factors could not have an impact on real factors such as real output. John Maynard Keynes attacked some of these ""classical"" theories and produced a general theory that described the whole economy in terms of aggregates rather than individual, microeconomic parts. Attempting to explain unemployment and recessions, he noticed the tendency for people and businesses to hoard cash and avoid investment during a recession. He argued that this invalidated the assumptions of classical economists who thought that markets always clear, leaving no surplus of goods and no willing labor left idle. The word macroeconomics was first used by Ragnar FrischThe generation of economists that followed Keynes synthesized his theory with neoclassical microeconomics to form the neoclassical synthesis. Although Keynesian theory originally omitted an explanation of price levels and inflation, later Keynesians adopted the Phillips curve to model price-level changes. Some Keynesians opposed the synthesis method of combining Keynes's theory with an equilibrium system and advocated disequilibrium models instead. Monetarists, led by Milton Friedman, adopted some Keynesian ideas, such as the importance of the demand for money, but argued that Keynesians ignored the role of money supply in inflation. Robert Lucas and other new classical macroeconomists criticized Keynesian models that did not work under rational expectations. Lucas also argued that Keynesian empirical models would not be as stable as models based on microeconomic foundations.The new classical school culminated in real business cycle theory (RBC). Like early classical economic models, RBC models assumed that markets clear and that business cycles are driven by changes in technology and supply, not demand. New Keynesians tried to address many of the criticisms leveled by Lucas and other new classical economists against Neo-Keynesians. New Keynesians adopted rational expectations and built models with microfoundations of sticky prices that suggested recessions could still be explained by demand factors because rigidities stop prices from falling to a market-clearing level, leaving a surplus of goods and labor. The new neoclassical synthesis combined elements of both new classical and new Keynesian macroeconomics into a consensus. Other economists avoided the new classical and new Keynesian debate on short-term dynamics and developed the new growth theories of long-run economic growth. The Great Recession led to a retrospective on the state of the field and some popular attention turned toward heterodox economics.