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History of Economic Thought Pre-Keynesian business-cycle theory January 5, 2010 Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 1 Oct. 26/27 Nov.2Nov. 24 Nov. 11Jan. 4 Jan. 5Jan. 19 Jan. 25Febr. 1 Introduction Classical Political Economy The emergence of the science of the market Markets vs. aggregation Conclusions Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 2 Markets vs. aggregation • Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory • Two short essay presentations • Niko Steinhoff: Neoclassical Theories of the Business Cylce • Johanna Stolze: Is reducing costs the driving force for innovation? • Wicksell´s distinction between natural and market rate • Over-investment theories • Keynes´s critique • The Economics of Keynes – a first glance Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 3 Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory and Keynes´s General Theory „stylized facts“: during the business cycle - fluctuations of M*V - output fluctuations in production goods industries are more violent than in consumption goods industries Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 4 Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory and Keynes´s General Theory • Over-investment theories („Monetary theories“, Austrian business cycle theory) • Under-consumption theories (GB: John A. Hobson, D: Emil Lederer, CH: Fritz Marbach) – intertemporal analysis – proto-Keynesian economic policy conclusions Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 5 Over-investment Theories • Austrian capital theory – Temporal production function: productivity of roundabout methods of production – Production processes are inflexible – i 1 < i 0 : time preference ↓= lengthening of production processes • Wicksell´s distinction between natural and market rate (of interest) Knut Wicksell (1851-1926) Geldzins und Güterpreise (1898) Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 6 Wicksell´s distinction between natural and market rate r S S: supply of (real) savings I: demand for (real) investment funds r: real rate of interest (productivity / time preference) r0 I1 I0 S, I Natural rate: Market rate: Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer investment demand = supply of savings demand for credit = supply of credit Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 7 r S If: natural rate = market rate - goods market equilibrium - monetary equilibrium (price stability) r0 I0 S, I Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 8 r S If: natural rate r1 > market rate r0 - excess demand in goods markets - inflationary pressure r1 r0 I1 → „real“ effects „cumulative process“ I0 S, I Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 9 Over-investment theories: Friedrich August v. Hayek (1931) Prices and Production Expansion market rate < natural rate, credit expansion More round about / capital-intensive production processes Rising investment goods prices, delayed increases in wages and consumer goods prices Upper turning point Reserves of the banking system are exhausted: market rate ↑ Recession Bankrupcies, lay-offs, credit contraction Falling investment goods prices, falling wages and consumer goods prices Market interest rate declines in the course of the recession Lower turning point When market rate < natural rate Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 10 Crisis - production processes are designed to be more round-about / capital intensive than real time preferences in the economy allow to finance - therefore: „too little is saved“ (in relation to investment projects under way) → crisis is characterized by: over-investment = under-saving = over-consumption → economic policy conclusion increase savings, reduce consumption (deficit financed government spending compounds the crisis) Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 11 Over-investment theories • Benchmark: intertemporal equilibrium • Disrupted by credit expansion (information and coordination failures in credit markets) • The expansion is a deviation from intertemporal equilibrium • The crisis is necessary to „purge“ the economy of the „excesses“ of the expansion and boom • Market forces bring the economy back into intertemporal equlibrium Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 12 Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory • Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory • Wicksell´s distinction between natural and market rate • Over-investment theories • Keynes´s critique • The Economics of Keynes – a first glance Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 13 Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory and Keynes´s General Theory • Analysis of effective (macroeconomic) demand (rather than disaggregated individual markets) • Short-term macroeconomic equilibrium (instead of intertemporal equilibrium) • Employment / Output: focus is on quantities (rather than prices) Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 14 Back to Wicksell: r S If: natural rate r1 > market rate r0 - excess demand in goods markets - inflationary pressure r1 r0 I1 → „real“ effects „cumulative process“ I0 S, I Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 15 Underlying assumptions: • Goods market equilibrium (determined by investment demand and savings supply): shortterm deviations from equilibrium positions do not change long-term equilibria • frictions in the market mechanism (information and coordination failures) lead to short-term monetary and real effects Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 16 Keynes critique: Short-term deviations from the goods market equilibrium change the equilibrium positions (especially: changes in income lead to changes in savings) → analysis of short-term effective demand Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 17 Keynes, J.M. (1936) The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, p. 180 Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 18 The Keynesian Cross (graphical analysis developed by Paul Samuelson) • Changes in investment demand • Multiplier effects lead to quantity (rather than price) adjustments • Short-term equilibrium: output and employment Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 19 Conclusions Economic policy: The market economy (based on private property and competive markets) is not inherently stable. Economic theory: The interest rate can not be determined from I = S. Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 20 Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory – and Keynes´s General Theory • Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory • Wicksell´s distinction between natural and market rate • Over-investment theories • Keynes´s critique • The Economics of Keynes – at the first glance Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 21 • Interest rate determination in the GT – liquidity preference and the portfolio decision – uncertainty • the investment decision – marginal efficiency of capital and uncertainty concerning the returns on real investment – (monetary) interest rate as opportunity cost • (volatile) investment demand determines aggregate demand Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 22 Economic policy conclusions (again) Fiscal policy (increase in government expenditure) vs. monetary policy (vs. downward wage flexibility) Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 23 The Economics of Keynes • „macro-economics“ • short-term analysis („In the long run we are all dead.“) • monetary and real factors determine employment and output • S = I (ex post) • monetary interest rate explanation (Denis Robertson: boot strap theory) Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 24 Next session: Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Keynes and Keynesianism 20th century developments Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 25 John Maynard Keynes 1884 Marshall becomes Professor of Political Economy at Cambridge University 1901 First wireless transatlantic telegraph connection 1885 Indian National Congress 1890 1880 June 5, 1883 John Maynard Keynes is born in Cambridge, England 1914 - 1918 First World War 1899 Bloomsbury Group comes into being 1910 1900 1902 - 1906 Studies in philosophy, mathematics and history, King’s College, Cambridge 1906-1908 Employment at the India Office (British administration) Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 26 1931 Britain abandons gold standard 1926 Britain returns to gold standard 1917 Breakdown of Russian monarchy, October Revolution 1929 Stock market crash in the USA, beginning of Great Depression 1919/20 Versailles Peace Treaty Germany: 1923 Hyperinflation 1920 1910 1939 Beginning of the Second World War 1930 Comments of Keynes’ Cambridge “Circus” on Treatise 1930 1940 1908 Becomes lecturer in economics at King’s College, Cambridge 1944 1925 1929 Keynes heads the Marriage to Acquaintance with British delegation ballerina Ludwig Wittgenstein at the Bretton Woods Lydia Lopokova 1936 conference 1919 1911 - 1945 “The General “The Economic Editor of the Theory of Consequences “Economic Employment, of the Peace” Journal” Interest and Money” published 1915 published 1930 April 21, 1946 Adviser to the “Treatise on Keynes dies in British finance Money” Tilton, Sussex department Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 27 John Richard Hicks 1936 Keynes publishes “The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money” 1906 Vilfredo Pareto “Manual of Political Economy ” 1922 Dennis Robertson publishes “Money” 1929 Lionel Robbins becomes the head of the economics department at LSE 1920 1910 April 8, 1904 John Richard Hicks is born in Warwick, England 1930 1917-22 Studies at Clifton College in Bristol 1922-26 Studies mathematics at Balliol College in Oxford 1923 Hicks reads "Philosophy, Politics and Economics“ 1939 Eric Lindahl “Studies in the Theory of Money and Capital“ 1940 1932 “The Theory of Wages” 1939 1935 “Value and Capital” Marriage with Ursula Webb 1937 “Mr. Keynes and the classics” published 1935-38 Lecturer at Cambridge Uni., work on “Value and Capital” 1926-35 Hicks teaches at the London School of Economics Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer 1939-45 World War II 1929 Beginning of the Great Depression Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 1938-46 Professor at Manchester University 28 1947 Marshall Plan established 1943 Maurice Allais “A la recherche d'une discipline economique“ 1944 Abba Lerner “Economics of Control“ 1957 Treaty of Rome 1968 Prague Spring, student protests 1959-75 in Europe Vietnam War 1973 1st oil crisis 1980 1st Gulf War 1979 2nd oil crisis 1954 Kenneth Arrow, Gerard Debreu "Existence of an Equilibrium for a Competitive Economy“ 1947 Paul Samuelson “Foundations of Economic Analysis“ 1950 1946-65 Research fellow at Nuffield College, Oxford 1952-65 Drummond Professor of Political Economy at All Souls College, Oxford 1950 Member of the Revenue Allocation Commission in Nigeria Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer 1971 Kenneth Arrow, Richard Kahn “General Competitive Analysis” 1960 1980 1970 1965-71 Research fellow at All Souls College, Oxford May 20, 1989 Hicks dies in New York 1964 Hicks is knighted 1960-62 President of the Royal Economic Society 1972 Nobel Prize together with Kenneth Arrow Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 29 Milton Friedman 1919-46 Jacob Viner is professor at the Chicago University 1929 Beginning of the Great Depression 1929-30 Federal Reserve system allows the quantity of money to decline 1945 World Bank established 1936 John Maynard Keynes “The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money” 1921 Frank Knight “Risk, Uncertainty and Profit“ 1910 1920 July 31, 1912 Milton Friedman is born in New York 1930 1928 Rutgers University Mathematics and Economics 1933–34 Fellowship at Columbia University 1932 Studies at the University of Chicago 1944 Bretton Woods Conference 1950 1940 1937 Work at the National Bureau of Economic Research 1934–35 Research assistant to Henry Schultz, lifelong friendships with George Stigler and Wilson Allen Wallis 1938 Marriage with Rose Director Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer 1944 IMF established Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory 1946 Lecturer at the University of Chicago 1943 Joins the Division of War Research at the Columbia University 1947 Founding member of the Mont Pèlerin Society 30 1965-75 Vietnam War 1976 1981-82 Lucas publishes Monetary crisis in the US “Econometric Policy Evaluation: A Critique” 1973 Military coup in Chile, beginning of the 1st Miracle 1968 Prague Spring, Student protests in Europe 1970 1953 “The Methodology of Positive Economics ” 1973 1st oil crisis 1962 “Capitalism and Freedom” published 1979-90 Thatcher Prime Minister of Great Britain, “Thatcherism” 1979 2nd oil crisis 1966-84 Weekly columns for Newsweek magazine Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Allgoewer 1981-89 Ronald Reagan President of the US, “Reaganomics” 1980 1975 Visit to Chile, Lecture on principles of economic freedom 1963 with Anna Schwarz “A Monetary History of the United States – 1867-1960” 1998 Foundation of ATTAC in France 1989 Berlin Wall falls 1996 Catherine Caufield publishes „Masters of Illusion: The World Bank and the Poverty of Nations“ 2000 1990 1981 Member of the Council of Economic Advisors to the President 1988 Receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the National Medal of Science 1976 Nobel Prize 1980 Television program “Free to Choose” aired on PBS Pre-Keynesian business cycle theory November 16, 2006 Friedman dies in San Francisco 31