The euro disaster — Wynne Godley was spot on already back in 1992! If there were an economic and monetary union, in which the power to act independently had actually been abolished, ‘co-ordinated’ reflation of the kind which is so urgently needed now could only be undertaken by a federal European government. Without such an institution, EMU would prevent effective action by individual countries and put nothing in its place. Another important role which any...
Read More »No man is an island!
No man is an island! Given how sweeping the changes wrought by SMD (Sonnenschein-Mantel-Debreu) theory seem to be, it is understandable that some very broad statements about the character of general equilibrium theory were made. Fifteen years after General Competitive Analysis, Arrow (1986) stated that the hypothesis of rationality had few implications at the aggregate level. Kirman (1989) held that general equilibrium theory could not generate falsifiable...
Read More »Sacrificing content for the sake of mathematical tractability
Sacrificing content for the sake of mathematical tractability A commodity is a primitive concept (Debreu 1991), and the model comprises a finite set of classes of commodities. The number of distinguishable commodities (Debreu 1959) or commodity labels (Koopmans and Bausch 1959) is a natural number. The Arrow—Debreu model continues by defining these commodities as goods that are physically determined … But after asserting that commodities are physically...
Read More »General equilibrium — the art of denying the obvious
General equilibrium — the art of denying the obvious General equilibrium is fundamental to economics on a more normative level as well. A story about Adam Smith, the invisible hand, and the merits of markets pervades introductory textbooks, classroom teaching, and contemporary political discourse. The intellectual foundation of this story rests on general equilibrium, not on the latest mathematical excursions. If the foundation of everyone’s favourite...
Read More »General equilibrium theory — still dead after all these years
General equilibrium theory — still dead after all these years Raphaële Chappe has written a very interesting article about the value of general equilibrium theory, concluding in the following words: For a student of real world markets, general equilibrium theory appears strangely distant. It is not surprising that a highly abstract framework consisting of hyper-rational agents might be ill equipped to provide a sufficiently credible account of markets in...
Read More »Krugman’s models — squeezing out central ideas from Keynes
Krugman’s models — squeezing out central ideas from Keynes The gist is that despite Krugman’s claims to the contrary, the analysis is not really Keynesian, at least in comparison to The General Theory, or GT. It does hark back to the world of the turn of the 20th century Swedish economist Knut Wicksell and contemporaries and followers such as Irving Fisher, James Tobin, and Robert Mundell … Krugman argues that the central bank should somehow intervene to...
Read More »Stiglitz on Brexit
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Read More »Economics at the edge
Economics at the edge The Fourth Nordic Post-Keynesian Conference will take place in Aalborg, Denmark, April 20-21 2017. More on the conference available here.
Read More »But once, we were here
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Read More »Krugman’s gadget interpretation of economics
Krugman’s gadget interpretation of economics Paul Krugman has often been criticized by people like yours truly for getting things pretty wrong on the economics of John Maynard Keynes. When Krugman has responded to the critique, by himself rather gratuitously portrayed as about “What Keynes Really Meant,” the overall conclusion is — “Krugman Doesn’t Care.” Responding to a post up here on Krugman not being a real Keynesian, Krugman writes: Surely we don’t...
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