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Tag Archives: John Hicks

George A. Akerlof — What They Were Thinking Then: The Consequences for Macroeconomics during the Past 60 Years

This article begins with a review of the two main textbook approaches that had evolved by the early 1960s to incorporate the musings of Keynes: the Keynesian cross from Samuelson’s (1948) introductory textbook and the complete, well fleshed-out model in Gardner Ackley’s (1961) advanced macro textbook. This Keynesian- neoclassical synthesis followed a pattern set by Hicks (1937) by focusing on certain elements of Keynes, while setting aside others. Some potential weaknesses of the specific...

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Lars P. Syll — Hicks on neoclassical ‘uncertainty laundering’

A good example of this is the phrase, "the new normal." At first, economists and policy makers were surprised and perplexed when policy predictions of their models based on historical trends did not turn out. So then they dragged in the concept of "the new normal" in stead of admitting they didn't have a grip on what is actually going on. We see this recently in Janet Yellen's statement that the Fed didn't really understand inflation, like it's not doing what it is supposed to be doing. ...

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