Classical Theory Supply
determines the state of the economy.
Smith: Costs determine
Supply.
Supply determines Price.
Price determines Demand
Say’s
Law: Supply calls forth its own Demand.
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Early Critiques of Classical Theory Recurrent problems
appear to be chronic & internal to the market.
Malthus:
Depressions, poverty & unemployment are too chronic to be simply
adjustments to equlibrium.
Marx:
- Capitalism is prone to generating ever-increasing internal
crises that it cannot resolve, e.g. Depressions, chronic
under-employment, & instability.
Institutionalism
(Early 1900s): Historical, political, social institutions influence and
constrain economic activities and forces.
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Keynesian Theory Explicitly
rejects
Classical Macro Theory.
The market is most often
not in equilibrium and often produces sub-optimal equilibriums.
Demand
(total spending)
determines the state of the economy.
Government
should use
Fiscal policy to stabilize the business cycle.
Monetarism
Claims
that
recessions are caused by a low Money Supply, and inflation is caused by
an over large Money Supply.
Rejects
Fiscal policy as
ineffective, distortionary, and inflationary.
Monetarism influenced
policy during Great Depression.
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The Classical - Keynesian Synthesis
(Neo-Keynesian) Restores
Supply & Demand equilibrium framework by including Keynesian theory
as the Demand-side analysis.
Classical
theory governs Supply analysis.
Keynesian theory governs Demand
analysis.
Neoclassical
Macro-Model
The foundations of the model are firmly set in Neoclassical micro-theory: 1) Supplies and demands of resources determine the prices and allocations of those resources. 2) The employment of resources and the technological possibilities determine the aggregate supply of goods. 3) The aggregate supply and aggregate demand of goods determine the equilibrium rate of interest. 4) Money demand and money supply determine the price level. |
Monetarism Peak influence of
Monetarism occurs during high inflation in 1970s & 1980s.
Large reduction in Money Supply results in successive recessions, but
lowers inflation over a decade.
Supply
Side Theory
“The Trickle-Down Theory” Claims Demand-side
Fiscal policy is ineffective in stimulating the economy,
resulting in inflation. Only Supply-side Fiscal policy (tax-cuts
to producers & wealthy households) can stimulate the economy.
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Clinton Version of S.S. Targets specific
producers, markets, industries for tax cuts to stimulate production.
New
Classical Theory
Argues that the
market’s ability to learn from past government policy renders all
economic policy ineffective, since people’s responses offset the
potential impact of the policy, Also Keynsian macro models sare
inconsistent with the miccrp models
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Supply-Side or Keynesian Revival? Bush revives S.S.
rhetoric and Keynesian fiscal policy via tax cuts
disproportionately benefiting the wealthiest households and
corporations.
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