NEW KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS/POST KEYNESIAN ALTERNATIVES This collection of original essays by the world’s most prominent Post Keynesian Economists offers a critique of what has come to be known as New Keynesian Economics and provides alternative conceptions to each of its principal areas: (cid:127) price and quantity adjustments (cid:127) the labour market (cid:127) the capital market (cid:127) coordination failures (cid:127) public policy The volume is a response to Mankiw and Romer’s New Keynesian Economics, and to the claim that New Keynesian Economics has provided a unique micro-economic foundation for so-called Keynesian features and Keynesian results. John Maynard Keynes wrote that any theory based on such foundations was theoretically flawed, did not represent the world in which we lived and would entail disastrous consequences if used as the basis of public policy. Adhering to this position of Keynes, Post Keynesians reject any neoclassical foundation for Keynesian economics. Instead, they provide a richer theoretical foundation—which does not rely on the classical dichotomy embraced by all neo-classical economists—consistent with Keynes’ monetary theory of production. Roy J.Rotheim is Professor of Economics at Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, New York. He was previously Executive Editor of Challenge—The Magazine of Economic Affairs and Associate Editor of the Eastern Economic Journal. His principal publications have been in the areas of Keynesian uncertainty, economic theory, and the history of economic thought. ROUTLEDGE FRONTIERS OF POLITICAL ECONOMY 1 Equilibrium Versus Understanding: Towards the Rehumanization of Economics within Social Theory—Mark Addleson 2 Evolution, Order and Complexity—Edited by Elias L.Khalil and Kenneth E. Boulding 3 Interactions in Political Economy: Malvern After Ten Years—Edited by Steven Prassman 4 The End of Economics—Michael Perelman 5 Probability in Economics—Omar F.Hamouda and Robin Rowley 6 Capital Controversy, Post Keynesian Economics and the History of Economic Theory: Essays in Honour of Geoff Harcourt, Volume One—Edited by Philip Arestis, Gabriel Palma and Malcolm Sawyer 7 Markets, Unemployment and Economics Policy: Essays in Honour of Geoff Harcourt, Volume Two—Edited by Philip Arestis, Gabriel Palma and Malcolm Sawyer 8 Social Economy: The Logic of Capitalist Development—Clark Everling 9 New Keynesian Economics/Post Keynesian Alternatives—Edited by Roy J. Rotheim 10 The Representative Agent in Macroeconomics—James E.Hartley 11 Borderlands of Economics: Essays in Honour of Daniel R.Fusfeld—Edited by Nahid Aslanbeigui and Young Back Choi 12 Value Distribution and Capital—Edited by Gary Mongiovi and Fabio Petri 13 The Economics of Science—James R.Wible 14 Competitiveness, Localised Learning and Regional Development: Specialization and Prosperity in Small Open Economies—Peter Maskell, Heikki Eskelinen, Ingjaldur Hannibalsson, Anders Malmberg and Eirik Vatne 15 Labour Market Theory: A Critical Assessment—Ben J.Fine 16 Women and European Employment—Jill Rubery, Mark Smith, Damian Grimshaw 17 Explorations in Economic Methodology: From Lakatos to Empirical Philosophy of Science—Roger Backhouse 18 Wanting and Choosing: Essays on Subjectivity in Political Economy—David P. Levine NEW KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS/POST KEYNESIAN ALTERNATIVES Edited by Roy J.Rotheim London and New York First published 1998 by Routledge 11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2003. Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge 29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001 © 1998 Roy J.Rotheim All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book has been requested ISBN 0-203-43215-0 Master e-book ISBN ISBN 0-203-74039-4 (Adobe eReader Format) ISBN 0-415-12388-7 (Print Edition) CONTENTS List of contributors viii Foreword ix G.C.HARCOURT Introduction 1 ROY J.ROTHEIM PART I Prices, outputs and markets 1 Setting the record straight 15 PAUL DAVIDSON 2 Keynes and the New Keynesians on market competition 39 J.A.KREGEL 3 New Keynesian macroeconomics and markets 51 ROY J.ROTHEIM 4 Price theory and macroeconomics: stylized facts and New Keynesian fantasies 71 EDWARD J.NELL PART II The labour market 5 Wages and employment: a Keynesian model 106 CLAUDIO SARDONI 6 New Keynesian macroeconomics and the determination of employment and wages 118 MALCOLM SAWYER v CONTENTS 7 Some questions for New Keynesians 134 SERGIO NISTICÓ FABIO D’ORLANDO Appendix by BENEDETTO SCOPPOLA 8 Social norms as rational choices 153 MURRAY MILGATE CHERYL B.WELCH 9 New Keynesians, Post Keynesians and history 168 JOHN B.DAVIS 10 Elements of conflict in UK wage determination 182 PHILIP ARESTIS IRIS BIEFANG-FRISANCHO MARISCAL PART III Money, credit rationing and asymmetric information 11 Menu costs and the nature of money 205 MALCOLM SAWYER 12 Knowledge, information and credit creation 214 SHEILA DOW 13 Post and New Keynesians: the role of asymmetric information and uncertainty in the construction of financial institutions and policy 227 DORENE ISENBERG 14 Disembodied risk or the social construction of creditworthiness? 241 GARY A.DYMSKI 15 A Kaleckian view of New Keynesian macroeconomics 262 TRACY MOTT PART IV Post Walrasian macroeconomics 16 Beyond New Keynesian economics: towards a post Walrasion macroeconomics 277 DAVID COLANDER 17 Complex dynamics in New Keynesian and Post Keynesian models 288 J.BARKLEY ROSSER, JR. vi CONTENTS 18 Post Keynesian and strong Keynesian macroeconomics: compatible bedfellows? 303 COLIN ROGERS PART V Public policy 19 On a recent change in the notion of incomes policy 328 GIOVANNI CARAVALE 20 Money and interest rates in a monetary theory of production 339 BASIL J.MOORE 21 Macroeconomic policy for the long haul 356 HERBERT GINTIS Bibliography 370 Index 396 vii CONTRIBUTORS Philip Arestis, University of East London, England. Iris Biefang-Frisancho Mariscal, University of East London, England. Giovanni Caravale, formerly University of Rome, ‘La Sapienza’, Italy. David Colander, Middlebury College, USA. Paul Davidson, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA. John B.Davis, Marquette University, USA. Fabio D’Orlando, University of Rome, ‘La Sapienza’, Italy. Sheila Dow, University of Stirling, Scotland. Gary A.Dymski, University of California-Riverside, USA. Herbert Gintis, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, USA. G.C.Harcourt, University of Cambridge, England. Dorene Isenberg, Drew University, USA. J.A.Kregel, University of Bologna, Italy. Murray Milgate, University of Cambridge, England. Basil J.Moore, Wesleyan University, USA. Tracy Mott, University of Denver, USA. Edward J.Nell, New School for Social Research, USA. Sergio Nisticó, University of Rome, ‘La Sapienza’, Italy. Colin Rogers, University of Adelaide, Australia. J.Barkley Rosser, Jr., James Madison University, USA. Roy J.Rotheim, Skidmore College, USA. Claudio Sardoni, University of Rome, ‘La Sapienza’, Italy. Malcolm Sawyer, University of Leeds, England. Cheryl B.Welch, Simmons College, USA. viii FOREWORD It is a pleasure and a privilege to write a Foreword to Roy Rotheim’s volume on New Keynesian Economics/Post Keynesian Alternatives. I have known Roy since he was a graduate student and have noted with sustained admiration his range of scholarship, sound judgement and fine analytical abilities. I also know personally most of the contributors to the volume, and their writings, and for them too I have much respect. What inspires them all is their thorough understanding of both the economy and Keynes’s interpretation of it. So the contributors are not expressing mere piety sixty years on from the publication of The General Theory and fifty years on from the death of Keynes; rather, it is that they recognize deep insights when they see them and want to build on the basis of those insights. To do so not only means making the positive contributions to theory and policy which characterize this volume but also requires the need to criticize error, no matter how well intentioned the perpetrators of it. Thus, the New Keynesian theories are criticized because they are a thorough misnomer. They are based on a misinterpretation of Keynes which has disastrous consequences for understanding and policy. That Keynes-type results in the economy emanate from price-stickiness is a howler in two senses: it is a false reading of The General Theory and, more importantly, of how the economy actually works. If we are ever to get a just, equitable and efficient society, policies which try to increase the flexibility of markets are exactly the wrong ones to propose— that way lies greater instability, crisis and ultimately chaos. The essays in this collection are therefore greatly to be welcomed as an offset to this highly influential but misleading school of thought. The essays show the value of knowing what the really great in the profession actually said and, even more important, what the economy itself is able to tell us. Now read on. G.C.Harcourt Cambridge March 1997 ix
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