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A Brief History of Macroeconomic Thought

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Title: A Brief History of Macroeconomic Thought


1
  • A Brief History of Macroeconomic Thought
  • and Policy in the 20th Century
  • Read Chapter 17 pages 350-368

2
  • I The Great Depression and Keynesian Economics
  • A) The Classical School and the Great depression.
  • 1) Classical economics is the body of
    macroeconomics thought associated primarily with
    nineteenth-century British economist David
    Ricardo. It emphasized the ability of flexible
    wages and prices to keep the economy at or near
    its natural level of employment.

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  • 2) The classical school saw the great
    depression as a short term aberration that would
    correct itself. Clearly they were wrong.
  • B) Keynesian Economics
  • 1) Keynesian economics asserts that changes in
    aggregate demand can create gaps between the
    actual and potential levels of output that can
    persist.
  • 2) The adjustment process is thwarted because
    prices tend to be sticky.

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  • 3) Keynesian Economics and the Great Depression
  • i) Started with an investment collapse
    following the excessive build-up during the
    roaring 20s.
  • ii) This shifted aggregate demand to the
    left.
  • iii) Two other factors contributed
  • a) Stock market collapse created a wealth
    effect.
  • b) Contractionary fiscal policy.
  • 4) Keynesian solution Expansionary fiscal
    policy.

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  • II Keynesian Economics in the 1960s and 1970s
  • A) Expansionary Policy in the 1960s Two
    Phases.
  • 1) Correcting a Recessionary Gap in the early
    1960s Kennedy Tax cuts and expansionary
    monetary policy.
  • 2) Too much stimulus during the late 1960s
  • created an inflationary gap.
  • B) The 1970s Troubles from the supply side.

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  • C) The Monetarist Challenge
  • 1) The Monetarist school holds that changes in
    the money supply are the primary cause of changes
    in nominal GDP.
  • 2) They do not advocate interventionist policy
    because they believe that lags associated with
    monetary policy are so long and variable that
    they are hard to control and can be
    destabilizing.

11
  • D) New Classical Economics A Focus on Aggregate
    Supply
  • 1) New classical economics is the approach to
    macroeconomic analysis built from an analysis of
    individual maximizing choices.
  • 2) Key assumption behind new classical
    economics is the assumption of rational
    expectations.
  • 3) Individuals have rational expectations if
    their expectations for the future are based on
    all information available to them and they act on
    those expectations.

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  • 4) One of the implications of classical economics
    is that policy effects are reduced.
  • E) Lessons from the 1970s
  • 1) Short run aggregate supply can shift over
    time.
  • 2) Money matters a lot.
  • 3) Policy stabilization is a delicate process.

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  • III An Emerging Consensus Macroeconomics for the
    Twenty-first Century
  • Modern economic thinking is for the most part a
    hybrid of all these views, being neither pure
    Keynesian, nor pure monetarist, nor pure
    classical.
  • The New Keynesian economics is a body of
    macroeconomic thought that stresses the
    stickiness of prices and need for activist
    stabilization policies though manipulation of
    aggregate demand.

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  • B) The 1980s and 1990s Advances in
    Macroeconomic Policy.
  • 1) The Revolution in Monetary Policy.
  • Fed policy moved to focus on inflation.
  • 2) Fiscal Policy Stepping back. Focus more on
    long term goals and in particular aggregate
    supply growth. Less focus on short term
    stabilization.

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