Thursday, October 24, 2019
Mathematical Interpretations of Keynesââ¬â¢s General Theory
IntroductionMany changes had occurred in the last century in every science. Economics was not the exception and a transformation into the theoretical approach took place in the 30s. In 1936 Keynes published ââ¬Å"The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Moneyâ⬠. Its main ideas set the foundations of macroeconomics and had influenced economics since.Unfortunately, Keynes had (and has) a bad reputation as a writer, because of this there has been constant analysis and interpretations of what he meant. Economists affirmed that Keynesââ¬â¢s innovating work, as any new approach, had some ââ¬Å"inconsistenciesâ⬠. Further, the book had small use of mathematics and, thus, had small proof of what it stated. Therefore, these ideas need interpretation and testing into the ââ¬Å"real worldâ⬠.Keynes Main IdeasKriesler and Nevile (2000) define the bookââ¬â¢s main points as follows:à ââ¬Å"â⬠¦in a capitalist economy employment, and hence unemployment, is determin ed by effective demand [â⬠¦] decisions about production and investment are made on the basis of expectationsâ⬠, and ââ¬Å"monetary variables influence real variables such as output and employment and real variables, in turn, influence monetary ones.â⬠One of the most daunting tasks was to set up a mathematical foundation of the cited Keynesââ¬â¢s works. The most important economists who performed this job were, in a ââ¬Å"crossed fertilization processâ⬠as Heller (2000) points it, Roy Harrod, James Meade and mainly John Hicks. In fact, in 1937 Hicks published an influential article, ââ¬Å"Mr. Keynes and the Classics: A suggested interpretationâ⬠that rapidly became the standard of Keynesian economics theory.Mathematical FoundationsThe Keynesââ¬â¢s ideas stated in the paragraphs above turned ââ¬Å"into simple mathematical models of the macro-economy; [and] the most long-lived and flexible, the ââ¬Å"IS-LM modelâ⬠, came from John R. Hicksâ⬠(Morgan 2001). Despite that, some authors suggest that Harrod and Meade had inspired the IS-LM model proposed by Hicks (Young, qt. in Heller, 2002)[1]. Others suggest that Champernowne and Reddaway also had some contribution into the modelââ¬â¢s formalization (Barens 1998, qt in Heller, 2002)Besides the multiple interpretations of Keynesââ¬â¢s work, Hicksââ¬â¢ one remains as one of the most important.As pointed by Heller (2000), the models proposed as explanations had similar expressions which are systems of simultaneous equations. And the mathematical formulationââ¬â¢s success of Keynesââ¬â¢s General Theory is because of the ââ¬Å"mathematical eleganceâ⬠and the exact nature of systems of simultaneous equations, which many consider alike; and particularly to Hicks who was the only one in representing the theory through diagrams. (Heller, 2002)As pointed, Harrod was another economist who performed a mathematical foundation for Keynesââ¬â¢s work. According to him, Keynes system corrects the traditional theory; allowing the Income level to be not given, the price level does not depend on the money, and money demand is divided in two. Due to all of this Harrod states that Keynes system is better than the traditional one. Keynes had a very positive view of Harrodââ¬â¢s development of his own work, which Harrods presented in the same conference where Hicks did. Hence, Keynes thought that Harrod works interpreted correctly his own ideas.But these authorsââ¬â¢ success in interpreting Keynesââ¬â¢s ideas is not free of detractors. Kriesler and Nevile (2000) made a clear stand of this: economists reject the ââ¬Å"IS-LM framework as being neither a valid simplification of the arguments in the General Theory nor a reliable model for analyzing macroeconomic issues.â⬠Economists think the IS-LM model ignores expectations and it is not useful to analyze a particular economy beside the static equilibrium[2]. They also affirm that Hicks t ook Keynesian macroeconomics to another direction from the one intended by the workââ¬â¢s author. à The same authors assert that Keynesââ¬â¢s own vision on Hicks model ââ¬Å"did have the faults that post Keynesians typically ascribe to IS-LM.â⬠[3]ConclusionKeynesââ¬â¢s work and the posterior mathematical development gave, to governments and to economists, answers that can be easily explained and understood by everyone only using analytical tools as diagrams or simple mathematics. What is more, those ideas were beyond the economic ââ¬Å"common senseâ⬠of the time: governments can spend during depressions.à Affirming if these formalizations of the model are what Keynesââ¬â¢s work pointed might be intimidating. Regardless of this and the different views, Hicks simplification and formalization of the model is useful, and catches the spirit of the work. As any first interpretation improvements were (and still are) made but the first task was accomplished.Refer encesHeller, Claudia, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money According to Brian Reddaway Economia em Revista, Vol. 10, pp. 15-32, 2002Heller, Claudia, The ââ¬ËGeneral Theory' Synthesis According to Roy Harrod in ââ¬ËMr. Keynes and Traditional Theoryââ¬â¢, Revista de Economia (Curitiba), Vol. 23, pp. 27-49, 2000Keynes, John Maynard, The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money (New York: Prometheus Books, 1997).Morgan, Mary, The formation of ââ¬Å"Modernâ⬠Economics: Engineering and Ideology, Department of Economic History, London School of Economics, May 2001, Available at ;http://www.lse.ac.uk/economicHistory/home.aspx;[1] Young proposed that to call it the ââ¬Å"IS-LM Harrod-Meadeâ⬠model. [2] It is important to make clear that many have pointed rational expectations as one of the inconsistencies in Keynesââ¬â¢s work. [3] Post Keynesian economists main critic to the IS-LM model is its static equilibrium nature, thus has no means to de al economyââ¬â¢s path of adjustment.
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