Ambrosi* Keynes ’ concept of a Zw-function relates the value of aggregate supply in wage units to employment. It aroused much controversy until the very recent past. A special bone of contention was the question of whether Keynes intended the Zw-curve to be drawn as a 45 line. This note argues that the 45 line, which Keynes did mention referred to equilibrium conditions ‘on ’ the Zw-curve but not to the shape of the curve itself. Keynes assumed that the Zw-curve is linear and its slope is determined by the share of wages in total income. The linearity assumption is helpful for consistent aggregation. This curve is based on conventional (neo)classical assumptions of profit maximisation under atomistic competition and on well-behaved produc...
In this paper, I build on the Keynesian analysis of the market for goods to draw some implications o...
their helpful comments. The usual disclaim applies. Keynes’s slip of the pen: aggregate supply curve...
This paper questions the usefulness of the neoclassical labour supply curve as a factor in the theor...
This paper focuses on Keynes’s exposition of the Principle of Effective Demand and its generalised m...
This paper focuses on Keynes’s exposition of the Principle of Effective Demand and its generalised m...
Keynes’s essay “Relative Movements of Real Wages and Output” is widely believed to be an important a...
This paper is intended to give a general, but rigorous view about what is the Z-function and what ar...
This paper is concerned with ambiguities in the Post Keynesian model regarding the nature of the fun...
Keynes had a lot of plausible things to say about unemployment and its causes. His ‘mercurial mind’,...
Most economists assume that Keynes's theory of the capitalist macroeconomy is adequately repres...
The paper suggests a consistent interpretation for the much debated Z-footnote on pp. 55-56 of the G...
Professor Tuchscherer (1984) offers a number of comments on my interpretation of Keynes1 labor marke...
Keynes’s General Theory argues there is no self-regulating mechanism that guarantees full employment...
Keynes had a lot of plausible things to say about unemployment and its causes. His ‘mercurial mind’,...
The article deals witli the problem of demand lor labour in the light ot J. M. Keynes' General Theo...
In this paper, I build on the Keynesian analysis of the market for goods to draw some implications o...
their helpful comments. The usual disclaim applies. Keynes’s slip of the pen: aggregate supply curve...
This paper questions the usefulness of the neoclassical labour supply curve as a factor in the theor...
This paper focuses on Keynes’s exposition of the Principle of Effective Demand and its generalised m...
This paper focuses on Keynes’s exposition of the Principle of Effective Demand and its generalised m...
Keynes’s essay “Relative Movements of Real Wages and Output” is widely believed to be an important a...
This paper is intended to give a general, but rigorous view about what is the Z-function and what ar...
This paper is concerned with ambiguities in the Post Keynesian model regarding the nature of the fun...
Keynes had a lot of plausible things to say about unemployment and its causes. His ‘mercurial mind’,...
Most economists assume that Keynes's theory of the capitalist macroeconomy is adequately repres...
The paper suggests a consistent interpretation for the much debated Z-footnote on pp. 55-56 of the G...
Professor Tuchscherer (1984) offers a number of comments on my interpretation of Keynes1 labor marke...
Keynes’s General Theory argues there is no self-regulating mechanism that guarantees full employment...
Keynes had a lot of plausible things to say about unemployment and its causes. His ‘mercurial mind’,...
The article deals witli the problem of demand lor labour in the light ot J. M. Keynes' General Theo...
In this paper, I build on the Keynesian analysis of the market for goods to draw some implications o...
their helpful comments. The usual disclaim applies. Keynes’s slip of the pen: aggregate supply curve...
This paper questions the usefulness of the neoclassical labour supply curve as a factor in the theor...