The purpose of this paper is to highlight the curiously circular course followed by mainstream macroeconomic thinking in recent times. Having broken from classical orthodoxy in the late 1930s via Keynes’s General Theory, over the last three or four decades the mainstream conventional wisdom, regressing rather than progressing, has now come to embrace a conception of the working of the macroeconomy which is again of a classical, essentially pre-Keynesian, character. At the core of the analysis presented in the typical contemporary macro textbook is the (neo)classical model of the labour market, which represents employment as determined (given conditions of productivity) by the terms of labour supply. While it is allowed that changes in aggre...
This paper sets out to reflect that contemporary schools of thought are unable to explain the great ...
It is interesting to look at instances of progress which are reversed or forgotten. Such is the subj...
peer reviewedAxel Leijonhufvud’s "On Keynesian Economics and the Economics of Keynes" (1968) d...
The purpose of this paper is to highlight the curiously circular course followed by mainstream macro...
Formal developments of the Keynes's General Theory, while attempting to achieve a new classical synt...
Ever since the publication of Keynes’ The General Theory in 1936, both the theoretical and methodolo...
The Queen of England famously asked her economic advisers why none of them had seen "it" (the global...
This paper provides an outline of the historical development of Keynesian macroeconomics. It first a...
Beginning in the late 1950s during the industrial revolution, new classical macroeconomists began to...
Both New Classical and New Keynesian macroeconomic theorists misunderstand and distort old Keynesian...
In 1936, Keynes published The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, one of the most infl...
This reassessment of J. M. Keynes's The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money results fro...
Left to its own devices, Keynes felt that there was no way a free market system, even with downwardl...
There is not much use to attack standard economics because deep in his heart the representative econ...
This paper (a revised version of Strathclyde Paper 2004-07) questions the thesis (again in fashion) ...
This paper sets out to reflect that contemporary schools of thought are unable to explain the great ...
It is interesting to look at instances of progress which are reversed or forgotten. Such is the subj...
peer reviewedAxel Leijonhufvud’s "On Keynesian Economics and the Economics of Keynes" (1968) d...
The purpose of this paper is to highlight the curiously circular course followed by mainstream macro...
Formal developments of the Keynes's General Theory, while attempting to achieve a new classical synt...
Ever since the publication of Keynes’ The General Theory in 1936, both the theoretical and methodolo...
The Queen of England famously asked her economic advisers why none of them had seen "it" (the global...
This paper provides an outline of the historical development of Keynesian macroeconomics. It first a...
Beginning in the late 1950s during the industrial revolution, new classical macroeconomists began to...
Both New Classical and New Keynesian macroeconomic theorists misunderstand and distort old Keynesian...
In 1936, Keynes published The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, one of the most infl...
This reassessment of J. M. Keynes's The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money results fro...
Left to its own devices, Keynes felt that there was no way a free market system, even with downwardl...
There is not much use to attack standard economics because deep in his heart the representative econ...
This paper (a revised version of Strathclyde Paper 2004-07) questions the thesis (again in fashion) ...
This paper sets out to reflect that contemporary schools of thought are unable to explain the great ...
It is interesting to look at instances of progress which are reversed or forgotten. Such is the subj...
peer reviewedAxel Leijonhufvud’s "On Keynesian Economics and the Economics of Keynes" (1968) d...