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Keynesian economics

Keynesian economics (/ˈkeɪnziǝn/ KAYN-zee-ǝn; sometimes


Keynesianism, named after British economist John Maynard Keynes)
are the various macroeconomic theories and models of how aggregate
demand (total spending in the economy) strongly influences economic
output and inflation.[1] In the Keynesian view, aggregate demand does
not necessarily equal the productive capacity of the economy. Instead,
it is influenced by a host of factors – sometimes behaving erratically –
affecting production, employment, and inflation.[2]

Keynesian economists generally argue that aggregate demand is


volatile and unstable and that, consequently, a market economy often
experiences inefficient macroeconomic outcomes – a recession, when
demand is low, or inflation, when demand is high. Further, they argue
that these economic fluctuations can be mitigated by economic policy
responses coordinated between government and central bank. In
particular, fiscal policy actions (taken by the government) and
monetary policy actions (taken by the central bank), can help stabilize
economic output, inflation, and unemployment over the business cycle.
[3] Keynesian economists generally advocate a regulated market

economy – predominantly private sector, but with an active role for


government intervention during recessions and depressions.[4]

Keynesian economics developed during and after the Great Depression


from the ideas presented by Keynes in his 1936 book, The General
Theory of Employment, Interest and Money.[5] Keynes' approach was a
stark contrast to the aggregate supply-focused classical economics
that preceded his book. Interpreting Keynes's work is a contentious
topic, and several schools of economic thought claim his legacy.
:
Keynesian economics, as part of the neoclassical synthesis, served as
the standard macroeconomic model in the developed nations during
the later part of the Great Depression, World War II, and the post-war
economic expansion (1945–1973). It was developed in part to attempt
to explain the Great Depression and to help economists understand
future crises. It lost some influence following the oil shock and resulting
stagflation of the 1970s.[6] Keynesian economics was later redeveloped
as New Keynesian economics, becoming part of the contemporary new
neoclassical synthesis, that forms current-day mainstream
macroeconomics.[7] The advent of the financial crisis of 2007–2008
sparked renewed interest in Keynesian policies by governments around
the world.[8]

Historical context
The General Theory
Main article: The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money

Keynes set forward the ideas that became the basis for Keynesian
economics in his main work, The General Theory of Employment,
Interest and Money (1936). It was written during the Great Depression,
when unemployment rose to 25% in the United States and as high as
33% in some countries. It is almost wholly theoretical, enlivened by
occasional passages of satire and social commentary. The book had a
profound impact on economic thought, and ever since it was published
there has been debate over its meaning.

Keynes and classical economics

Keynes begins the General Theory  with a summary of the classical


:
theory of employment, which he encapsulates in his formulation of
Say's Law as the dictum "Supply creates its own demand". He also
wrote that although his theory was explained in terms of an Anglo-
Saxon laissez faire economy, his theory was also more general in the
sense that it would be easier to adapt to "totalitarian states" than a free
market policy would.[50]

Under the classical theory, the wage rate is determined by the marginal
productivity of labour, and as many people are employed as are willing
to work at that rate. Unemployment may arise through friction or may
be "voluntary," in the sense that it arises from a refusal to accept
employment owing to "legislation or social practices ... or mere human
obstinacy", but "...the classical postulates do not admit of the
possibility of the third category," which Keynes defines as involuntary
unemployment.[51]

Keynes raises two objections to the classical theory's assumption that


"wage bargains ... determine the real wage". The first lies in the fact
that "labour stipulates (within limits) for a money-wage rather than a
real wage". The second is that classical theory assumes that, "The real
wages of labour depend on the wage bargains which labour makes with
the entrepreneurs," whereas, "If money wages change, one would have
expected the classical school to argue that prices would change in
almost the same proportion, leaving the real wage and the level of
unemployment practically the same as before."[52] Keynes considers
his second objection the more fundamental, but most commentators
concentrate on his first one: it has been argued that the quantity theory
of money protects the classical school from the conclusion Keynes
expected from it.[53]
:
Keynesian unemployment

Saving and investment

Saving is that part of income not devoted to consumption, and


consumption is that part of expenditure not allocated to investment,
i.e., to durable goods.[54] Hence saving encompasses hoarding (the
accumulation of income as cash) and the purchase of durable goods.
The existence of net hoarding, or of a demand to hoard, is not admitted
by the simplified liquidity preference model of the General Theory.

Once he rejects the classical theory that unemployment is due to


excessive wages, Keynes proposes an alternative based on the
relationship between saving and investment. In his view, unemployment
arises whenever entrepreneurs' incentive to invest fails to keep pace
with society's propensity to save (propensity is one of Keynes's
synonyms for "demand"). The levels of saving and investment are
necessarily equal, and income is therefore held down to a level where
the desire to save is no greater than the incentive to invest.

The incentive to invest arises from the interplay between the physical
circumstances of production and psychological anticipations of future
profitability; but once these things are given the incentive is
independent of income and depends solely on the rate of interest r.
Keynes designates its value as a function of r  as the "schedule of the
marginal efficiency of capital".[55]

The propensity to save behaves quite differently.[56] Saving is simply


that part of income not devoted to consumption, and:

... the prevailing psychological law seems to be that when aggregate


:
income increases, consumption expenditure will also increase but to
a somewhat lesser extent.[57]

Keynes adds that "this psychological law was of the utmost importance
in the development of my own thought".

Liquidity preference

Determination of income according to the General Theory

Keynes viewed the money supply as one of the main determinants of


the state of the real economy. The significance he attributed to it is one
of the innovative features of his work, and was influential on the
politically hostile monetarist school.

Money supply comes into play through the liquidity preference


function, which is the demand function that corresponds to money
:
supply. It specifies the amount of money people will seek to hold
according to the state of the economy. In Keynes's first (and simplest)
account – that of Chapter 13 – liquidity preference is determined solely
by the interest rate r—which is seen as the earnings forgone by holding
wealth in liquid form:[58] hence liquidity preference can be written L(r )
and in equilibrium must equal the externally fixed money supply M ̂ .

Keynes’s economic model

Money supply, saving and investment combine to determine the level of


income as illustrated in the diagram,[59] where the top graph shows
money supply (on the vertical axis) against interest rate. M ̂   determines
the ruling interest rate r̂   through the liquidity preference function. The
rate of interest determines the level of investment Î  through the
schedule of the marginal efficiency of capital, shown as a blue curve in
the lower graph. The red curves in the same diagram show what the
propensities to save are for different incomes Y ; and the income Ŷ 
corresponding to the equilibrium state of the economy must be the one
for which the implied level of saving at the established interest rate is
equal to Î.

In Keynes's more complicated liquidity preference theory (presented in


Chapter 15) the demand for money depends on income as well as on
the interest rate and the analysis becomes more complicated. Keynes
never fully integrated his second liquidity preference doctrine with the
rest of his theory, leaving that to John Hicks: see the IS-LM model
below.

Wage rigidity

Keynes rejects the classical explanation of unemployment based on


:
wage rigidity, but it is not clear what effect the wage rate has on
unemployment in his system. He treats wages of all workers as
proportional to a single rate set by collective bargaining, and chooses
his units so that this rate never appears separately in his discussion. It
is present implicitly in those quantities he expresses in wage units,
while being absent from those he expresses in money terms. It is
therefore difficult to see whether, and in what way, his results differ for
a different wage rate, nor is it clear what he thought about the matter.

Remedies for unemployment

Monetary remedies

An increase in the money supply, according to Keynes's theory, leads to


a drop in the interest rate and an increase in the amount of investment
that can be undertaken profitably, bringing with it an increase in total
income.

Fiscal remedies

Keynes' name is associated with fiscal, rather than monetary, measures


but they receive only passing (and often satirical) reference in the
General Theory. He mentions "increased public works" as an example
of something that brings employment through the multiplier,[60] but
this is before he develops the relevant theory, and he does not follow
up when he gets to the theory.

Later in the same chapter he tells us that:

Ancient Egypt was doubly fortunate, and doubtless owed to this its
fabled wealth, in that it possessed two activities, namely, pyramid-
building as well as the search for the precious metals, the fruits of
:
which, since they could not serve the needs of man by being
consumed, did not stale with abundance. The Middle Ages built
cathedrals and sang dirges. Two pyramids, two masses for the
dead, are twice as good as one; but not so two railways from
London to York.

But again, he doesn't get back to his implied recommendation to


engage in public works, even if not fully justified from their direct
benefits, when he constructs the theory. On the contrary he later
advises us that ...

... our final task might be to select those variables which can be
deliberately controlled or managed by central authority in the kind of
system in which we actually live ...[61]

and this appears to look forward to a future publication rather than to a


subsequent chapter of the General Theory.

Keynesian models and concepts


Aggregate demand

Keynes–Samuelson cross
:
Keynes' view of saving and investment was his most important
departure from the classical outlook. It can be illustrated using the
"Keynesian cross" devised by Paul Samuelson.[62] The horizontal axis
denotes total income and the purple curve shows C (Y ), the propensity
to consume, whose complement S (Y ) is the propensity to save: the
sum of these two functions is equal to total income, which is shown by
the broken line at 45°.

The horizontal blue line I (r ) is the schedule of the marginal efficiency of
capital whose value is independent of Y. The schedule of the marginal
efficiency of capital is dependent on the interest rate, specifically the
interest rate cost of a new investment. If the interest rate charged by
the financial sector to the productive sector is below the marginal
efficiency of capital at that level of technology and capital intensity
then investment is positive and grows the lower the interest rate is,
given the diminishing return of capital. If the interest rate is above the
marginal efficiency of capital then investment is equal to zero. Keynes
interprets this as the demand for investment and denotes the sum of
demands for consumption and investment as "aggregate demand",
plotted as a separate curve. Aggregate demand must equal total
income, so equilibrium income must be determined by the point where
the aggregate demand curve crosses the 45° line.[63] This is the same
horizontal position as the intersection of I (r ) with S (Y ).

The equation I (r ) = S (Y ) had been accepted by the classics, who had
viewed it as the condition of equilibrium between supply and demand
for investment funds and as determining the interest rate (see the
classical theory of interest). But insofar as they had had a concept of
aggregate demand, they had seen the demand for investment as being
given by S (Y ), since for them saving was simply the indirect purchase
:
of capital goods, with the result that aggregate demand was equal to
total income as an identity rather than as an equilibrium condition.
Keynes takes note of this view in Chapter 2, where he finds it present in
the early writings of Alfred Marshall but adds that "the doctrine is never
stated to-day in this crude form".

The equation I (r ) = S (Y ) is accepted by Keynes for some or all of the


following reasons:

As a consequence of the principle of effective demand, which


asserts that aggregate demand must equal total income (Chapter
3).
As a consequence of the identity of saving with investment
(Chapter 6) together with the equilibrium assumption that these
quantities are equal to their demands.
In agreement with the substance of the classical theory of the
investment funds market, whose conclusion he considers the
classics to have misinterpreted through circular reasoning
(Chapter 14).

The Keynesian multiplier

Keynes introduces his discussion of the multiplier in Chapter 10 with a


reference to Kahn's earlier paper (see below). He designates Kahn's
multiplier the "employment multiplier" in distinction to his own
"investment multiplier" and says that the two are only "a little different".
[64] Kahn's multiplier has consequently been understood by much of

the Keynesian literature as playing a major role in Keynes's own theory,


an interpretation encouraged by the difficulty of understanding
Keynes's presentation. Kahn's multiplier gives the title ("The multiplier
model") to the account of Keynesian theory in Samuelson's Economics 
:
and is almost as prominent in Alvin Hansen's Guide to Keynes  and in
Joan Robinson's Introduction to the Theory of Employment.

Keynes states that there is ...

... a confusion between the logical theory of the multiplier, which


holds good continuously, without time-lag ... and the consequence
of an expansion in the capital goods industries which take gradual
effect, subject to a time-lag, and only after an interval ...[65]

and implies that he is adopting the former theory.[66] And when the
multiplier eventually emerges as a component of Keynes's theory (in
Chapter 18) it turns out to be simply a measure of the change of one
variable in response to a change in another. The schedule of the
marginal efficiency of capital is identified as one of the independent
variables of the economic system:[67] "What [it] tells us, is ... the point
to which the output of new investment will be pushed ..."[68] The
multiplier then gives "the ratio ... between an increment of investment
and the corresponding increment of aggregate income".[69]

G. L. S. Shackle regarded Keynes' move away from Kahn's multiplier as


...

... a retrograde step ... For when we look upon the Multiplier as an
instantaneous functional relation ... we are merely using the word
Multiplier to stand for an alternative way of looking at the marginal
propensity to consume ...,[70]

which G. M. Ambrosi cites as an instance of "a Keynesian commentator


who would have liked Keynes to have written something less
'retrograde'".[71]
:
The value Keynes assigns to his multiplier is the reciprocal of the
marginal propensity to save: k  = 1 / S '(Y ). This is the same as the
formula for Kahn's mutliplier in a closed economy assuming that all
saving (including the purchase of durable goods), and not just
hoarding, constitutes leakage. Keynes gave his formula almost the
status of a definition (it is put forward in advance of any
explanation[72]). His multiplier is indeed the value of "the ratio ...
between an increment of investment and the corresponding increment
of aggregate income" as Keynes derived it from his Chapter 13 model
of liquidity preference, which implies that income must bear the entire
effect of a change in investment. But under his Chapter 15 model a
change in the schedule of the marginal efficiency of capital has an
effect shared between the interest rate and income in proportions
depending on the partial derivatives of the liquidity preference function.
Keynes did not investigate the question of whether his formula for
multiplier needed revision.

The liquidity trap


:
The liquidity trap.

The liquidity trap is a phenomenon that may impede the effectiveness


of monetary policies in reducing unemployment.

Economists generally think the rate of interest will not fall below a
certain limit, often seen as zero or a slightly negative number. Keynes
suggested that the limit might be appreciably greater than zero but did
not attach much practical significance to it. The term "liquidity trap"
was coined by Dennis Robertson in his comments on the General
Theory,[73] but it was John Hicks in "Mr. Keynes and the Classics"[74]
who recognised the significance of a slightly different concept.

If the economy is in a position such that the liquidity preference curve is


almost vertical, as must happen as the lower limit on r  is approached,
then a change in the money supply M ̂   makes almost no difference to
the equilibrium rate of interest r̂   or, unless there is compensating
:
steepness in the other curves, to the resulting income Ŷ. As Hicks put
it, "Monetary means will not force down the rate of interest any further."

Paul Krugman has worked extensively on the liquidity trap, claiming that
it was the problem confronting the Japanese economy around the turn
of the millennium.[75] In his later words:

Short-term interest rates were close to zero, long-term rates were at


historical lows, yet private investment spending remained
insufficient to bring the economy out of deflation. In that
environment, monetary policy was just as ineffective as Keynes
described. Attempts by the Bank of Japan to increase the money
supply simply added to already ample bank reserves and public
holdings of cash...[76]

The IS–LM model

IS–LM plot

Hicks showed how to analyze Keynes' system when liquidity preference


is a function of income as well as of the rate of interest. Keynes's
admission of income as an influence on the demand for money is a step
back in the direction of classical theory, and Hicks takes a further step
in the same direction by generalizing the propensity to save to take
both Y  and r  as arguments. Less classically he extends this
generalization to the schedule of the marginal efficiency of capital.

The IS-LM model uses two equations to express Keynes' model. The
first, now written I (Y, r ) = S (Y,r ), expresses the principle of effective
demand. We may construct a graph on (Y, r ) coordinates and draw a
line connecting those points satisfying the equation: this is the IS 
:
curve. In the same way we can write the equation of equilibrium
between liquidity preference and the money supply as L(Y ,r ) = M ̂ and
draw a second curve – the LM  curve – connecting points that satisfy it.
The equilibrium values Ŷ  of total income and r̂   of interest rate are then
given by the point of intersection of the two curves.

If we follow Keynes's initial account under which liquidity preference


depends only on the interest rate r, then the LM  curve is horizontal.

Joan Robinson commented that:

... modern teaching has been confused by J. R. Hicks' attempt to


reduce the General Theory to a version of static equilibrium with the
formula IS–LM. Hicks has now repented and changed his name from
J. R. to John, but it will take a long time for the effects of his
teaching to wear off.

Hicks subsequently relapsed.[77][clarification needed]

Keynesian economic policies


Postwar Keynesianism
Other schools of macroeconomic thought
See also
References
Further reading
External links
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