Artikel

Raising Keynes: A General Theory for the 21st century

Keynes’s General Theory argues there is no self-regulating mechanism that guarantees full employment. Keynes’s vision has been distorted by mainstream Keynesians to mean that it is the warts on the body of capitalism, not capitalism itself, that are the problem: frictions and imperfections and rigidities may interfere with the mechanism for self-regulation that inheres in the perfectly competitive model. This distortion has two supposed corollaries, first, that the more the economy resembles the textbook model of perfect competition, the less likely are lapses from full employment; second, that since imperfections are limited to the short run, so are lapses from full employment. Keynes was unable to convince the economics profession that the problem is capitalism; that the warts, real though they are, obscure a more fundamental problem. The reason is that Keynes lacked the mathematical tools to substantiate his vision. This paper deploys tools that were unavailable to Keynes, in order to lay the foundations of a Keynesian macroeconomics for the 21st century.

Language
Englisch

Bibliographic citation
Journal: EconomiA ; ISSN: 1517-7580 ; Volume: 19 ; Year: 2018 ; Issue: 1 ; Pages: 1-11 ; Amsterdam: Elsevier

Classification
Wirtschaft
Subject
Keynes
Dynamic vs static models
Flexprice adjustment
Fixprice adjustment

Event
Geistige Schöpfung
(who)
Marglin, Stephen A.
Event
Veröffentlichung
(who)
Elsevier
(where)
Amsterdam
(when)
2018

DOI
doi:10.1016/j.econ.2018.02.001
Handle
Last update
10.03.2025, 11:42 AM CET

Data provider

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Object type

  • Artikel

Associated

  • Marglin, Stephen A.
  • Elsevier

Time of origin

  • 2018

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