finalexam
History of Economic Thought
Notes for Weeks 13 & 14
Keynes’s Critique
Keynes had difficulty with almost every part of the Neoclassical’s claim that free
competitive markets are forever moving toward a full and efficient use of resources. He didn’t
accept Say’s law, thought the Neoclassicals had a flawed theory of the labor market, disagreed
with their theory of saving and investment, and did not see the interest rate as determined by the
loanable funds market.
One of his more important critiques, which in turn revolutionized the way in which
economists interpret capitalism, involved his alternative conception of money. He was among the
first mainstream economists to point out that money is held as an asset, even though it earns no
interest. The basic idea is that he saw money as a vehicle that allows individuals to bridge the
gap between the future and the present. People hold onto money not because they’re unaware of
the interest they could be earning from buying a financial asset, but because it’s the one asset that
can be used to buy things in the future. Unlike other assets, money has the advantage of being
liquid, i.e., easily used for transaction purposes. As a result, people tend to hold onto money,
even though it earns no interest, because they want to be sure they’ll have the liquidity needed to
purchase goods sometime in the future. To be sure, the extent to which people held onto money
for this purpose depends on the level of economic uncertainty and conditions in the financial
markets. But, for the moment, it’s enough to know that he saw the asset demand for money
growing whenever economic uncertainty was heightened. If the public is uncertain about the
future (say because of declining economic activity and rising unemployment), then people will
tend to hold onto money, causing the overall level of spending to fall. He did not believe that
people could be counted on to purchase goods whose value is equal to the value of what they
offer for sale. They may instead decide to hold onto a portion of the money they earn from
selling goods and not buy an amount whose value is equal to the value of what they offered for
sale. In other words, from Keynes’s perspective, it is not irrational to hold onto money beyond
the amount needed for transactions purposes.
Keynes’s rejection of Say’s Law carried with it a rejection of the Neoclassical insistence
that all economic decisions are made in real terms. As was noted in the notes on Say’s Law, the
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Neoclassicals see the decision to offer work or saving (or the decision to hire workers or borrow
money for investment purposes) as being carried out in terms of the real wage or the real interest
that could be earned from offering labor or saving. The same is true with regard to every other
decision. In short, Say’s Law assumes a barter economy or, perhaps more appropriately, one in
which money and finance play a minor role. But Keynes argued that finance and money are
actually at the core of what it means to have a capitalist economy. Rather than playing a minor
role, money is central to the operation of the system; and not simply because money serves as a
medium of exchange (the transactions function of money), but because it is the medium through
which future plans are connected to current decisions. What’s more, in the real world, decisions
are seldom made in real terms, not because people are unaware of the real value of their wages or
saving, but because the average price is beyond their control.
Thus, for example, the Neoclassicals claim that workers will offer less labor when the real
wage falls. In the context of unemployment this argument seems reasonable, so long as one stays
within the context of their theory of human behavior. A reduction in nominal wages, due to
unemployed workers competing against employed workers, would seem to cause real wages to
fall, which in turn would motivate workers to either cut back on the offer of labor or drop out of
the market. But this is much more difficult to imagine when we consider real wages falling as a
result of an increase in the general price level, while nominal wages remain unchanged. That is,
one would not expect fully employed workers to cut back on their offer of employment, or drop
out of the labor market, when real wages fall due to an increase in the price level. Indeed, in the
real world, they don’t. The reason for this is not because workers are unaware of the declining
real value of their nominal wages, but because they have no control over the prices of the things
they purchase (i.e., no control over the price level). What workers do respond to and try to have
some control over is the nominal wage, since there’s not much they can do about the price level.
It’s for this reason that the labor market doesn’t work quite the way Neoclassicals claim. In
the context of labor unemployment, workers do their best to hold onto their real wage by
resisting reductions in their nominal wage. Rather than there being a fall in the nominal wage,
and consequently a fall in the real wage, what happens is that the nominal wage remains
stagnant. While workers may not be able to influence the price level, they do try to influence
nominal wages. And they do this not by offering their labor at a lower nominal wage, but by
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searching for employment at the same nominal wage. Those who lose out in that competition and
remain unemployed were referred to as involuntarily unemployed by Keynes.
Keynes also rejected the idea that wages are set in the labor market. That is, he did not
accept the idea that wages are determined endogenously, from the interaction of supply and
demand in the national market for labor. Now, it’s important to note that he was not referring to
relative wages, but rather the average wage for labor as a whole. Like the Classicals, he saw the
average wage determined by exogenous factors. But while the Classicals saw the average real
wage as being determined by subsistence, Keynes, while not rejecting this idea, put greater
emphasis on the legal and institutional context of the economy (minimum wage laws, existence
of labor unions, labor laws, the international context, etc.). In short, Keynes assumes that the
average wage rate is given by exogenous factors.
In addition, Keynes rejected the Neoclassical interpretation of saving, investment and
interest. Keynes argued that saving (i.e. non consumption) is determined by the level of income,
and not the interest rate. He did this by introducing a theory of consumption that argued
consumption grows at a diminishing rate with respect to income (another way of saying this is
that saving grows at an increasing rate with respect to income). The amount by which
consumption changes due to a change in income, Keynes referred to as the marginal propensity
to consume, and it tends to diminish as the level of income increases. But since saving is the
counterpart to consumption, this is equivalent to saying that the marginal propensity to save
increases as the level of income grows. What’s important about this is that Keynes divorces the
decision to save (and consume) from the kind of utility maximizing calculus that’s central to the
Neoclassical way of thinking. Saving doesn’t occur because individuals are comparing the going
rate of interest to their marginal disutility of abstaining from current consumption, it instead
occurs because individuals have attained a level of income that allows them to save.
It’s important to note that, in this regard Keynes is implicitly introducing the concept of
necessity. While the Classicals took for granted the reality of necessary income and necessary
consumption, these notions died out with the coming of Neoclassical economics. Indeed, to this
day, Neoclassical economics shies away from this notion since it implies that alternatives or
substitutes are unavailable or difficult to find, a position that’s in direct contradiction to the core
of the Neoclassical paradigm. By reintroducing this notion, Keynes was able to depict saving as
an activity that is carried out after necessary consumption is taken care of. But, in addition, this
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same notion of necessity is implicit in the way Keynes characterizes the behavior of workers
with respect to the real wage. Workers, he argued, resist offering less labor when the real wage
falls, not because they’re unaware of the declining real value of wages, but because there’s a
minimum threshold below which necessities become unattainable. And in their effort to avoid
that outcome, workers do not cut back on their offer of labor when real wages fall; they instead
offer the same, or more, labor.
Keynes also rejected the notion that investment is determined by the relationship between
the marginal productivity of capital and the interest rate. He argued that the decision to invest is
determined by the relationship between what he called the marginal efficiency of capital and the
interest rate. His discussion of the marginal efficiency of capital is quite involved, but the basic
idea is that it represents an estimate made by capitalists of the rate of return that will be captured
in the future from investing in capital goods now. It is, in short, a guess of future profitability
and, as such, subject to all kinds of conjectures and capable of changing at a moment’s notice.
That is, the decision to invest in new productive capacity is not dependent on the relationship
between the marginal product of capital and the real interest rate, but rather on the relationship
between estimates of future profitability (the marginal efficiency of capital) and the nominal
interest rate.
The key idea here, as with his conception of money, is that capitalists have no way of
knowing the future. This is true even if the capitalist hires statisticians, accountants and
economists to estimate the flow of future profits from a potential investment. In the end, all such
estimates are nothing more than a guess, regardless of how sophisticated that guess might be.
The reason for this is that the future is unknowable. To be sure, we make plans and try to
safeguard future outcomes, but there is never any guarantee that our best-laid plans will work as
anticipated. Because of this, investment is subject to an enormous amount of uncertainty, and
capitalists will only invest if they’re reasonably confident that the marginal efficiency of capital
is greater than or equal to the going rate of interest. But confidence can easily vanish, and a
change of heart is all that’s needed to go from assuming that investment will be profitable to
imagining that it might entail a loss. Investment, in short, is quite volatile and tends to exhibit a
kind of herd mentality, rising when other capitalists seem confident about the future and falling
or stagnating when others are uncertain and leery.
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Because of the above, Keynes did not believe that the interest rate was determined in what
the Neoclassicals call the loanable funds market. He instead argued that it was determined by the
demand and supply for money. This was another major innovation on the part of Keynes. Instead
of thinking of the interest rate as a real magnitude, as imagined by Neoclassicals, Keynes thought
it was more appropriate to understand the interest rate as a nominal, monetary, magnitude. This
part of his theory is also quite involved and complex, but the basic idea is that Keynes saw the
rate of interest as a measure of what he called liquidity preference.
Keynes argued that the demand for money consisted of a transactions and an asset demand
for money. The transactions demand for money represents the demand to hold money for
transactions purposes. This part of his theory was compatible with the Neoclassical emphasis on
money as a medium of exchange. An increase in the volume of transactions, other things equal,
will induce an increase in the transactions demand for money, and vice versa. But the asset
demand form money involved a way of looking at money that is alien to, or rejected by, the
Neoclassical tradition. The asset demand for money consisted of what he called the
precautionary and the speculative motive. The precautionary demand for money involved the
straightforward notion that people often hold onto money not because it allows them to engage in
current transactions, but because they are cautious about the future. The speculative demand for
money involved the use of money for purposes of financial speculation. The idea here was that
wealthy individuals use money as a hedge against the vagaries of the financial markets, using it
as a fund from which to buy or sell financial assets for speculative purposes.
The combined impact of these different motivations led Keynes to the conclusion that
the interest rate is determined by what he called the liquidity premium. Since money is the most
liquid asset, people will be reluctant to part with it unless the rate of interest is sufficiently high
to ally their concerns. The degree to which people are willing to part with liquidity will depend
on the general state of confidence, or certainty, regarding the future behavior of the economy
and, more specifically, financial assets. If people become increasingly uncertain about the future,
they’ll increase the premium they attach to holding money and, as a result, will demand a higher
rate of interest to cover the higher premium they’re now attaching to liquidity. If, instead, people
are increasingly confident about the future, they’ll reduce the premium attached to holding
money and willingly accept a lower rate of interest before parting with it.
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The last critique implicit in Keynes’s theory involved the quantity theory of money and the
average price. Keynes did not see the supply of money as being exogenously determined, as do
the Neoclassicals. He instead saw the supply of money as being endogenously determined,
responsive to the needs of business and financiers. So, it’s not that the price level increases
because of an increase in the supply of money, it’s rather that the supply of money is increased
as a result of rising price level. What’s more, he thought of the price level as being determined
by some multiple (a markup) of the going wage rate.
Note that this last point leads to a theory of inflation that focuses on the struggle for
income on the part of capitalists and workers. That is, inflation, rather than being a result of too
much money in circulation, is instead thought of as a symptom of class struggle; where
capitalists increase the price of their output as a way of holding onto the profit margins that get
squeezed when wages rise. This has the effect of increasing the demand (and thus supply) of
money. If the spiral of rising wages and prices, in an effort to safeguard profits, grows faster than
output, then the net effect is inflation. The money supply does indeed grow under these
circumstances, but not because the central bank pushed more money into the system, but because
capitalists are demanding more money to safeguard their profits.
Keynes’s concept of effective demand
Given the above critiques, Keynes set out to create an entirely different framework to
explain the employment of labor. The basic idea was that the demand for labor was not
determined by the marginal productivity of labor in something called the labor market. Instead,
the demand for labor was determined by the effective demand for business’s output. The
effective demand for output represented that level of spending (aggregate demand) which could
effectuate the capitalist’s sales, and consequently profit, expectations. That is, at any moment in
time there exists a going wage rate and technology, and consequently a cost of production, as
well as a markup over cost that business owners customarily expect from the sale of their
product. Given that context, the number of workers capitalists hire depends on whether or not the
revenue they earn from selling the product generated by those workers is enough to cover their
cost plus anticipated profits. If sales revenue is greater than anticipated, capitalists will hire more
workers; if sales revenue is less than anticipated, capitalists will hire fewer workers; and if sale
revenue is consistent with expectations, capitalists will leave their hiring decisions unchanged.
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The effective demand for output represents that level of sales which meets capitalist’s
expectations.
Keynes referred to the effective demand for output as being that point at which aggregate
supply is matched by aggregate demand. Aggregate supply was thought of as the relationship
that exists between expected sales and employment. It represents the relationship introduced in
the previous paragraph, where the number of workers hired by capitalists depends on anticipated
sales (and thus profits). Aggregate demand represents the level of overall spending, both
consumption and investment spending, that both workers and capitalists engage in at various
levels of employment, given existing wages and markups. The consumption function makes up
the largest component of aggregate demand and grows at a diminishing rate as the level of
income and employment grows. The investment function makes up the other part of aggregate
demand. It is the more volatile component of aggregate demand, rising or falling in response to
changing profit expectations on the part of the capitalist class.
These relationships are depicted in the following figure. Note that sales revenue is depicted
in nominal terms along the vertical axis, while employment is measured on the horizontal axis.
That is, this graph provides a visual image of the relationship Keynes is establishing between the
nominal value of sales and the level of real employment. This is one of the ways in which
Keynes is underscoring the role of money, and nominal magnitudes, in the economic behavior of
capitalists, consumers and workers.
Z
D
d
N
d
Z, D
d
Ne
d
Ze
d
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The upward slopping curve labeled Z is the aggregate supply curve. It is upward slopping
to account for the existence of diminishing returns. And since it is expressed in nominal terms
the whole curve can rotate up or down depending upon whether wages and/or markups rise or
fall. If, for example, wages increase, then the Z curve would rotate upward. And if wages
decrease, then the Z curve would rotate downward. Similarly, if capitalists were to increase their
markups, with a stable wage rate, then the Z curve would rotate upward; and if they were to
decrease their markups, then the Z curve would rotate downward.
The curve labeled D represents the aggregate demand for output. It too is represented in
nominal, not real, terms. It captures the nominal value of spending the public at large will engage
in at various levels of employment, given existing wages and markups. As the level of
employment increases, consumption spending also increases but a diminishing rate. This is due
to the fact that the marginal propensity to consume decreases as the level of income and
employment increases. At the same time, the aggregate demand curve (D) also incorporates the
role of investment spending and it’s this latter component that makes aggregate demand
somewhat volatile. Keynes imagined aggregate demand moving up and down in response to
changes in investment spending which in turn is responding to changes in capitalist’s
expectations of future profitability and/or interest rates. Like the Z curve, aggregate demand can
move up or down, not only because of changing profit expectations and/or interest rates, but
because of changes in wages and/or markups. If the wage rate were to increase, other things
equal, then the D curve would shift up, and if the wage rate were to fall, then the D curve would
shift down; likewise for changes in the markup, though the impact would be less dramatic than
changes in the wage rate since it captures a smaller proportion of national income.
The effective demand for output is the point at which aggregate demand matches up with
aggregate supply. The equilibrium level of employment is determined by the effective demand
for output. If aggregate demand is greater than aggregate supply, then employment will be
growing, and if aggregate demand is less than aggregate supply, then employment will be falling.
It is only when aggregate demand is equal to aggregate supply that employment remains stable.
Note however, that this equilibrium level of employment need not correspond to the full
employment of labor. The number of workers seeking employment may very well exceed the
equilibrium level of employment. But, since sales and profit expectations are being met, there is
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no is no incentive motivating capitalists to hire the extra workers. They have no reason to change
their employment decisions.
The Neoclassicals argued that in the presence of unemployment, competition among
workers would cause the wage rate to fall, helping to eliminate unemployment by restoring full
employment at a lower real wage. Keynes used his theory of effective demand to explain why
this would probably not happen. He noted that if wages were indeed to fall, as Neoclassicals
suggest, then all that would happen is that both aggregate supply and aggregate demand would
fall, reducing the value of the effective demand for output, without necessarily changing the
equilibrium level of employment. In terms of the above figure, both the Z and the D curve would
fall, bringing about a lower level of effective demand but at the same level of employment. The
system as a whole will experience deflation but the level of unemployment will remain
unchanged. Indeed, it’s possible that, in the face of considerable deflation, aggregate demand
falls faster than aggregate supply bringing about drop in the equilibrium level of employment.
Under these more dramatic circumstances, the reduction in wages would actually increase the
level of unemployment, not reduce it.
Keynes, in short, did not believe that free markets automatically move the economy toward
the full employment of labor. Given this, society really has no other option, assuming that it’s
concerned about unemployment, but to rely on government to nudge the private sector toward
the full employment of labor. And the only way this can be accomplished, within the parameters
of a capitalist economy, is through fiscal and monetary policy. Keynes was convinced that his
theory implied that, from now on, capitalist societies would have to assign a much larger role to
government. Indeed, he believed that there was no other option but to accept the socialization of
investment, so as to maintain full employment over the long term.