Microeconomics and Keynes
Microeconomics and Keynes
Microeconomics and Keynes
AND KEYNES
This volume, along with its companion volume Money, Macroeconomics and
Keynes, is published in honour of Victoria Chick, inspired by her own contribu-
tions to knowledge in all of these areas and their interconnections. This volume
represents both consolidation and the breaking of new ground in Keynesian
methodology and microeconomics by leading figures in these fields.
The chapters have been contributed by some of the many who admire Chick’s
work: Claudio Sardoni, Meghnad Desai, Maria Cristina Marcuzzo, Alexander
C. Dow and Sheila Dow, Geoffrey M. Hodgson, Roy J. Rotheim, Tony Lawson,
Jan Toporowski, Giuseppe Fontana and Bill Gerrard, Athol Fitzgibbons, Suzanne
W. Helburn, Brian J. Loasby, Donald Gillies and Grazia Ietto-Gillies, Fabiana
Santos and Marco Crocco, Ian Steedman, David Pearce, Carmen Aparecida Feijó,
Adriana M. Amado, Jochen Runde, and Peter A. Riach and Judy Rich.
The chapters cover a wide range of permutations and combinations of aspects
of the three areas: methodology, microeconomics and Keynes. The volume opens
with an account of Victoria Chick’s academic career and ends with a list of her
publications.
Philip Arestis is Professor and Research Director at the South Bank Business
School at South Bank University. Meghnad Desai is Professor of Economics and
Director of the Centre for the Study of Global Governance at the London School
of Economics. Sheila Dow is Professor, Department of Economics, University of
Stirling.
ROUTLEDGE FRONTIERS OF
POLITICAL ECONOMY
List of tables ix
List of contributors x
vii
CONTENTS
viii
TABLES
ix
CONTRIBUTORS
x
CONTRIBUTORS
xi
1
INTRODUCTION: ON CHICK’S
LIFE AS AN ACADEMIC
Keynes talked of The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money as part
of his ‘long struggle to escape from habitual modes of thought and expression’.
But these modes of thought and expression continued to prevail, requiring subse-
quent like-minded economists to engage in their own struggle to escape. Victoria
Chick is one of the leading economists to engage in such a struggle, and to assist
others in the process.
We have prepared this volume and its companion volume, Money, Macro-
economics and Keynes, bearing in mind the many economists, dispersed all over
the world, who have assiduously sought out Victoria Chick’s writings over the years
to provide illumination and inspiration, who have benefited from her teaching,
guidance and friendship, and who accordingly owe her a great debt of gratitude. It
is therefore with great pleasure that we have invited a subset of her enormous in-
ternational audience to contribute to the two volumes in her honour on the occasion of
her retirement from University College London (UCL).
Victoria Chick was born in 1936, in Berkeley, California. She studied at the
University of California at Berkeley where she took her Bachelor’s and Master’s
degrees. Berkeley’s Department of Economics was particularly strong and eclec-
tic at that time. Thus, very high quality and tremendous concentration of calibre
were two characteristics of the environment in which Victoria Chick developed as
an economist. The important ingredient of that environment was the disparity of
views that were flowing in the corridors and seminar rooms of the Department.
The independent character and personality of Victoria Chick were stimulated by
the diversity of theoretical views there, but she did not take sides on ideology or
methodology. That came later. However, a continuity in her relationship with
Berkeley was maintained through her friendship with Hyman Minsky.
At Berkeley she specialised in international trade theory and wrote a thesis
on Canada’s 1950s experience with flexible exchange rates. Then, in 1960 she
moved to the London School of Economics (LSE) to continue postgraduate stud-
ies, where the impetus of Berkeley was maintained, indeed enhanced. That was
the heyday of ‘Methodology, Measurement and Testing’ at the LSE. Just as at
1
P. ARESTIS, M. DESAI AND S. DOW
Berkeley previously, both staff and students at the LSE were of enormously high
caliber; Victoria Chick took full advantage of these opportunities. The Staff and
Graduate Student Seminar chaired by Lionel Robbins, Wednesday evenings in the
Three Tuns, and the London–Oxford–Cambridge graduate students’ seminars
provided the platform for fertile ideas to be disseminated and indeed to become
firmly embedded in the economics discipline. Victoria Chick was once more in
the middle of different views as to how the economy worked, but still her ideas
were in their gestation period.
In 1963 she took an Assistant Lectureship at UCL, and was promoted to
Lecturer during the following year. She was then moving away from international
economics to monetary theory and macroeconomics. Her book, The Theory of
Monetary Policy, grew out of her teaching, a clear indication that she takes serio-
usly the ideal of blending teaching with research; she continues an old tradition
of publishing new material as ‘lectures’ – a commendable way to teach. The book
was a conscious attempt to impose an order on monetary theory, an order which
by comparison to international economics was sadly lacking at that time. That she
did extremely well.
The approach of The Theory of Monetary Policy was in fact simultaneously
sympathetic to and critical of Keynesians and monetarists alike. Ultimately,
though, she rejected both schools of thought as theoretically inadequate.
Inevitably, the IS–LM apparatus, the accepted framework of monetary debate, had
to go as well. She had uncovered a logical inconsistency in the model which was
connected with its static method. The suggestion was not well received either by
the Anglo-American journals or by her own colleagues. Nonetheless, she per-
sisted and the relevant paper was published, some five years after its drafting.
As these ideas were falling into place, she attended the 1971 meeting of the
American Economic Association in New Orleans, where Joan Robinson gave her
famous Ely Lecture, ‘The Second Crisis in Economics’. At that gathering Joan
Robinson and Paul Davidson called a meeting of like-minded people, which gave
Victoria Chick great courage in discovering that she was not alone and thus pro-
vided her with a tremendous impetus to carry on.
Publishing The Theory of Monetary Policy had created a vacuum: mainstream
macroeconomics had been shown to be inadequate. Perhaps as a belated response
to Hyman Minsky’s earlier attempt, at Berkeley, to teach her Keynes’s General
Theory (see her Macroeconomics after Keynes, p. viii), she returned to that book
and began teaching it to her undergraduate students and developing her views in
the process. When she felt that she had a coherent and systematic story to tell, she
published Macroeconomics after Keynes. With this book Victoria Chick made a
major contribution to post-Keynesian thinking. As will become clear from the rest
of this introduction and the papers that follow in the two volumes, she had already
made her distinctive mark on post-Keynesian thought. Macroeconomics after
Keynes consolidated her position as one of the more important and regular con-
tributors to the attempt to complete and elucidate the post-Keynesian paradigm.
She was promoted to Reader in 1984 and to Professor in 1993.
2
INTRODUCTION
During the time Victoria Chick has spent at UCL, she supervised a great number
of Ph.D. students, many of whom are represented in the two volumes. Victoria
Chick has also taught at a number of universities throughout the world. These
include McGil1 University in Canada, University of California at Berkeley and at
Santa Cruz in the USA, Aarhus University in Denmark, University of Southampton
in the UK, University of Burgundy, Dijon in France, and the Catholic University of
Louvain in Belgium. As well as visiting universities, she spent a summer at the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York and eighteen months at the Reserve Bank of
Australia in Sydney. More recently (September–March, 2000–1) she has been
appointed Bundesbank Professor of International Monetary Economics tenable at
the Free University, Berlin.
Victoria Chick has been an active member of two British Study Groups, funded
by the ESRC: she served on the Committee of the influential Money Study Group
for many years; and she and Philip Arestis initiated and jointly chaired for many
years the active and successful post-Keynesian Economics Study Group. Victoria
Chick has also served as a member on the editorial board of the Review of
Political Economy (1987–93), European Journal of Political Economy (1985–94)
and Metroeconomica (1994–present). During the period 1991–6 she was elected
and served on the Council of the Royal Economic Society (RES). Over the period
1994–6 she served on the Executive Committee of the RES.
Many of the issues raised by Vicky still remain unresolved, particularly those in
monetary theory. Victoria Chick has an outstanding capacity to analyse critically
the logical foundations of theoretical structures and to uncover hidden assump-
tions. Her analysis goes beyond the level of theory to that of method, where many
of the apparent differences between theories have their source. She analyses the-
ories on their own terms, yet she does not hesitate to point out where she regards
these terms as unduly limiting with respect to real-world issues and to suggest
more fruitful lines of enquiry. Nor does she hesitate to criticise Keynes’s frame-
work, with which she is most strongly identified.
Although Victoria Chick’s own methodological approach has much in common
with that of Keynes, she has an emphasis which he left largely implicit: the his-
torical particularity of theories, that is the fact that different types of abstraction
may be better suited to some historical periods than others. This approach
encourages the fair-mindedness with which Victoria Chick explores different theo-
retical approaches for useful theories to deal with particular problems. She is not
afraid to state her views on each theory, and on how it is used: views which are
founded on a high standard of scholarship. The value of this aspect of Victoria
Chick’s work really cannot be emphasised enough.
We are grateful to Vicky’s many colleagues and friends who responded so pos-
itively to our request to contribute to this volume. We apologise to the many more
that have not been approached – this was entirely due to lack of space. We are also
grateful to Taylor & Francis, and especially to Alan Jarvis, who responded so
promptly and enthusiastically to our request to publish the two volumes.
3
2
ON THE MICROECONOMIC
FOUNDATIONS OF
MACROECONOMICS:
A KEYNESIAN PERSPECTIVE 1
Claudio Sardoni
1. Introduction
For several years now, I have been discussing the problem of microeconomic foun-
dations with Victoria Chick. I do hope that this chapter will provoke her reaction,
so that I can keep on enjoying the pleasure of an open-minded and constructive
discussion with Vicky, one of the most prominent representatives of post-
Keynesian economics and a friend.
All strands of contemporary mainstream macroeconomics share the strong belief
that macroeconomic theory must be based on sound microfoundations, which is
generally interpreted as macroeconomics being based on neoclassical microeco-
nomic foundations. In other words, macroeconomic analysis must be consistent
with the fundamental features of the neoclassical model of the economy. In this
chapter, I argue that macroeconomics must indeed be based on rigorous microeco-
nomic foundations, but this does not imply that the microfoundations of macroeco-
nomics must be neoclassical. Following Keynes’s approach to economics, the
explanation of macroeconomic phenomena can be based on an analysis of individ-
ual behavior that differs from the neoclassical model in fundamental respects.
The macroeconomics of the neoclassical synthesis of the 1950s and 1960s was
criticized for its lack of sound microfoundations. Since the monetarist ‘counter-
revolution’, the neoclassical synthesis has been accused of failing to reconcile its
analysis of the macroeconomy with its underlying neoclassical vision of the work-
ing of the microeconomy. The inconsistency between the so-called ‘Keynesian
results’ and the underlying neoclassical microeconomic model led monetarism and
new classical macroeconomics to reject Keynesian macroeconomics altogether.
More recently, new Keynesian economics has tried to reconcile ‘Keynesian results’
with rigorous microeconomic foundations. The ‘old Keynesians’ of the synthesis
tried to explain market failures at the macro-level by introducing some obstacles
4
A KEYNESIAN PERSPECTIVE
(or imperfections) into the working of the economic system,2 which were simply
assumed without any analytic explanation. New Keynesians argue that, instead,
these rigidities must be explained on the grounds of microeconomic analysis.
Non-mainstream economists, post-Keynesians in particular, have traditionally
looked at the debate on the microeconomic foundations of macroeconomics with
a great deal of suspiciousness. The attempt at explaining macro-phenomena on
the basis of the neoclassical vision of the world has been regarded as a betrayal
of Keynes’s own theory.3 Many post-Keynesian economists have held that what is
most needed is macroeconomic foundations of microeconomics rather than the
other way around (see e.g. Crotty 1980; Kregel 1987). Individual behavior is
necessarily constrained and conditioned by crucial inherent characteristics of a
capitalist market economy. It is those characteristics that must be taken into con-
sideration in order to provide a satisfactory explanation of individual behavior.
Although I agree with the view that individual behavior is socially conditioned,
I also believe that acknowledging this does not imply renouncing the development
of a rigorous analysis of how individuals decide and act in a decentralized capital-
ist economy. Section 2 below is devoted to arguing that macroeconomics needs to
be based on a rigorous analysis of individual behavior, i.e. on microeconomic
foundations, even though such microfoundations must not necessarily be neoclas-
sical and based on methodological individualism. Quite to the contrary, in my
view, rigorous microeconomic foundations imply a radical critique of neoclassical
economics.
In this perspective, I regard Keynes’s original contribution to the analysis of the
working of a market economy as fundamental. Keynes tried to base his macro-
theory on microeconomic foundations that were not neoclassical. His vision of
the basic features of a market economy led him to stress the importance of social
conditioning of individuals’ behavior. In this respect, Keynes’s fundamental
notion of uncertainty and of decision making within an uncertain framework
plays a crucial role. Moreover, from Keynes’s analysis of the working of a market
economy in conditions of uncertainty, it emerges that the crucial decisional units
are entrepreneurs rather than generic optimizing individuals. This interpretation
of Keynes, which emphasizes the importance of microeconomic analysis, is not
generally accepted; therefore, Section 3 is concerned with showing that Keynes
indeed based his macroeconomic theory on microeconomic foundations that were
essentially non-neoclassical.
Keynes’s approach to the analysis of individual behavior represents a fundamen-
tal contribution to the construction of non-neoclassical microeconomic foundations
of macroeconomics but, in my view, he left some problems unsatisfactorily dealt
with and in need of further developments. Here, in Section 4, I concentrate on some
problems that are more directly connected to the analysis of the decisional units that
are crucial in a capitalist market economy, entrepreneurs and firms. In particular, in
Section 4, attention is concentrated on two aspects that are related to one another:
Keynes’s hypothesis of short-period decreasing returns and his choices concerning
the issue of market forms. Finally, I draw some conclusions in Section 5.
5
C. SARDONI
6
A KEYNESIAN PERSPECTIVE
is seen as the direct derivation of Keynes’s General Theory, then the criticism is
correct. However, as all post-Keynesians have strongly argued, Keynes’s theory
cannot be reduced to the neoclassical synthesis.
The issue of the microeconomic foundations of macroeconomics in Keynes
must be dealt with by looking at his own works and not by vicariously consider-
ing the approach developed by the neoclassical synthesis.5 The following section
is devoted to showing that Keynes actually grounded his macroeconomic theory
on microeconomic analysis and that it was significantly different from the
neoclassical analysis of individual behavior. Fundamental distinctive aspects of
Keynes’s approach are his emphasis on uncertainty and on the fact that entrepre-
neurs, rather than generic optimizing agents, are the crucial decisional units in a
capitalist economy.
7
C. SARDONI
8
A KEYNESIAN PERSPECTIVE
paradigm in the most convincing way may give rise to difficulties when the
emphasis is shifted toward the analysis of how actual economies work. Here,
I consider two topics in which these aspects of Keynes’s approach appear quite
clearly and further analytical developments are required. I look at the hypothesis
of decreasing short-period returns and the problem of market forms, two topics
that are strictly related to one another.
The notion of aggregate supply function, which plays an important role in The
General Theory, was obtained by Keynes as an extension to the economy as a
whole of the Marshallian industry supply curve.9 He obtained an upward sloping
supply curve by making the hypothesis that individual supply curves are increas-
ing because of short-period decreasing returns. Although Keynes’s, and Marshall’s,
notion of decreasing returns is different from the canonical neoclassical hypothe-
sis, it is nonetheless unable to provide support to the hypotheses of U-shaped mar-
ginal cost curves and of an upward sloping aggregate supply curve.10
In general, the safest hypothesis on short-period returns is that they are constant
and, hence, short-period marginal cost curves have a reverse-L shape, i.e. they are
flat to capacity and then rise vertically. This hypothesis is supported by empirical
evidence.11 In turn, the adoption of a hypothesis of constant returns leads to the con-
clusion that, in general, also industry supply functions and the aggregate supply
function are reverse-L shaped. In principle, such a conclusion is not necessarily
true, but in order to obtain upward sloping supply curves it would be necessary also
to accept other unrealistic results. If all firms in an industry are identical and have
reverse-L-shaped cost curves, the industry supply function takes on the same shape.
But, if it is admitted that firms are of differing efficiency, it is possible to obtain
a continuously increasing supply function by arguing that the number of firms is so
large and the degree of efficiency is so differentiated that all the discontinuities in
the supply function are ‘filled’ by firms of differing efficiency. Continuously
increasing supply functions obtained in this way, however, imply an unrealistic con-
sequence. Any situation in which demand is below the level corresponding to the
industry’s full capacity implies that there must be some firms (the least efficient or
marginal firms) that do not produce at all, while all the others produce to full
capacity. Thus, if more realistic situations, in which all firms in an industry produce
below capacity, have to be explained, the simplest and most acceptable hypothesis
is that industry supply functions are flat up to capacity. As to the shape of the
aggregate supply function, the conclusions are analogous to those reached for
industry supply functions. If industries’ supply functions are reverse-L-shaped, the
aggregate supply function retains the same shape.
If the hypothesis of a flat to capacity (full employment) aggregate supply curve
is accepted, increases in effective demand do not give rise to increases in the
general price level, unless the economy reaches full employment or one or more
industries experience a bottleneck.12 Once the economy has reached full employ-
ment, the aggregate supply function becomes vertical: further increases in demand
give rise only to price increases since no expansion of output is possible. If
one or more industries reach full capacity earlier than others, the aggregate
9
C. SARDONI
10
A KEYNESIAN PERSPECTIVE
be regarded as acceptable when the emphasis of the analysis is shifted toward the
explanation of how actual economies work. The hypothesis of short-period
decreasing returns is affected by logical inconsistencies and does not have any
convincing empirical support. A hypothesis of constant (if not increasing) returns
should be regarded as more adequate in studying the working of real economies.
If decreasing returns are rejected, an explicit hypothesis of some form of imper-
fect competition becomes necessary, a hypothesis that is largely supported by
empirical evidence.14 In such a way, a more realistic analysis of firms’ behavior
could be carried out, and macroeconomics would be based on foundations that are
not only more realistic but also more rigorous than neoclassical microeconomics;
as they would not be flawed by the logical inconsistencies that mar the traditional
view of the firm.
5. Conclusion
In dealing with the topic of the microeconomic foundations of macroeconomics,
post-Keynesian economists often tend to emphasize that what is really needed is the
macroeconomic foundations of microeconomics. The insistence on microeconomic
foundations essentially means to distort Keynes’s theory and an explicit hypothesis
of imperfect competition implies a weakening of Keynes’s theory. Although I share
the conviction that the behavior of individuals is conditioned by macroeconomic
factors, I also believe that this should not imply that the development of macroeco-
nomic analysis can be carried out by ignoring microeconomic issues. It cannot be
ignored that aggregate outcomes derive, though in a non-simplistic way, from indi-
vidual decisions and actions.
For post-Keynesians, Keynes’s theory represents a radical break with orthodox
economics. In his attempt to explain the world in which we live, Keynes provided
a new alternative theoretical framework, which post-Keynesians try to develop
further.15 I argued that the development of Keynes’s theory also requires carry-
ing out a rigorous analysis of the microeconomy. Keynes followed this line of
approach, even though he left some problems unsolved.
In this chapter, I concentrated on two aspects of Keynes’s analysis that cannot be
regarded as fully satisfactory, the problem of short-period decreasing returns and
the problem of market forms. Post-Keynesian efforts to develop Keynes’s theory
should also be directed to providing a more satisfactory analysis of these topics.
In this respect, Kalecki’s work, and more recent work done in that tradition,16 are
an important contribution. Kalecki’s analysis of firms operating in an oligopolis-
tic regime can be coherently integrated into Keynesian analyses of the macro-
economy in an uncertain context.
It is likely that Keynes did not pay much attention to the analysis of costs and
to the problem of market forms also because he believed that such topics were not
crucial for the validity of his principle of effective demand, and that accepting the
traditional hypotheses would have reinforced his critique of the dominant para-
digm. Post-Keynesians, however, should now take a different perspective.
11
C. SARDONI
Notes
1 I would like to thank G. Harcourt, W. Harcourt, P. Kriesler and the editors of this volume
for their helpful comments on an earlier version of this chapter.
2 In particular, wage rigidities were used to provide a justification for the existence of
involuntary unemployment.
3 Also the new Keynesian approach to microfoundations has been, by and large, consid-
ered as an attempt to develop macroeconomics along neoclassical lines.
4 In this respect, Marx’s view is still relevant: ‘In this society of free competition, the
individual appears detached from the natural bonds etc. which in earlier historical periods
make him the accessory of a definite and limited human conglomerate … But the epoch
which produces this standpoint, that of the isolated individual, is also precisely that of the
hitherto most developed social … relations.’ (Marx 1973: 83–4).
5 In this regard, Greenwald and Stiglitz have recently taken a position that certainly is more
correct. They hold that Keynes had indeed based his analysis on microeconomic founda-
tions. However, they also view Keynes’s foundations as essentially traditional and incom-
patible with his vision of the working of the macroeconomy (Greenwald and Stiglitz 1993:
25n). Greenwald and Stiglitz take chapter 18 of The General Theory as an example of the
traditional character of Keynes’s microfoundations (Greenwald and Stiglitz 1987: 127–31);
but post-Keynesians (e.g. Shackle 1967) have traditionally looked at Chapter 18 as one of
the chapters where the innovative character of Keynes’s economics appears most clearly.
6 Keynes’s famous 1937 article in the Quarterly Journal of Economics (1937 [1973b]:
109–23) is perhaps the clearest exposition of his vision of uncertainty and how individ-
uals cope with it: ‘By “uncertain” knowledge, let me explain, I do not mean merely to
distinguish what is known from what is only probable. The game of roulette is not sub-
ject, in this sense, to uncertainty … The sense in which I am using the term is that in
which the prospect of a European war is uncertain … About these matters there is no sci-
entific basis on which to form any calculable probability whatever. We simply do not
know.’ (1937 [1973b]: 113–4).
7 For Kregel, ‘individual actions are constrained by the actions of other individuals which
cannot be predicted with certainty and thus when taken together form an aggregate or
global or macroeconomic constraint which is not the simple, linear, and therefore pre-
dictable summation of individual behaviour’ (Kregel 1987: 528).
12
A KEYNESIAN PERSPECTIVE
08 Among the factors which determine output, ‘it is those which determine the rate of
investment which are most unreliable, since it is they which are influenced by our
views of the future about which we know so little’ (1937 [1973b]: 121).
09 On Keynes’s aggregate supply function, see Tarshis’s (1979) excellent analysis.
10 For Keynes, like for Marshall, decreasing returns are due to the heterogeneity of fac-
tors of production rather than to the varying quantity of homogeneous factors em-
ployed. For more details on this topic, see Sardoni (1994).
11 Sylos Labini (1988: 276) refers to some empirical studies that confirm the hypothesis
of reverse-L-shaped direct cost curves.
12 This, of course, is true under the hypothesis that the money wage rate is constant until
full employment is reached.
13 On the other hand, it is reasonable to think that reaching a bottleneck, which causes the
prices of some goods to rise vertically, might give rise to changes in the demand com-
position. In such a case, even if one or more industries reach full capacity earlier than
others, the aggregate supply function could remain flat until full employment is
reached: the increase in the prices of the goods in shortage could induce a shift of
demand toward goods whose prices are still unchanged.
14 An explicit assumption of imperfect competition ‘is not one for which you have to
make an apology, you have to apologise when you are assuming perfect competition
which manifestly does not exist’ (B. Reddaway, in Harcourt 1985: 96–7).
15 Also recently, post-Keynesians have offered important contributions to the develop-
ment of several aspects of Keynes’s theory. See e.g. the recent essays by eminent post-
Keynesians on a ‘second edition’ of The General Theory (Harcourt and Riach 1997).
16 For a recent work on microeconomic foundations from a Kaleckian perspective, see
Kriesler (1996).
17 See e.g. Shapiro (1997), where it is argued that imperfect competition is irrelevant for
Keynes’s analysis, but see also Marris (1997) for an opposite viewpoint.
18 On this, see Harcourt’s contribution to this volume.
References
Crotty, J. R. (1980) ‘Post-Keynesian Economic Theory: An Overview and Evaluation’,
American Economic Review 70(2): 20–5.
Greenwald, B. and Stiglitz, J. E. (1987) ‘Keynesian, New Keynesian and New Classical
Economics’, Oxford Economic Papers 39: 119–32.
Greenwald, B. and Stiglitz, J. E. (1993) ‘New and Old Keynesians’, Journal of Economic
Perspectives 7: 23–44.
Harcourt, G. C. (ed.) (1985) Keynes and His Contemporaries. London: Macmillan.
Harcourt, G. C. and Riach, P. (eds) (1997) ‘A Second Edition’ of The General Theory.
London and New York: Routledge.
Kahn, R. F., 1989 (1929), The Economics of the Short Period. London: Macmillan.
Keynes, J. M. (1936) [1973a] The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes, Vol. 7, The
General Theory of Employment Interest and Money. London: Macmillan.
Keynes, J. M. (1937, 1938) [1973b] The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes,
Vol. 14, The General Theory and After – Part II. London: Macmillan.
Keynes, J. M. (1939) [1973a] ‘Relative Movements of Real Wages and Output’, Economic
Journal, Reprinted in The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes, Vol. 14,
pp. 394–412.
Kregel, J. (1987) ‘Rational Spirits and the Post Keynesian Macrotheory of
Microeconomics’, De Economist 135(4): 520–32.
13
C. SARDONI
14
3
THE NATURE OF EQUILIBRIUM IN
KEYNES’S GENERAL THEORY
Meghnad Desai
1. Introduction
The core of Victoria Chick’s (VC hereafter) work has been Keynes, the General
Theory and money. She has espoused a non-dualistic (non-Cartesian) and non-
formalistic, open-systems-oriented and historically grounded approach to
economic theorising, sensible of the inevitable ambiguities and aware of the
institutional specificities. In this essay in her honour, I want to take up a theme in
her work which relates intimately to the core of her concerns – the nature of
equilibrium in Keynes’s General Theory (GT hereafter). This also connects with
her methodological writings on formalism in economics. Equilibrium is also a
theme which she has pursued in a consistent way over the twenty-five years
of her published work and even longer in her lectures and conversations.
I shall pay particular attention to the most recent of her writings on the subject
in which she put forward the notion of provisional equilibrium (PE) (Chick
1997b).
In Section 2 I discuss the notion of equilibrium as it is taught in economic the-
ory. This is a somewhat pedagogic section but nonetheless useful in demonstrating
the range of equilibrium concepts which are currently in use. Then in Section 3,
I discuss VC’s notion of PE which is her most mature characterisation of Keynes’s
equilibrium in the GT. In Section 4, I put the notion of PE on a formal footing tak-
ing advantage of the discussion in Section 2. I develop a more explicit and formal
description of PE though no proofs are provided at this stage. Much remains to be
done as I point out in the concluding section.
15
M. DESAI
Equilibrium is at once the most commonly used idea in economics and the most
confusing to many economists and non-economists. Grown-up men and women
have been unable to agree on its meaning and scope. Some like Nicholas Kaldor
have traversed a path from a firm belief in the concept to total agnosticism over
a lifetime in economic theorising (Kaldor 1934, 1972). A crude version of the
concept – supply-equals-demand – has entered popular imagination so much that
even a sophisticated financial expert like George Soros asserts that that is all there
is to economics (Soros 2000). So let us go a step at a time.
Static partial equilibrium. The simplest notion is of course the static partial
equilibrium notion of demand-equals-supply. Formally, it is the intersection of
the demand schedule and the supply schedule in the price–quantity space (or
equivalently the solution to the demand and supply equations). It is presumed in
textbook diagrams, though it is not necessarily true, that (a) such an intersection
is in the positive orthant and yields a non-negative, indeed positive, price and
quantity as solutions, and/or (b) that it is unique. Textbooks discuss only the most
restrictive case presuming a unique equilibrium in the positive orthant.
Of course the simple notion is the popular one. It is also the easy one to teach.
Multiple equilibria are quite possible. They are mentioned sometimes when
the discussion moves on to the stability of equilibrium. Textbooks contrast
Marshallian and Walrasian notions of stability by highlighting that one can be sta-
ble and the other unstable, given certain configurations of demand and supply. In
cases of multiple equilibria some can be stable and others unstable. Stability may
of course only be local rather than global.
Thus even the simplest case of demand-equals-supply is fraught with a multi-
plicity of possibilities. We may have locally/globally stable/unstable unique/mul-
tiple positions of equilibrium even in the partial static case. But even this simple
listing exposes gaping holes in the simple notion of equilibrium within its own
terms. Thus two questions need to be asked:
The answer to the first question involves aggregation. The supply curve is pretty
straightforward for a competitive industry with price-taking firms. The supply
16
NATURE OF EQUILIBRIUM
17
M. DESAI
18
NATURE OF EQUILIBRIUM
is giving agents signals which do not cause agents to alter their theory (Hahn
1973: 59)’ (ibid., p. 227). Agents act on the basis of the theory they hold of the
economy. They base their expectations on their theories, and if the outcome is
such as not to falsify their theory they do not change behaviour or their theory. It
is possible that different agents have different theories unlike in the standard
rational expectations (RE) case where everyone knows the unique ‘true’ model.
There is also the possibility of Bayesian learning. TE does however make heroic
assumptions about perfect information. The solution concept of a Nash equilib-
rium which is most often used does assume that each agent knows the strategies
of all the other agents. (Recent game theoretic work has introduced new solution
concepts such as perfect equilibrium. I leave them aside partly for want of space
and largely for lack of expertise on these topics.)
Equilibrium in economic theory is thus a very rich notion, though even at the
end of this inventory one is aware how much simpler models are than the world
they are purporting to describe. Thus it is not surprising that many economists are
impatient with the notion of equilibrium and wish to speak of disequilibrium. But
if equilibrium is difficult to model, disequilibrium is impossible. This is so in the
sense that in disequilibrium anything can happen, and if one wants to sketch out
the behaviour of an economy in disequilibrium it is impossible to do so without
saying something about systematic (i.e. consistent) predictable (i.e. derivable
from some theory) behaviour. Sometimes when people speak of disequilibrium,
they may merely mean a dynamic rather than a static or comparative static model,
for example a limit cycle rather than a static equilibrium. At other times they may
be rejecting a particular class of restrictions, for example the assumption in
RE models that everyone has the same model. Or they may prefer a non-linear
model to a linear one. The rich array of equilibrium concepts available allows for
much flexibility and they need to be exhausted before one may plunge into the
uncharted waters of disequilibrium analysis.
3. Provisional equilibrium
With that background how do we characterise the equilibrium in GT? There have
been many views expressed – that it is a disequilibrium model disguised as com-
parative statics, that it is a comparative statics model overlaid with dynamic literary
additions, that whatever it is it is inconsistent with microfoundations, that is, with
Walrasian general equilibrium. VC has explored this question in a series of papers
spanning twenty-five years (Chick 1973/7 1978/92, 1983, 1991, 1992, 1997a, b).
There are some constant themes but there is also progression in the articulation of
the GT model. The constant themes are:
19
M. DESAI
3. The nature of the monetary economy with the pivotal importance of credit in
financing production leading to a causal primacy of investment over saving.
As I said above, it is in the article written with Maurizio Caserta that the most
recent and in my view most mature of these analyses occurs. I shall therefore dis-
cuss that article.
Provisional equilibrium (PE) is a variation of TE. While TE can be modelled in
terms of the one-period-ahead expectations of all agents for all commodities, in PE
there is an additional complication that investment decisions by entrepreneurs are
conditional on long-term expectations. Thus, unlike TE, a PE is a consistent solu-
tion of short-term expectations of many agents conditional on the long-term
expectations of the entrepreneurs. Long-term expectations of investors are volatile
partly because the future values of the marginal efficiency of capital are unknown
and unknowable and partly because of the influence of animal spirits. (Other fac-
tors mentioned in the article cited are signal extraction and analytical convenience
for choosing PE as a way of describing GT equilibrium.)
The equilibrium is provisional in the sense that it is not final, that is, stationary
or steady state. Nor is it clear that the sequence of PE will converge to a long-term
or final equilibrium. This could be the case if agents’ long-term expectations as
well as short-term expectations could be fulfilled. But, as the authors say, Keynes
never worried about the long-period equilibrium. This is because ‘he considered
the question of whether entrepreneurs’ expectations of long-term profits would be
realised (the long-period equilibrium of his short-period equilibrium) to be irrel-
evant. The result would not guide entrepreneurs’ future action, as the circum-
stances surrounding the investment decisions may have changed.’ (ibid., p. 230).
This leads the authors to an important conclusion: ‘Thus, “progress” towards the
neo-Ricardian final equilibrium depends, if it is to happen at all, on continual
recalculation and the repeated exercise of animal spirits, in new and always
uncertain circumstances. Convergence is far from guaranteed.’ (ibid., p. 230).
20
NATURE OF EQUILIBRIUM
Note that each agent can have a different forecasting rule (Grandmont 1988,
introduction).
In the Keynesian case there are different types of agents – consumers, workers,
producers, rentiers and entrepreneurs. There is an overlap between these categories.
Thus producers and entrepreneurs overlap, as do consumers and workers. But the
distinction is as to what they focus on in generating their short-term forecasts. Thus
as VC showed in Macroeconomics after Keynes, one has to periodise as between
the action of these different agents. Within the unit period, producers have pri-
macy in generating their forecasts of what the demand will be and deciding on
how many workers to hire and what to pay given their wage and price expecta-
tions. Consumers/workers make their plans but may revise them in light of what
the producers decide by way of hiring. Entrepreneurs have long-term expectations
about profitability which are fragile (high variance) but they also have animal
spirits. Rentiers have expectations about the course of the money supply and in-
terest rates.
Thus we can distinguish between agents and confine their expectations to a
subset of the variables. This is not necessary since everyone can have expectations
about everything but there is some convenience to using common sense to sim-
plify the problem. So we denote Xc consumers and Xl workers, Xk producers,
Xr rentiers and Xe entrepreneurs. The variables are aggregate supply price Z,
aggregate demand price D, N is employment, wages w, price p, interest rate r. We
assume a single commodity besides labour, bonds and money. The production
function of the single commodity is a standard one and capital stock is given as
usual in a GT model.
Producers generate expectations about D knowing the production function and
decide on wages and the price level. Consumers/workers having formed initial
expectations about Z estimate their incomes wN and decide on consumption
which is part of D. Producers hire and pay wages and workers receive and spend
wages. The difficult element in the equilibrium is investment. This depends on
entrepreneurs’ expectations about long-term profitability and animal spirits. Let us
say that the timing and size of investment demand is erratic because of this. This
makes the estimate of D erratic. Therefore analogous to eqn (1) above, the X vec-
tor in the present case, comprising {Z, D, N, w, p, r}, can be written as follows:
Xt ⫽f {X*k (D, w, r), X*r (r, p); X*c, 1 (Z, w, p); X** (4)
e (Z, p, r)}.
21
M. DESAI
decides first, I have clubbed together producers and rentiers whose expectations
determine the cost of credit and the size of output/employment. Then con-
sumers/workers decide on their demand given expected income. Lastly all this
depends on the entrepreneurs’ long-term expectations. Long-term expectations are
denoted by a double asterisk. The analogues of (2) and (3) can be easily written.
Equation (4) is just a formal exercise. We have to go further and put some flesh
on the bare bones of the equilibrium. Let me for the present take the rentiers’
expectations as given, and hence take the interest rate as given as well. In line
with GT chapter 3, we can then trace out the aggregate demand aggregate supply
equilibrium as follows. Given the expectations about D and w and r, producers
decide on employment. They do this by inverting the aggregate supply curve de-
rived from the production function (see Chick (1983) for details).
This says that employment is decided on the basis of expected aggregate demand
and wages. The function F is the inverse of ø which is the standard notation for
aggregate supply. Now D is the sum of consumption and investment.
Consumption is decided as follows:
Equation (9) is then the PE of the Keynesian GT model. In each case it is made
clear as to whose expectations they are by putting in the subscripts k, c and e. We
have also the superscripts * and ** to clarify whether these are short- or long-run
22
NATURE OF EQUILIBRIUM
expectations. The question is, will (9) be solvable, that is, do the two sides really
equal each other?
In chapters 3 and 5 where Keynes discusses this output employment equilib-
rium, he dwells mostly on the expectations of the firm, that is, of the producers. If
we had k instead of c in the first term on the right-hand side of (9), that is with the
consumption function C, only the long-term expectations of the entrepreneurs will
remain as a complication. Here again since producers overlap with entrepreneurs,
we could get away by saying that these are the short- and long-run expectations of
the same people.
This will not quite do. But even if that was the case, we still have animal spir-
its to deal with. Let me offer the following scenario.
We may have low animal spirits u⫽0 and then D⫽C{D/p(w)}⫹I{G(w)⫺r}.
This is a low demand scenario. If u takes on a higher value, then D will be higher
and so will be N which then will feed back on C and so on. So animal spirits will
make the PE fragile in any case.
But the really important insight is that there are long-term expectations about
profitability of the entrepreneurs who will be a subset of the producers and they
may differ from those who are not investing but merely producing. Thus our PE
departs from a TE in the vital sense that both short- and long-run expectations are
involved in its determination. The situation which will be realised will thus
depend on the investment decision for this double reason – fragility of long-term
profitability expectations, and animal spirits. It can be anywhere in the range
given by u as it varies from 0 to 1, as shown in Fig. 3.1.
In any case the left-hand side of (9) less the first term on the right-hand side
will equal investment at some level. So it all depends on I. Equilibrium will thus
depend on I.
Z W (N )
I (u =1)
I (u = 0)
Nc Ni 0 N 0 Ni 1 N
23
M. DESAI
It is very difficult to say anything about long-term convergence since it is not the
spirit of GT. But the sort of a story a Walrasian or his twin neo-Ricardian will tell is
clear from eqn (9) above. Fix u at its expected value (assuming moments exist of the
pdf of u). Then, given r, there will be a value of w at which, after repeated iterations,
the model will converge. So profitability will be that in the long and the short run
which satisfies (9), given a mean value of u. It is not a story that VC would buy.
5. Conclusion
I have attempted a very crude and simple demonstration of PE of the Keynesian
model. Its connections with TE have been shown and an attempt was made to set
up the chapter 3 model in the framework of PE. Much work remains to be done
of course, but then there are plenty of years ahead for all of us to do just that.
References
Abramovitz, M. et al. (eds) (1958) The Allocation of Economic Resources. Stanford, CA:
Stanford University Press.
Arrow, K. J. (1958) ‘Towards a Theory of Price Adjustments’, in Abramovitz (1958).
Arrow, K. J. and Hahn, F. H. (1971) General Competitive Analysis. San Fransisco, CA:
Holden Day.
Arrow, K. J. and Honkapojha, S. (1985) Frontiers of Economics. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
Chick, V. (1973/7) The Theory of Monetary Policy. London: Gray Mills/Oxford; Parkgate
Books, Basil Blackwell.
Chick, V. (1978/92) ‘The Nature of the Keynesian Revolution: A Reassessment’,
Australian Economic Papers June. Reprinted in Chick (1992).
Chick, V. (1983) Macroeconomics After Keynes: A Reconsideration of the General Theory.
London: Philip Allan.
Chick, V. (1991) ‘The Small Firm Under Uncertainty: A Puzzle of the General Theory’,
Discussion Papers in Economics 91-10, UCL.
Chick, V. (1992) In P. Arestis and S. Dow (eds), On Money Method and Keynes: Selected
Essays.
Chick, V. (1997a) ‘The Multiplier and Finance’, in G. C. Harcourt and P. A. Riach (eds), A
Second Edition of General Theory, Vol. 1, Chapter 11. London: Routledge.
Chick, V. (1997b) ‘Provisional Equilibrium and Macroeconomic Theory’, with Maurizio
Caserta, in P. Arestis, G. Palma and M. Sawyer (eds), Markets, Unemployment and
Economic Policy: Essays in Honour of Geoff Harcourt, Vol. 2, London: Routledge.
Desai, M. (1973) ‘Growth Cycles and Inflation in a Model of the Class Struggle’, Journal
of Economic Theory, Vol. 6, pp. 527–545, December.
Feinstein, C. E. (ed.) (1967) Socialism, Capitalism and Economic Development. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Fisher, F. M. (1983) Disequilibrium Foundations of Equilibrium Economics. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Goodwin, R. M. (1967) ‘A Growth Cycle’, in Feinstein (1967).
Goodwin, R. M., Krueger, M. and Vercelli, A. (1984) Nonlinera Models of Fluctuating
Growth. Berlin: Springer-Verlag.
24
NATURE OF EQUILIBRIUM
25
4
FROM THE FUNDAMENTAL
EQUATIONS TO EFFECTIVE
DEMAND: ‘NATURAL EVOLUTION’
OR ‘CHANGE OF VIEW’?
1. Premise
One of the difficult tasks, which any scholar of Keynes’s writings is confronted
with, is that of tracing the relationship between the General Theory and the
Treatise. To this controversial matter, which has spawned a large literature,
I would like to contribute with a further element which does not seem to have
received as much attention as others, namely an investigation into Keynes’s own
assessment of the relationship between his two books.
Keynes was convinced that there was a fundamental continuity between the
Treatise and the General Theory. Throughout the process which led him from the
former to the latter book, he repeatedly claimed that the Treatise analysis was in
fact compatible with that of the General Theory and that he had made the new
argument only ‘much more accurate and instructive’ (Keynes 1936 [1973b]: 77).
In fact, the transition from the Treatise analysis, as presented in the
Fundamental Equations and that of the General Theory, as incorporated in the
principle of effective demand, required the introduction of new concepts and a
change in definitions, which eventually made the latter approach quite distinct
from the former. However, Keynes wanted his readers to believe that ‘under the
surface […] the essential ideas are the same’ (Skidelsky 1992: 442), and pre-
sented his new book as a ‘natural evolution’ in his line of thought. (Keynes 1936
[1973b]: xxii).
In this paper I follow this evolution step by step, comparing Keynes’s own
measurement of the distance from his previous framework of analysis with our
present understanding of the change involved in the process of building up the
new one. To spin the narrative, I divide the five years spanning from the publica-
tion of the Treatise to that of the General Theory into three time-legs, which I
have marked as Stages I, II and III. The first dates from comments and criticism
26
FROM FUNDAMENTAL EQUATIONS TO EFFECTIVE DEMAND
on the Treatise (autumn 1930) to the early material for the new book and lectures
(spring 1932). Stage II spans from the Easter Term 1932 lectures, which were
attended by members of the ‘Circus’, to the summer 1933, when the writing of
the new book was well under way. The final stage runs from the 1933 Michaelmas
Term lectures and the contemporary fragments of versions of the General Theory,
when the principle of effective demand was clearly expounded, to the final
touches to the proofs in December 1935.
Q1 ⫽ I⬘ ⫺ S,
Q2 ⫽ I ⫺ I⬘,
Q ⫽ Q1 ⫹ Q2
⫽ I ⫺ S.
There are different effects on the system, according to how profits are spent. In the
‘widow’s cruse’ example (Keynes 1930 [1971]: 125), if entrepreneurs spend their
extra profits on consumption goods, the positive gap between the cost of invest-
ment goods and saving widens: the price of consumption continues to increase,
and so do profits. When profits are positive, entrepreneurs have an incentive to
increase output and employment; if losses occur, both output and employment will
be reduced. However, adjustment of output is not the object of the analysis in ques-
tion, although in the ‘banana plantation’ example (Keynes 1930 [1971]: 158ff.) the
effect of losses (due to an autonomous increase in saving) on output is taken up to
show the potential instability of the system (Barens 1987). If, starting from an
equilibrium condition (prices ⫽ costs of production, saving ⫽ investment), there
is an increase in saving, the price of consumption goods fall, entrepreneurs incur
losses and so cut back on employment. A new equilibrium position is reached only
when either: (a) output is reduced to zero; (b) the reduction in saving no longer
occurs; and (c) investment increases and exceeds saving (Keynes 1930 [1971]:
160). The possibility that equilibrium is reached at a positive level of output was
not envisaged.
The Fundamental Equations apparatus was the object of criticism from the out-
set. Hawtrey, Robertson, Pigou and Kahn objected to some of Keynes’s definitions
27
M. C. MARCUZZO
and conclusions. In particular, three issues came to the forefront: (a) the
‘independence’ of the forces underlying determination of the two price levels;
(b) the definition of saving; and (c) the price–output adjustment mechanism.
As a result of the various criticisms, a few months after publication of the
Treatise Keynes recast his argument in a new form. The first evidence of a change
in formulation is the account which he gave in the Harris Foundation lectures
(June 1931) of the reason for expecting a positive equilibrium level of output to
be reached:
Unlike the ‘banana plantation’ example, the possibility that the equilibrium level
of output may be less than zero is now given, on the basis of the assumed behav-
iour of saving: ‘[…] as soon as output has declined heavily, strong forces will be
brought into play in the direction of reducing the net volume of saving’ (Keynes
1973a: 356). This result was anticipated in a letter to Kahn of 17 April 1931 (dur-
ing the ‘Circus’ period): ‘[...] when O [output] is falling, unless entrepreneurs’
expenditure on consumption falls faster than O, there is a reduction of saving’
(Keynes 1979: 12). What, however, remained to be determined was at which level
of profit entrepreneurs are no longer inclined to continue production, or, on the
other hand, have an incentive to expand production. The solution was found in a
new relationship, which Keynes attributed to Kahn (Keynes 1973a: 368), the ag-
gregate supply curve.1
During the summer of 1931, Keynes worked to pin down cases where ‘points
of equilibrium output can be reached which fall short of maximum and zero’
(Keynes 1973a: 374). The mechanism he submitted to Kahn in a letter of 20
September 1931 may be outlined thus: an increase in investment (I) raises prof-
its (Q), part of the increase in profits going into savings (S); at the same time, an
increase in profits raises output (O), along the aggregate supply curve, and thus
brings about a further increase in savings. However, the profit per unit of output
(Q/O) declines as output increases since profits fall as savings rise. Keynes’s con-
clusion was that ‘If Q/O reaches zero before O reaches maximum, we have “long-
period unemployment”, i.e. an equilibrium position short of full employment.’
(Keynes 1973a: 374).
Kahn was not totally convinced (Keynes 1973a: 375); it was clear that the ques-
tion was far from being settled. Keynes had to work out the new formulation
afresh, which is what he set out to do in the autumn of 1931. He told Lydia on
22 November: ‘I have begun again quietly in my chair writing about monetary
theory’ (Skidelsky 1992: 432). In fact, early in 1932, in a draft,2 he was able to
28
FROM FUNDAMENTAL EQUATIONS TO EFFECTIVE DEMAND
present the ‘vital generalisation’ of the proposition that entrepreneurs tend to in-
crease or decrease their output according as their profit is increasing or
decreasing, which runs as follows:
29
M. C. MARCUZZO
This result was reached on the ‘presumption’ (Keynes 1979: 41) that changes
in saving, following a change in investment, rather than offset, reinforce the
effects of the change in investment on profit and output. The main argument was
that changes in investment and output were positively correlated: an increase in
output is equal to an increase in sales receipts (⫽income); an increase in
investment is equal to an increase in sales receipts (⫽income) minus expenditure
on consumption; consumption and income are positively correlated, therefore
changes in investment and changes in output have the same sign. This ‘proof’ was
challenged by Kahn, Austin and Joan Robinson who signed a Manifesto and
offered an ‘alternative’ (as Keynes put it) or ‘complementary’ (as Joan Robinson
had it in her subsequent correspondence) solution (Keynes 1973a: 378). The au-
thors of the Manifesto claimed that demonstration would be better handled ‘by
the method of supply and demand’ (Keynes 1979: 43). The increase in investment
– they argued – leads directly to an increase in the level of output because it raises
the demand for consumption goods; assuming as given the supply conditions of
these goods, the new level of output of consumption goods and thus the aggregate
level of output can immediately be determined.7
Keynes was reluctant ‘to scrap all my present half forged weapons’ (Keynes
1973a: 378), as he wrote to Joan Robinson, but shortly afterwards he gave in. In
the lectures of Michaelmas Term 1932, when he changed the title of his course to
‘The Monetary Theory of Production’,8 he took up the ‘method’ of the Manifesto.
However, once again he pledged that ‘a change in demand as a whole relatively
to supply as a whole due to deficient disbursement […] is the same thing as what
in my Treatise on Money, I have called an excess of saving over
investment’ (Keynes 1979: 53).
In those lectures, windfall profits are the signals which induce entrepreneurs to
revise their production decisions, but whether or not entrepreneurs are making
profits is now made dependent on whether disbursements (i.e. expenditure) are
greater than earnings. According to his new terminology (Rymes 1989: 57),
unlike the Treatise, total income, E⬘, includes profits, being defined as
E⬘⫽ E ⫹ Q ,
while E retains its old meaning of earnings. Moreover, the ‘new term’ (Rymes
1889: 57) disbursement, D, is defined as the sum of investment, I, and expendi-
ture on consumables, F, which are made equal to income. Then we have
D ⫽ I ⫹ F ⫽ E⬘ ⫽ E ⫹ Q
30
FROM FUNDAMENTAL EQUATIONS TO EFFECTIVE DEMAND
and
Q ⫽ I ⫺ (E ⫺ F) ,
hence
Q ⫽ I ⫺ S.
Parallel to the change in the definition of income, a new concept of saving was
introduced, which Keynes labelled ‘surplus’, retaining S (⫽E⫺F) for saving:
S⬘⫽ S ⫹ Q.
Equality is said always to exist between investment and surplus, the adjustment
mechanism being provided by the price of consumables (Rymes 1989: 62); sav-
ing being here described as ‘something that has to occur to make more investment
possible at the existing price level’ (Rymes 1989: 61).
The ambiguity of Keynes’s position at the time – his formulation being halfway
between the Treatise and the General Theory – is well revealed by the following
passage from a fragment from which he appears to have lectured on 14 November
1932:
[…] if, starting from a position of equilibrium with saving and invest-
ment equal, the price level stable and the factors of production fully
employed, there occurs a change which causes the rate of interest exist-
ing at the moment to become such as to cause saving to be in excess of
investment9 prices will fall, rates of earnings will fall, and output will
fall, in accordance with the argument in my Treatise of Money.
(Keynes 1979: 56)
31
M. C. MARCUZZO
Moggridge is persuaded – unlike Patinkin (1976) – that by the time of this article
the ‘penny had firmly dropped for the theory of effective demand’ (Moggridge
1992: 564). Certainly, a visible leap forward from the Treatise was accomplished
in Stage II, with the crucial discovery of the income–expenditure approach, which
provided the framework where the multiplier could be fully accommodated.10
As late as 17 August 1933 writing to Macmillan Keynes appeared to think that
he could revise the Treatise accordingly, believing that he was just putting off
revising it ‘until my next book has appeared’ (Keynes 1973a: 420). As we know,
the revision was not to be and perhaps could never have been.
Y⫽E⫹Q⫽C⫹I⫽D
or
Q ⫽ D ⫺ E ⫽ I ⫺ ( E ⫺ C ).
Facing once again the task of accounting for the change in the definition of
saving from the Treatise, Keynes presented the following:
S ⫽ Y ⫺ C ⫽ E ⫹ Q ⫺ C,
and then explained that he had decided to retain the notation, S, and the word
Saving for Y ⫺ C and to define S⬘, corresponding to the definition of saving in
the Treatise, as Economising (Keynes 1979: 69). He then rewrote the price equa-
tions of the Treatise, insisting that, although the definitions were not identical
with those given in the previous book, ‘they deal with substantially the same con-
cepts which I was then driving at’ (Keynes 1979: 72).
We have now two definitions of savings (S and S⬘) and two corresponding def-
initions of profits (Q and Q⬘) to distinguish their meaning from that in the
Treatise, according to the following expression:
S⬘ ⫽ E ⫹ Q⬘ ⫺ C .
32
FROM FUNDAMENTAL EQUATIONS TO EFFECTIVE DEMAND
He stressed the compatibility of his present treatment with the Treatise, by saying
that Q⬘ was the ‘flow of quasi-rent relevant to long-period expectations’, while Q is
relevant for the short period (Rymes 1989: 107; Keynes 1979: 72).
The Fundament Equations had by now (Rymes 1989: 110) become
Y ⫽ E ⫹ Q ⫽ C ⫹ I ⫽ D,
S ⫽ E ⫹ Q ⫺ C ⫽ Y ⫺ C,
⌬S ⫽ ⌬Q ⫹ ⌬(E ⫺ C) ⫽ ⌬I ,
hence
⌬Q ⫽ ⌬S ⫺ ⌬S⬘
and
⌬Q ⫽ ⌬I ⫺ ⌬S⬘.
In March 1934 Keynes was convinced that the book was by then ‘nearing com-
pletion’ (Keynes 1973a: 422). From this period we have the versions of chapters
6–12 of the index to the book, which now bore the title The General Theory of
33
M. C. MARCUZZO
Employment, Interest and Money, written before his journey to the United States
in June 1934, and the provisional versions of chapters 8–9 written over the sum-
mer.13 In those drafts he insisted on compatibility with the Treatise analysis, by re-
ferring to entrepreneur’s windfall profits or losses as the difference between effec-
tive demand and income (Keynes 1973a: 425) and explaining the change in the
definitions of income and saving as ‘a change of terminology and not a change of
view’ (Keynes 1973a: 476).
The issue of explaining the relationship between the new book and the old one
arose again. On 29 November 1934, he wrote to a Spanish correspondent, Luc
Beltram:
[…] in a work of mine which will probably come out in about a year’s
time I deal with the underlying theory on what at any rate on the surface,
would appear to be lines rather different from those adopted in my
Treatise on Money. Under the surface, however, the essential ideas are
the same.
(Skidelsky 1992: 442)
The General Theory was finished in late December 1935. In the final version
Keynes carefully indicated where his new argument departed from the old. First,
there was the change in the definition of income:
34
FROM FUNDAMENTAL EQUATIONS TO EFFECTIVE DEMAND
seeking to maximise his present and prospective profits […]; whilst the
volume of employment which will maximise his profit depends on
the aggregate demand function given by his expectations of the sum of
the proceeds resulting from consumption and investment respectively on
various hypotheses.
(Keynes 1936 [1973b]: 77)
Third, there was determination of the equilibrium level of output at less than
full employment:
Summing up, reinterpreting in Stage III his former approach based on the
Fundamental Equations in the light of the latter, based on Effective Demand,
Keynes claimed to have established compatibility between the two. The ‘expected
increase of investment relatively to saving’ as defined in the Treatise had become
‘a criterion of an increase in effective demand’ (Keynes 1936 [1973b]: 78). So he
felt confident to present the escape from his ‘old ideas’ as continuity in his line
of thought, granting that the exposition in the Treatise was ‘of course, very con-
fusing and incomplete in the light of the further developments here set forth’
(Keynes 1936 [1973b]: 78).
5. Conclusion
Throughout the writing of the General Theory, Keynes was at pains to make the
new approach compatible with the Treatise. First, he presented the argument,
reached probably at the end of 1931, according to which changes in the volume
of output and employment ‘depend upon the changes in disbursement relative to
earnings’ as a ‘generalisation’ of the old argument, where it was dependent upon
changes in investment relative to saving. Second, during the second half of 1932,
in adopting the new ‘method’ – a fall in output and employment depended on ‘a
change in demand as a whole relatively to supply as a whole due to deficient dis-
bursement’ – he presented it as ‘the same thing’ as an excess of saving over
investment. Third, when in the autumn of 1933 he introduced effective demand
and showed that equality of aggregate expenditure to aggregate costs may well
occur at a level of output below full employment, he very cursorily mentioned
that in the Treatise he just ‘failed to point [this] out’.
35
M. C. MARCUZZO
Keynes managed to present his former approach as compatible with the latter
by: (a) reinterpreting profits of the Treatise ‘as determining the current expecta-
tion of profit’; and (b) presenting a change in the excess investment over saving
of the Treatise as ‘a criterion’ of an increase in effective demand. However, he
must have had doubts that his attempted reconciliation was entirely successful,
since he wrote in the Preface to the General Theory:
The scope for the history of economic thought is to review existing records and
textual evidence in order to provide evidence for interpretations and to explain
developments of ideas. Unfortunately, the evidence is rarely unambiguous and
interpretations are often the by-product of the purpose for which the historical
investigation is undertaken. It thus happens that those aiming to discover com-
patibility among theories conceived at different times tend to draw a line of con-
tinuity, whereas those who are mindful of the time at which they were presented
are likely to emphasise changes and discontinuities. In the quest for further clues,
it may sometimes be attempted to make use of the narrative of the development
of ideas given by the author. In this context, I think I agree with what one of
Keynes’s biographers wrote: ‘I believe that one should accept Keynes’s retro-
spective account of how he came to his conclusions.’ (Moggridge 1992: 559).
However in assessing those conclusions, I cannot but interpret the approach based
on effective demand as a ‘dramatic’ change of view.
Notes
1 ‘You have over a short period something of the nature of a supply curve which tells you
that for a given level of prime profit [i.e. the difference between gross receipts and prime
costs] there will be a given level of output, that if you have a certain amount of prime profit,
that would be sufficient to bring a certain quantity of potential output over the prime
cost level […] so if you have a supply curve which is valid over the short period only
[…] you could only increase employment and output by increasing prime profit.’
(Keynes 1973a: 368).
2 According to Moggridge’s dating (Keynes 1973a: 380), this is the ‘earliest’ of the frag-
ments of the 1931–2 period of writing. Moggridge’s dating of the early General Theory
fragments was questioned by Patinkin (see Patinkin 1993: 654–6). I do not see enough
evidence supporting Patinkin’s claims.
3 See also the letter to Hawtrey, 1 June 1932: ‘I put less fundamental reliance on my
conception of savings and substitute for it the conception of expenditure.’ (Keynes
1973a: 172).
4 Keynes postponed the lectures he was to have held in the 1931 Michaelmas Term to
April–May 1932 feeling that a ‘theoretical clean up’ was needed before he could ‘re-lecture
stuff which is available in print’. Letter to Austin Robinson of 28 September 1931
(EAGR papers, Marshall Library, box 9).
36
FROM FUNDAMENTAL EQUATIONS TO EFFECTIVE DEMAND
05 We have fragments from which he appeared to have lectured on 25 April and 2 May.
06 ‘I believe that [Keynes] thought then [in April 1932] and I think he thought later – of
the General Theory as supplementing rather than replacing the Treatise.’ (E. A. G.
Robinson 1986: 7).
07 In 1980 Joan Robinson reviewed Vol. XXIX of the Collected Writings of J. M. Keynes,
where the Manifesto was first published. She argued that: ‘[…] Keynes, in his lectures,
was still using the cumbersome Treatise definitions, which turn on a difference
between saving and investment, but he was using them to get the same results’
(Robinson 1980: 391).
08 Of these lectures there survive fragments from 10 October and 14 November.
09 In retrospect Kahn was startled by this proposition: ‘It is disconcerting in these
October [sic] lecture notes to read of the rate of interest “such as to cause saving to be
in excess of investment”.’ (Kahn 1984: 113n).
10 In the retrospective evaluation of his ‘multiplier’ article, Kahn wrote: ‘I was handicapped
having to translate my thinking into the definitions of the Treatise.’ (Kahn 1984: 100).
11 In fact, there is no evidence on whether the fragments corresponding to the first and
second 1933 draft table of contents (Keynes 1979: 63–75) were written during the sum-
mer, but it is a plausible inference.
12 Dimand (1986) noticed that the Treatise profits are always ex post windfalls magni-
tudes, except for one passage (Keynes 1930 [1971]: 143) in which they are considered
as an ex ante measure of profitability.
13 By the autumn of that year he was using chapters 2–14 of the first drafts of the General
Theory for his lectures (Keynes 1973a; Rymes 1989).
14 My method there was to regard the current realised profit as determining the current
expectation of profit.
References
Barens, I. (1987) ‘From the “Banana Parable” to the Principle of Effective Demand: Some
Reflections on the Origin, Development and Structure of Keynes’s General Theory’, in
D. A. Walker (ed.), Twentieth-Century Economic Thought. Aldershot: Elgar.
Dimand, R. W. (1986) ‘The Macroeconomics of the Treatise of Money’, Easter Economic
Journal 12(4): 431–50.
Dimand, R. W. (1988) The Origins of the Keynesian Revolution. Aldershot: Elgar.
Kahn, R. F. (1984) The Making of Keynes’s General Theory. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Keynes, J. M. (1930) [1971] ‘A Treatise on Money’, in D. Moggridge (ed.), The Collected
Writings of John Maynard Keynes, Vol. V. London: Macmillan.
Keynes, J. M. (1973a) ‘The General Theory and After: Preparation’, in D. Moggridge (ed.),
The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes, Vol. XIII. London: Macmillan.
Keynes, J. M. (1936) [1973b] ‘The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money’,
in D. Moggridge (ed.), The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes, Vol. VII.
London: Macmillan.
Keynes, J. M. (1979) ‘The General Theory and After. A Supplement’, in D. Moggridge
(ed.), The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes, Vol. XXIX. London: Macmillan.
Moggridge, D. (1992) Maynard Keynes: An Economist’s Biography. London: Routledge.
Patinkin, D. (1976) Keynes’s Monetary Thought: A Study of its Development. Durham:
Duke University Press.
Patinkin, D. (1982) Anticipations of the General Theory? And Other Essays on Keynes.
Oxford: Blackwell.
37
M. C. MARCUZZO
Patinkin, D. (1993) ‘On the Chronology of the General Theory’, Economic Journal 103:
647–63.
Robinson, E. A. G. (1986) ‘Symposium to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Publication
of Keynes’s General Theory’, Cambridge, mimeo.
Robinson, J. V. (1980) ‘Review of The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes, Vol.
XXIX: The General Theory and After – A Supplement’, Economic Journal 90: 391–3.
Rymes, T. K. (1989) Keynes’s Lectures, 1932–1935. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan
Press.
Skidelsky, R. (1992) John Maynard Keynes. The Economist as Saviour 1920–1937. Vol. 2.
London: Macmillan.
38
5
THE RELEVANCE OF HISTORICAL
EXPERIENCE FOR ECONOMICS
1. Introduction
At the 1999 Meeting of the UK History of Economic Thought Conference in
Glasgow, Victoria Chick presented a paper on Karl Niebyl’s Studies in the Classical
Theories of Money. Drawing our attention to a little-known author, Chick explains
the circumstances of chancing on his work, so that we could understand the context
of discovery. We are treated to an insightful and thought-provoking account. But
above all, as with Keynes’s Essays in Biography, the account of Niebyl’s methodol-
ogy is as significant for our reading of Chick’s work as it is for our reading of Niebyl
himself.
We are told that the attraction of the book was its methodology, which involves
an emphasis on history, both economic history and the history of economic
thought, and their interconnections. We therefore take this paper as a starting
point for a discussion of the role of history in economics. There is a large and
growing literature on the study of the history of economic thought (see e.g. the
survey in Coats 2000), but little attention is paid to the more general issues of the
role of history, such as economic history, in economics. It is the purpose of this
chapter to look at some of the history of ideas on history in economics in this
latter sense, focusing on British economic thought. This limited sampling of ideas
reveals that, even among those who see history as important for economics, there
are differences over what exactly is entailed. Just as Weintraub (1998) has argued
that, because mathematics itself evolves, the question of whether or not econom-
ics should be mathematical is incomplete, so there may be a similar issue with
respect to history and economics.
It is not uncommon for heterodox economists in particular to advocate the
importance of a historical time approach to economics (see e.g. Robinson 1978:
126–36). The distinction between historical time and the logical-time framework
of orthodox economics is fundamental to the argument for the historical approach.
But there is rarely any detailed discussion of what exactly is meant – what kind of
history, how it relates to theory and theory construction, and so on. Chick’s work
39
A . C . D OW A N D S . C . DOW
is a notable exception in that she not only provides a rationale for integrating
history and economics, but also exemplars of how it should be done.1 In the third
section we focus on Chick’s views of the role of history in economics (with
reference to Niebyl), and the way she employs these views in monetary econom-
ics. The chapter concludes by broadening out the discussion of the role of history
in economics by considering its reinvention for modern economics.
40
THE RELEVANCE OF HISTORICAL EXPERIENCE
The arguments put forward by the English historical economists for their view
that history and economics were inseparable reflect the contemporary, narrative
approach to history. In 1878 J. K. Ingram delivered a lecture on ‘The present
position and future prospects of political economy’ to Section F of the British
Association.4 Here he laid out his objection to deductive economics without a
historical dimension. The contents of this address are summarised by Koot:
41
A . C . D OW A N D S . C . DOW
generalisations of the discipline are applicable in all times in all places.5 The
price mechanism is a universal wonder. Individual self-interest always plays a
dominant role in economic outcomes. Opportunity costs are perceived and provide
incentives. A few examples sustain this perception – cigarettes in prisoner of
war camps and the effect on wages of the Black Death in medieval England are
frequently cited. What is the point of having students of economics study history
(at the cost of not learning more mathematical techniques) if universal principles
are discernible in the current economic environment anyway? Why introduce a
historical perspective to the economic analysis of a particular issue if nothing is
added by so doing?
But the predominantly narrative historical approach of the English Historical
School was not the only approach in British economics. In looking back to the
flowering of economics more than a century earlier in Scotland, the Scottish tra-
dition of the twentieth century had absorbed naturally the Scottish Enlightenment
approach to social science which was imbued with history. Knowledge across the
disciplines was built on a theory of human nature which in turn was built on
detailed historical study. Among those who inspired the Scottish tradition, David
Hume was known to his contemporaries as a historian rather than a philosopher,
and Smith’s Wealth of Nations is full of detailed historical passages which
recognised the specificity of context while searching for common principles.
The Scottish Enlightenment approach to history itself was distinctive:
The ensuing Scottish tradition in political economy carried forward this parti-
cular, analytical, historical approach to economics (Dow et al. 1997). Therefore
there was also in Scotland, at the turn of last century, a body of support for an
integral role for history in economics, where history was more analytical than
narrative. J. S. Nicholson, the second appointment as Professor of Economics at
the University of Edinburgh, and William Smart, the first Professor of Economics
at University of Glasgow, were both sympathetic to this historical approach to
economics.
42
THE RELEVANCE OF HISTORICAL EXPERIENCE
twentieth century. History, furthermore, while often still narrative in form, has
developed modes of analysis influenced by literary criticism and anthropology.
This contrasts with modern economic history which, subsequent to the cliometric
revolution in the 1960s, became quantitative and formally analytical. (Ironically
this transformation does not seem to have improved the currency of the historical
dimension within the economics profession at large.)
In considering how we might incorporate history into modern economics, we
therefore need to consider a range of approaches. Victoria Chick has identified
in the writing of Niebyl a set of ideas which makes the case for an integral role
for history. Both Niebyl and Chick are particularly apposite in that their method-
ological thinking is presented along with exemplars of how it may be applied.
Niebyl is concerned to understand money. In order to do this, he argues, we need
to understand the history of the real economic processes which moulded the
development of modern institutions. Further we need to study the historical devel-
opment of monetary theory in relation to the contemporary real economic context
within which it developed so that ‘we shall be able to attain an invaluable insight
into the necessary technique of coping with our own concrete problems’ (Niebyl
1946: 2).
But the three layers (production, the institution of money and monetary theory)
may get out of phase with each other. Niebyl identifies periods of stable growth
(he focuses on the late eighteenth to the early nineteenth centuries), as being when
monetary arrangements settle into phase with the mode of production. In contrast,
periods of recession instigate institutional change. Further, Niebyl identifies clas-
sical monetary theory with that period of economic and institutional stability. But
these ideas persisted in spite of subsequent instability, and change in the mode of
production and in money. The resulting disjunction between theory and reality
can persist either because of a view of theory as being detached from history,
or because of ‘the functional part that the reviewers play in the given economy’
(Niebyl 1946: 164). As a corollary, as Chick makes clear, once we take account
of context, we can understand some theoretical disputes as being empty, since
each position was in phase with a different historical context.
History is then important at three, interconnected levels: the historical devel-
opment of real economies, the historical development of the institutions of
production and the historical development of ideas. Money provides an excellent
case study for such a methodology because of its institutional nature, and because
monetary history is so tied up with the role of the state, which in turn is the
product of the history of ideas.
This concern with the history of production, the history of institutions and the
history of ideas is something we can see traced through Chick’s work. Nowhere
is this more evident than in her own path-breaking contribution to money and
banking theory: the stages of banking development framework, first set out in
Chick (1986) and developed further in Chick (1988) and Chick (1993).6 Here she
shows how money and banking systems develop according to their own logic,
through a series of historical stages, in response to the needs of the real economy.7
43
A . C . D OW A N D S . C . DOW
The significance of the framework has several dimensions. First it highlights the
logic of banking development, and the importance of the institutional structure for
generating confidence. The framework is based on English banking history. But
the framework provides a benchmark by which to analyse any national banking
system, and thus has general application.8
Second it shows how different economic theories make sense depending on the
stage of development of the banking system. In particular, as soon as the banking
system can create credit as a multiple of deposits, the economy is no longer
constrained by prior saving. Chick’s framework demonstrates that Say’s Law, based
on an effective saving constraint, ceases to be relevant with the early development
of the banking system.
Third, different stages of banking development justify different monetary theo-
ries. For example, as soon as the central bank introduces the lender-of-last-resort
facility, it is no longer the case that the money supply can reasonably be treated as
exogenous. Monetary policy is more appropriately analysed in terms of interest rate
policy than control over monetary aggregates (see Goodhart 2001). In parallel to
Niebyl’s argument, classical monetary theory is no longer relevant, and indeed has
not been relevant for a considerable period of time.9
History, then, is important in helping us understand the evolution of the
institution of money in relation to production. It is also important for helping us
understand the evolution of ideas about money, and their translation into mone-
tary policy and the design of public monetary institutions. It is ironic that the real
economic consequences of the modern application of classical monetary ideas
should support a governmental system in Europe with a deflationary bias and
a lack of attention to financial stability (as a result of excessive attention to
monetary stability). These are exactly the opposite of the conditions which Niebyl
specifies for the kind of stable institutional environment which could feasibly
justify the classical approach. Current conditions then could be said to justify
reintegrating history into economics.
Of course, it is possible that history could fill all three roles, or any two of them.
In practice, our perception is that, with honourable exceptions such as Victoria
44
THE RELEVANCE OF HISTORICAL EXPERIENCE
Chick, only the first role listed is credited within the profession today, and that
probably only by a minority. In what follows we consider the case for history to
fill all three roles.
Modern economics has become a discipline based on mathematical modelling,
which may or may not be oriented towards economic data. Often economists seem
to regard this method as the only legitimate one by which to pursue knowledge of
an economic sort (see e.g. Krugman 1998). Other methods are regarded as ‘soft’
or simply ruled out. But there is still some possibility for reintroducing the his-
torical approach. When it comes to pedagogy, for example, other methodologies
may be admitted. Thus David Colander can publish an article in the AEA Papers
and Proceedings calling for a historical approach to the teaching of the Principles
class (Colander 2000). Also some methodological evolution is apparent in
the practice of economics. Even an apparent formalist such as Arrow (1985) has
spoken out in favour of the role of history in economics.
Were it the case that we were considering simply using history as a test bed, there
might be little nominal resistance within the profession.10 Many applied economists
would express themselves happy to use data from the historical past. But the point
is that the historical approach pays much more attention to the context in which
data originate, including the institutional configuration and the cultural background,
than is now usual in applied economics.11 The call for historical perspective is an
appeal for a particular mindset (one evident in the approach of Adam Smith and
Alfred Marshall), in which the particulars of history are considered alongside
statistical measures.12
It is in this regard that cliometrics, once the ‘New Economic History’, may
have erred. Robert Solow put this idea more than a decade ago:
45
A . C . D OW A N D S . C . DOW
approach. Then a historical approach would explain how current conditions arose,
and provide different examples of economic phenomena to be explained by
theory.
As an academic profession economics sits atop a pyramid with a wider student
base and narrower apex than most other academic disciplines. The resources
which support the academic profession of economics are thus predominantly
obtained in the teaching of first- and second-year undergraduates. Often the
students are pursuing degree programmes other than economics. If these disci-
plines were to decide they did not wish their students to pursue a (formalist)
Introductory Economics module, the student shortfall would be devastating for
the employment of economists in the academy.
Of course, there is a high ground too on which to argue the case for a histori-
cal dimension in the learning required at an introductory and intermediate level.
Developing the skill of dealing with the structural change characteristic of open
systems is a major benefit of the historical approach in undergraduate education.
(Unlike the orthodoxy with respect to history we do not disparage, or seek to
eliminate, the teaching of mathematical and quantitative methods, though in
a fixed timetable there is clearly a trade-off.) Further, the communication of
(non-formalist) economic knowledge to a wider, more receptive audience must be
good for the discipline; the English Historical School, to its credit, was greatly
interested in promulgating economic knowledge as widely as possible.
As an intellectual training a graduate education in economic history could
enhance the Ph.D. in economics. The case for this is that it encourages lateral
thinking. Charles Kindleberger in his book Historical Economics remarks:
Art, instinct, intuition, hunch and pattern recognition may be among the
missing ingredients of the economic tyro and the unrecognised asset of
the magisterial one. Exposure to Economic History, if necessary at some
cost in giving up courses in advanced mathematics in the Economics
curriculum, will push the student a slight distance in the development of
these capacities.
(Kindleberger 1990: 350)
It is hard to be sure that you understand how the economy works now
without looking at evidence that is largely historical; and if you want to
46
THE RELEVANCE OF HISTORICAL EXPERIENCE
know how it might work it is useful to look quite a long way back. You
have to examine how the different economic forces operated on one
another in the past in order to judge the strength of their interactions
currently. To form an accurate view of what matters and what does not
matter in the performance of the economy, or parts of it, you badly need
an historical perspective, a truth too little appreciated by those whose
business it is to manage or control the economy.
(Caincross 1989: 175)
These arguments suggest that an alert historical perspective should be part of the
expertise of every economic analyst, not only to emphasise the importance of
context, but also in order to draw on other contexts to inform modern debate. But
integrating history successfully into economics requires a knowledge base which
has been eroded by recent trends in economics education. Can economists be
persuaded again to have students exposed to historical experience as they were
until the final third of the twentieth century?
When the case for including a historical dimension in economic analysis in
general is considered, more philosophical issues thus arise, such as the problem of
historical specificity (Hodgson 2001). Can the analyst generally understand the
crucial aspects of a situation by reference to a few general economic principles,
backed up (in the more thorough investigation) by econometric estimation? Or, are
there unique aspects to each economic reality such that a historical clarification
of the context is necessary to guide and embellish the application of economic
principles involved? This provides a strong case for (narrative) history’s role as
integral to economic analysis.
There still remains the issue of the approach to history which is to be used
for any analysis. The arguments are being rehearsed in the history of economic
thought as to the balance between the different approaches (see e.g. Weintraub
1999); mirroring developments in the field of history itself (see e.g. Tully 1988).
There is an important issue as to how context is to be understood and what
contextual specificity implies for our understanding of context and
our ability to draw conclusions from history. In the same way, we have seen a
difference within the historical approach to economics over the balance between
the analytical and the narrative. An analysis of the role of history in modern eco-
nomics requires that these issues be brought to the fore.
5. Conclusion
Embedded in all of Chick’s work, and made explicit in her account of Niebyl as
well as her stages banking development framework, is a focus on the history of
economies, institutions and ideas, and their interactions. This contrasts with the
current norm in economics, which is an inattention to history. There has been in
fact over the centuries a discourse on the role of history in economics. It is not
simply a matter of whether or not to refer to history, but also a matter of the role
47
A . C . D OW A N D S . C . DOW
of historical evidence. How far, for example, can history be treated as providing
massive data sets by which to formulate or assess theory?
Chick has more recently (Chick 1998, for example) become much more explicit
on methodological issues. It is therefore fitting to take her views of history in the
context of monetary economics, and relate the discussion to a more general discus-
sion of history in economics. Echoing Niebyl, we can see that the development of
ideas on history and economics itself requires a study of history.
The way in which both Niebyl and Chick have used history is closer to the
analytical approach than the narrative approach. A great attraction of Chick’s stages
of banking framework is that it allows us to attempt to identify forces at work
underneath the mass of historical detail. At the same time, there is a modern trend
towards emphasis on the specificity of context. There appears to be considerable
scope for discussion as to how exactly to proceed with a historical approach to
economics. In that sense, this chapter has simply attempted to expose some of the
scope for such debate.
But a firmer conclusion can be reached with respect to economics education.
There are good (resource and educational) arguments for including economic his-
tory in the standard economics curriculum. But, if the arguments that history should
be integral to economics hold for the modern era, then educating economists in
history is not to be regarded as an optional extra. The generation of economists
for whom history was part of their economics education will soon be succeeded
by a generation of whom the majority received no historical education. If the
reintroduction of the historical approach is to be on the agenda at all, those who
make the decisions need to be convinced soon.
Notes
1 Another exemplar is provided in Arestis and Howells (2001).
2 The original reference is Cunningham, W. (1882: 5).
3 We therefore do not aim here to consider other traditions in which history played an integral
role in economics, such as the German Historical School or the American Institutionalists.
4 Ingram was President of Section F. He also gave the lecture to the Statistical and Social
Inquiry Society of Ireland.
5 It should be noted that the notion of generality is not unproblematic; see for example
Dow and Chick (forthcoming).
6 Some precursors have subsequently been identified in the work of Mireaux (see Fontana
1999) and De Viti De Marco (see Realfonzo 1998).
7 In later stages, Chick argues that it is the needs of the banking system itself which come
to dominate.
8 Thus, for example, we can see how the US banking system oscillated for a long time
between stages one and three until a successful central banking system was set up to
allow progress to later stages.
9 This argument also echoes Keynes’s argument about the particularity of the classical
approach. Similarly, in the early drafts of the General Theory, Keynes compared the
characteristics of pre-capitalist economies with capitalist economies. Thus Chick, like
Keynes and Niebyl, employs history in order better to understand the present. In this
they seem to be closer to the analytical approach to history than the narrative approach.
48
THE RELEVANCE OF HISTORICAL EXPERIENCE
References
Arestis, P. and Howells, P. (2001) ‘The “Great Inflation”, 1520–1640: Early Views on
Endogenous Money’, in P. Arestis, M. Desai and S. Dow (eds), Money, Macroeconomics
and Keynes. New York: Routledge.
Arrow, K. J. (1985) ‘Maine and Texas’, AEA Papers and Proceedings 75(2): 320–23.
Cairncross, A. K. (1989) ‘In Praise of Economic History’, Economic History Review
42(2): 173–85.
Chick, V. (1986/92) ‘The Evolution of the Banking System and the Theory of Saving,
Investment and Interest’, Economies et Sociétés, serie Monnaie et Production, No. 3:
111–26; Reprinted in P. Arestis and S. C. Dow (eds), On Money, Method and Keynes.
London: Macmillan.
Chick, V. (1988) ‘Sources of Finance, Recent Changes in Bank Behaviour and the Theory
of Investment and Saving’, in P. Arestis (ed.), Contemporary Issues in Money and
Banking: Essays in Honour of Stephen Frowen. London: Macmillan, pp. 30–48.
Chick, V. (1993) ‘The Evolution of the Banking System and the Theory of Monetary
Policy’, in S. F. Frowen (ed.), Monetary Theory and Monetary Policy: New Tracks for
the 1990s. London: Macmillan, pp. 79–92.
Chick, V. (1998) ‘On Knowing One’s Place: The Role of Formalism in Economics’,
Economic Journal 108(451): 1859–69.
Chick, V. (1999) ‘Karl Niebyl’s Methodology: Classical Monetary Theory in Historical
Context’, Paper presented to the History of Economic Thought Conference, Glasgow
Caledonian University.
Chick, V. and Dow, S. C. (forthcoming) ‘Formalism, Logic and Reality: A Keynesian
Analysis’, Cambridge Journal of Economics.
Coats, A. W. (2000) ‘The Historiography and Methodology of Economics: Some Recent
Contributions’, Paper presented to the HES Annual Meeting, Vancouver, July.
Colander, D. (2000) ‘Telling Better Stories in Introductory Macro’, AEA Papers and
Proceedings 90(2): 76–80.
Cunningham, W. (1882) The Growth of English Industry and Commerce. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Davidson, P. (1994) Post Keynesian Macroeconomic Theory. Cheltenham: Elgar.
Dow, A., Dow, S. C. and Hutton, A. (1997) ‘The Scottish Political Economy Tradition and
Modern Economics’, Scottish Journal of Political Economy 44(4): 368–83.
Dow, A., Dow, S. C. and Hutton, A. (2000) ‘Applied Economics in a Political Economy
Tradition: The Case of Scotland from the 1890s to the 1950s’, History of Political
Economy, 32 (Supplement): 177–98.
Fontana, G. (1999) Essays on Money, Uncertainty and Time in the Post Keynesian
Tradition, Ph.D. thesis, Leeds University.
Friedman, M. and Schwartz, A. (1963) A Monetary History of the United States:
1867–1960. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
49
A . C . D OW A N D S . C . DOW
50
6
GENERAL THEORISING VERSUS
HISTORICAL SPECIFICITY: A
PROBLEM FOR POST-KEYNESIANS
Geoffrey M. Hodgson
I was prompted to write this chapter for two reasons. First, although I am an
admirer of the works of John Maynard Keynes and of many modern post-
Keynesians, I have long had nagging doubts about Keynes’s emphatic claim to
build a general theory. Second, in September 1999, Victoria Chick gave an
excellent talk at the University of Hertfordshire on the evolution of financial
institutions and their relevance for monetary theory and policy. This presentation
was based on her important but unduly neglected paper on the same theme
(Chick 1986). Vicky’s outstanding talk (delivered amazingly without any use of
notes or prompts) helped me develop my ideas on the difficulty that I had
perceived within the Keynesian tradition. The purpose of this chapter is to outline
this problem.1
What I call ‘the problem of historical specificity’ starts from the supposition that
different socioeconomic phenomena may require theories that are in some respects
different from each other (Hodgson, 2001). An adequate theory of (say) the feudal
socioeconomic system will differ from an adequate theory of (say) capitalism.
Furthermore, an adequate theory of (say) nineteenth century British capitalism will
differ from an adequate theory of any other capitalist system in different time or
space. Any common aspects of these theories will reflect common features of the
real systems involved. Nevertheless, differences between different systems could be
so important that the theories and concepts used to analyse them must also be
substantially different. A fundamentally different reality may require a different
theory. This is the problem of historical specificity. The problem was central to the
economics both of Karl Marx and of the German historical school.
In contrast, a general theory presumes that ‘one theory fits all’. It is claimed that
one theory can deal adequately with diverse phenomena within a wide – if not uni-
versal – historical and geographical range of socioeconomic systems. Examples of
such claims to generality are common in mainstream economics, from the assump-
tion that the subject is the universal ‘science of choice’ to the idea that ‘general
51
G. M. HODGSON
equilibrium theory’ applies to many human societies. Another such claim is found
in the work of Keynes.
Section 1 of this chapter discusses the generality of Keynes’s General Theory.
It is argued that the theory is not as general as its author claimed. Section 2 deals
with the earlier claim, by Joseph Schumpeter, that Keynes’s theory was not truly
general in its scope. Section 3 focuses in detail on a specific aspect of the prob-
lem with the ‘general theory’ claim, by using the example of money. Section 4
situates the overall problem within the post-Keynesian tradition. Section 5 con-
cludes the chapter.
I have called this book the General Theory of Employment, Interest and
Money, placing the emphasis on the prefix general. … I shall argue that
the postulates of the classical theory are applicable to a special case only
and not to the general case, the situation which it assumes being a limit-
ing point of the possible positions of equilibrium. Moreover, the charac-
teristics of the special case assumed by the classical theory happen not
to be those of the economic society in which we actually live, with
the result that its teaching is misleading and disastrous if we
attempt to apply it to the facts of experience.
(Keynes 1936: 3)
The first chapter of the General Theory consists solely of the single paragraph
from which the above quotation is taken. Here Keynes was playing a double
rhetorical game. First, the term ‘general theory’ was used to create a contrast with
the allegedly special theory of the neoclassical economists. Keynes made the
convincing argument that the ‘classical’ theory misses something, especially con-
cerning issues such as uncertainty and disequilibria. He wanted a ‘general theory’
that encompassed such missing elements.
Second, Keynes made the claim that his theory applies to the specific ‘eco-
nomic society in which we live’ – again in alleged contrast to the classical theory.
He suggested that a more general theory is able to embrace contemporary reality
more closely. This particular claim is contestable. If the ‘economic society in
which we live’ is different in one or more important respects from other socio-
economic systems, then a general theory, embracing all or several such systems,
could not include any features that were unique to contemporary reality. A theory
of greater generality would fail to identify the particular mechanisms that
were relatively more important at a specific historical juncture. Contrary to
52
GENERAL THEORISING VERSUS HISTORICAL SPECIFICITY
Keynes, by making a theory more general we may make it less able to focus on
the important aspects of the ‘economic society in which we live’. We cannot have
it both ways.
Keynes missed the possibility that such a high degree of generality might be
gained at the cost of a loss of explanatory power. A set of general statements
might encompass contemporary economic reality, but be unable to explain very
much. Universality is gained at the cost of an ability to discriminate between and
explain concrete particulars.
In economics, a theory with sufficient explanatory power would have to focus on
the key economic relations and processes that were of importance in understanding
the nature and behaviour of the system in question. In contrast, a general theory that
covered a wide variety of different structures, would not be able to focus on these
special relations and processes. Keynes did not consider that a theory with sub-
stantial explanatory power that applied to the ‘economic society in which we live’
might have to be a special theory. Indeed, a ‘general theory’ might underemphasise
some of the historically specific features of the economic system and the causes of
the prevailing unemployment of the 1930s. Keynes overlooked the possibility that
a special theory could start from historically specific assumptions concerning eco-
nomic institutions, and end up with much greater explanatory power.
Keynes was concerned to criticise those ‘classical’ theories that claimed to
show that markets would clear and the economy would reach a full employment
equilibrium. But the fact that Keynes considered disequilibria, and multiple equi-
libria below full employment, is not enough to make his theory general. It still
rested on historically specific assumptions. The classical theory is not general, in
part because it excludes price inflexibility and radical uncertainty. Neither, for
different reasons, is the General Theory. It is also difficult to say which theory is
more general than the other. While Keynes dropped several of the classical
assumptions, he imposed other restrictive conditions, for instance by assuming a
monetary economy. While Keynes made his theory more general with one move,
he made it less general with another.
In addition, Keynes did very little to ground his theory upon historically
specific economic institutions. Although historically specific institutions – such
as the joint stock company and the stock exchange – inevitably protrude into his
narrative, he did not start from the specific institutions of capitalist society and
then develop a theory that illuminated their principal causal processes and rela-
tions. Instead, Keynes (1936: 246–7) appealed repeatedly to ‘fundamental
psychological factors’ as the foundation for his theory. His invocation of alleged
psychological factors in his discussion of economic processes is more prominent
than any discussion of historically specific institutions. Specific institutions
appear in the General Theory as the mechanisms through which seemingly ahis-
torical psychological forces express their power. Again, there is evidence to
suggest that Keynes was attempting to develop a ‘general theory’ that would
apply to a number of different types of socioeconomic system. He conceived of
this general theory as having a universal and psychological foundation.
53
G. M. HODGSON
According to Keynes, his General Theory applied not only to the ‘Anglo-Saxon
countries … where laissez-faire still prevails’ but also to countries then with
strong ‘national leadership’ such as Germany. He made this statement on the basis
that his analysis was not based on specific institutions but allegedly on ‘the the-
ory of psychological laws relating consumption and saving’. Hence Keynes
clearly claimed that his theory was not based on historically specific institutions
but on general ‘psychological laws’.
Furthermore, Keynes did not in fact deliver what he had promised: a general
theory. Keynes did make some universal statements. In particular, he stressed
aspects of human psychology. But he could not show how psychological propen-
sities worked out in practice except by introducing an explicit or implicit institu-
tional framework. Human psychology had to play out its part on some specific
stage. It had to be applied to quite specific institutional structures, such as the
stock market, state money and legal contracts. For example, the famous discussion
of the psychology of speculation in chapter 12 of the General Theory required a
specific institutional framework, principally the stock market.
Consider the specific economic phenomena to which Keynes referred in the
title of the book. Even here he did not fulfil the promise of a general theory. The
work did not provide a general theory of the nature and level of employment in
all past, present or possible human societies. What it explored is the quite specific
relationship in modern capitalism between the levels of employment, expecta-
tions and effective demand. Rather than providing a truly general theory of inter-
est or money, Keynes explored the quite specific, capitalist type of system in
which ‘money is the drink which stimulates the system to activity’ (Keynes 1936:
173). Money has existed for thousands of years but it did not become the elixir of
production until the rise of modern capitalism. Keynes favoured the ‘general
theory’ rhetoric but always ended up exploring the particular circumstances of the
contemporary capitalist system. Absent in the General Theory is a truly general
theory of employment, interest or money.
Notably, Keynes did show some awareness of the philosophical basis of the
problem of historical specificity. In a letter to Roy Harrod dated 4 July 1938
Keynes (1938 [1973]: 296) wrote:
54
GENERAL THEORISING VERSUS HISTORICAL SPECIFICITY
In the above letter he implied that economic theory must related to historically
specific material. Yet the General Theory was attempted on the basis of universal
‘psychological laws’. If Keynes had tried to develop economics in full awareness
that economies are ‘not homogeneous through time’, then he would have been
less likely to attempt an entirely general theory.
Any analysis in economics that engages with reality is bound to make some
assumptions about the institutional makeup of society. The General Theory was
no exception. But the striving for generality relegates specific institutions to the
background, whereas they ought to occupy the centre of the stage. There is not
much discussion in the General Theory of specific economic institutions that are,
in fact, indispensable to his argument. For example, Keynes was concerned to
examine the nature of the wage bargain, and the relation between real and money
wages. But the institutions of the labour market and employment are not dis-
cussed to any depth. In this respect, Keynes attempted the impossible: to draw
quite specific conclusions from a theory that purported to be general.
This pretence of generality has widely afflicted economics for much of the
twentieth century. Because of Keynes, many of his followers have attempted gen-
eral theories as well. On the other hand, some post-Keynesians have stressed the
importance of history and specific economic institutions that the rhetoric of
general theorising has been implicitly undermined.
In particular, Chick (1986) has showed that standard assumptions of monetary
theory are specific to the financial institutions involved. As these institutions
evolved through time, different theoretical principles can pertain. In particular,
the nature of money itself changes, from precious metal, to bank deposits, to data
in computer memories. Chick argued that because of the institutional realities of
pre-industrial capitalism, saving necessarily preceded investment. Subsequently,
as soon as banks were able to create credit, saving no longer had to precede
investment. As the banking system evolved it enhanced the capacity for the banks
to create credit. Hence, by the 1920s and the time of Keynes, banking institutions
and the credit system had evolved to the point that investment could and would
precede saving. This was the quite specific historic period to which the allegedly
General Theory applied. Today, as Chick pointed out in her paper, financial insti-
tutions have developed further, including a huge role for global speculation in a
variety of financial assets. This may mean that Keynesian analyses and remedies
can to some extent become obsolete.
Chick’s argument underlines the fact that the General Theory was not, in truth,
a general theory but it applied to a historically specific set of capitalist institu-
tions. Like Chick, other post-Keynesians have explicitly centred their analysis on
historically specific institutions. What has been largely unnoticed, however, is the
implication that the allegedly general theoretical status of the General Theory is
likely to be undermined as a result.
55
G. M. HODGSON
But there is one word in the book that cannot be defended on these lines –
the word ‘general’. Those emphasizing devices – even if quite unexecep-
tionable in other respects – cannot do more than individuate very special
cases. Keynesians might hold that these special cases are the actual ones
of our age. They cannot hold more than that.
In his 1946 obituary of Keynes, Schumpeter (1946: 514n) noted that Oskar Lange
in 1938 had ‘paid due respect to the only truly general theory ever written – the
theory of Léon Walras’. Lange (1938: 20) had argued that ‘both the Keynesian
and the traditional theory of interest are but two limiting cases of what may be
regarded to be the general theory of interest … the essentials of this general theory
are contained already in the work of Walras.’ Schumpeter (1954: 1082) also later
declared Keynes’s General Theory to be ‘a special case of the genuinely general
theory of Walras’. Clearly, Schumpeter too was beguiled by the lure of a general
theory. That is one reason why he praised Walras throughout his life. In 1936,
Schumpeter’s (persuasive) criticism of Keynes was that specific policies could
never be properly grounded on a general theory. Later, his (unpersuasive) criti-
cism of Keynes was that the General Theory was not general enough.
Schumpeter’s invocation of Walras as a general theorist was also questionable.
Contrary to Schumpeter, Walrasian theory is not general. It has been admitted by
leading practitioners of Walrasian theory – such as Kenneth Arrow (1986) and
Frank Hahn (1980) – that it fails to incorporate key phenomena, such as time and
money.
The genuine problem that Schumpeter recognised is that Keynes simultane-
ously revered a ‘general theory’ and attempted to derive quite specific policy con-
clusions from such an edifice. In this respect, Schumpeter’s criticism hit home. It
might be possible to regard Keynes’s work as a framework for such specific
analyses, but Keynes himself did not lay down guidelines for the development of
historically specific theories.
56
GENERAL THEORISING VERSUS HISTORICAL SPECIFICITY
Figure 6.1 – taken and amended slightly from Clower (1967) – represents these
two contrasting arrangements:
In the figure, C1, C2, C3 and C4 each represent commodities. M is money. The
presence of symbol ⫻ indicates that an exchange between two commodities is
possible; a ‘0’ indicates that no such exchange normally takes place. This restric-
tive structure of an exchange economy is a necessary but not sufficient condition
C1 C2 C3 C4 M C2 C3 C4
C1 × × × × M × × × ×
C2 × × × × C2 × × 0 0
C3 × × × × C3 × 0 × 0
C4 × × × × C4 × 0 0 ×
57
G. M. HODGSON
for the existence of money. In addition, money has other special attributes – such
as a store of value and means of dealing with an uncertain future – that are not
represented here.2
Clearly, a barter economy model in which all exchanges are possible involves
fewer restrictive assumptions than a model in which there is money. A model of
a monetary economy must include additional restrictive assumptions in order to
obtain the special structure of a monetary economy in Fig. 6.1. At least as far as
the adequate representation of a monetary economy is concerned, more assump-
tions are required.
However, which model is ‘more general’? Of the two models in Fig. 6.1, in a
strong sense the barter economy model is more general. The presence of an ‘⫻’
in any cell in a matrix in Fig. 6.1 indicates that an exchange is possible, not that
the exchange has to take place. In this sense, therefore, a monetary economy is
a special case of a barter economy: the barter economy model is more general.
However, this gives us a partial and potentially misleading picture and the state-
ment needs to be qualified.
Crucially, the very process of generalisation – from a ‘monetary’ to a barter
model – means that some essential features of a money economy are lost. Because
everything in a barter economy has the property of being able to exchange with
everything else – a necessary feature of money – then nothing has the property of
money. If all men are kings then there are no kings, because kingship implies the
existence of non-regal inferiors. Hence, from this point of view, neither a barter
model nor Walrasian theory is an adequate representation of a monetary economy.
For a theory to accommodate money, it has to incorporate the special qualities of
money; it has to become a special theory.
Paradoxically, general theories lose something and cease to be truly general.
Their generality becomes relative rather than absolute. While remaining more
general in scope, the barter economy model loses key features of the monetary
economy. A common feature of all general theories is that, by embracing a wide
range of possible structures, they fail to accentuate the key features pertaining to
a particular set of circumstances. Greater generality is typically gained at the cost
of an ability to discriminate between and explain concrete particulars. A general
theory of exchange, including barter, will overlook some of the important features
of a particular type of exchange economy, that is a monetary economy. As a
result, if it were possible to construct a more general theory on the basis of the
barter model, then it would be inadequate precisely because of its generality.
4. Post-Keynesianism commentaries
Keynes (1936: viii) himself wrote of his ‘long struggle of escape … from habit-
ual modes of thought and expression’. Ironically, post-Keynesianism itself
has faced a ‘long struggle of escape’ from the General Theory title, its claimed
ahistorical foundation in universal psychological laws, and its problematic first
chapter.
58
GENERAL THEORISING VERSUS HISTORICAL SPECIFICITY
59
G. M. HODGSON
independent of the demand for labour in the economy. It is in the nature of insti-
tutions, laws and rules that some things are prohibited or unyielding.
Lange and Schumpeter were in error to describe Walras’s theory as entirely gen-
eral, because it included several restrictive assumptions. However, Keynes,
Carabelli and Davidson were doubly wrong – in claiming that the General Theory
was truly general and in claiming that generality is necessarily a positive attribute.
Notably, all five of these economists were misled by the lure of a general theory.
They all failed to observe that a theory designed to apply to a more particular do-
main may be more adequate in its analysis of the distinguishing characteristics of
the type of economy in question. What Keynesians required was not a general the-
ory but a historically specific theory of a modern, monetary, capitalist economy.
To some extent, the post-Keynesian label itself encouraged attempts to build
a new or extended ‘general theory’, against the warnings, before and after Keynes,
of members of the German historical and American institutionalist schools. Hence
several post-Keynesians have downplayed the institutional specifics and developed
ostensibly general theories, allegedly to enhance the ‘general theory’ of Keynes.
5. Concluding remarks
The intention of this article is not to detract from Keynes’s great contribution to
economics. It is argued, however, that Keynes was misled by the lure of a general
theory. Furthermore, he was largely ignorant of the historical and institutionalist
schools and of their critiques of general theorising in economics (Garvy 1975;
Hodgson, 2001).
It is clear, however, that not all post-Keynesians have committed this method-
ological error. While some – such as Davidson – remain with Keynes on this point,
others – such as Chick – emphasise the historical specificity of theory. If there are
some morals to be drawn here, we must first point to the inherent limits of all gen-
eral theorising in social science. Second, economists – particularly critical econo-
mists – must recognise and attempt to deal with the problem of historical specificity.
In this endeavour we can learn from the achievements and mistakes of the past.
Notes
1 Extensive use is made here of material from Hodgson (2001). The author is also espe-
cially grateful to Sheila Dow, Stephen Dunn, Paul Ormerod and Bertram Schefold for
detailed conversations and other assistance.
2 Accordingly, Clower (1967: 5) was wrong to suggest that ‘a barter economy is one in
which all commodities are money commodities’. On the contrary, commodities under
barter do not possess all the characteristics of money.
References
Arrow, K. J. (1986) ‘Rationality of Self and Others in an Economic System’, Journal of
Business 59(4.2): S385–99. Reprinted in Eatwell, J., Milgate, M. and Newman, P. (eds)
(1987) The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, Vol. 2. London: Macmillan.
60
GENERAL THEORISING VERSUS HISTORICAL SPECIFICITY
61
7
TIMEFUL THEORIES, TIMEFUL
THEORISTS
Roy J. Rotheim1
62
TIMEFUL THEORIES, TIMEFUL THEORISTS
1. Timeless theory
Among the most important methodological delineators in economic theory is the
role assumed by time. How we think of time helps to define every element in our
theoretical framework. If time is considered from a dualist perspective, then enti-
ties have unique, independent compositions allowing them to be distinguished
from all other entities, to be compared, contrasted, moved, but never organically
altered in light of any of those actions. The consumption bundle of an individual
may be altered by changes in relative prices and income, but she herself, i.e. her
preference orderings, are never affected by any of those aforementioned changes.
As such, we can identify her, as she is today, and compare that state to where she
might be tomorrow, depending upon possible states of nature.
This limited conceptualization of time restricts us to thinking in terms of atom-
istic individuals directing their lives only by the choices they make, irrespective of
the real and psychological constraints they may encounter based upon their past
interactions and the resultant positions that they now occupy as a consequence of
those interactions. Their mental images are thus framed in the dualist conceptualiza-
tion of me/not me. For the dualist thinker, as Chick points out (p. 37), the opposite
of A must always be not-A. The possibility of the organic coexistence of A/not-A
where, to use Tony Lawson’s phrase ‘the existence of each presupposes the other’
(1997: 159), is perceptually impossible. As such, the analysis rules out the organi-
cally interdependent nature of people or their self-perception based upon those
interdependencies. Time, then, is merely a frame of demarcation, allowing differing
states to be compared; it does not denote the sense that elements and organisms
evolve (or devolve) as a result of actions and interactions that occur in time.
In such a timeless ontology, there is no explanation for how the present came
to be, causing (permitting?) theorists to assume that the present moment reflects
a confluence of forces, i.e. a stable equilibrium. Our initial points of reference for
analysis are where supply equals demand, savings equal investment, IS ⫽ LM, etc.
Such a perspective rules out all questions that inquire as to the forces, tendencies,
powers, structures which caused the present moment to be what it is. For the
mainstream theorist, the present moment is then simply a benchmark, a point of
reference to which all other states may be compared in dualist fashion.
In mainstream economics, there really is no past. The present is always merely
one-half of a dual between this present moment and some other time-period called
‘the future’ which must be independent of, but linked to, the present moment.
Constraints, to which individuals make their consumption and production choices,
are merely posited, but have no contextual source. This ontological configuration
allows the mainstream economist to ‘speak’ of the future and the relationship be-
tween the present moment and the future strictly from the vantage point of the
present moment. The future collapses into but never organically affects the funda-
mental elements that make up the present moment. Thus, when the future occurs,
it too must be rational, and therefore it has no relationship to the past. Here, the
past does not matter, because, in fact, it does not exist.
63
R. J. ROTHEIM
2. Timeful theory
In light of the above observations on ‘timeless’ theory, how should we consider
Chick’s reference to ‘timeful’ theory? Here she gives us a few signposts by which
we might direct our inquiry. She observes, initially, that ‘time only has signifi-
cance with the introduction of uncertainty’ (p. 28). She then goes on to note that
‘[i]t must be shown that the timefulness of production matters to the results – that
time is essential. … It is essential because the timeless model supposes a direct
exchange between inputs and outputs. Thus we have labour paid in “corn”: the
real wage model.’ (p. 31).
With regard to the first, I think it would be just as appropriate to state that
‘uncertainty only has significance with the introduction of time’. For in the case
of timeless theory, it is necessary for the existence of the present as the only mo-
ment in time that the future must be suitably collapsed into that present moment
in time. Such an organising principle is clearly outlined in Arrow–Debreu mod-
els where the future is mapped onto the present using a spectrum of states of na-
ture all weighted by the relevant risk factors assigned to each. As G. L. S. Shackle
always indicated, such propositions constitute knowledge, not uncertainty. There
is no time; therefore there can be no uncertainty (Shackle 1970).
64
TIMEFUL THEORIES, TIMEFUL THEORISTS
To introduce time, as Chick suggests, means that all individuals operating in the
system must be timeful. What, might we say, is a timeful person? A timeful person
is one, following the critical realist perspective, who can make choices with inten-
tionality. Here, there is now the possibility that individuals recognise that their
actions both affect and are affected by others’ actions (see Lawson 1997: 64).
This recognition implies that the possible outcomes of any individual action
may not be identifiable, a priori, let alone predictable, especially by the individual
herself: the choice framework reflects ontological as well as epistemological
considerations. It is in this sense that we might say that the individual acts in a
world of uncertainty, where the future cannot be reduced to the present moment.
Here, the organic connectedness of the future to the present (connected, but not
directly reducible to the present) implies that the present moment embodies the
organically interdependent results of the multitude of actions in the past. Unlike
timeless theory, where there cannot be any discernible past, in timeful theory
there is such a realm as the past, organically linked with the present. Here it is
more likely that the person living in the present moment will recognise the past
for what it was, rather than needing to rewrite the past as a safe haven from the
psychologically uninhabitable present.
While this emergence of the past as an ontological entity adds a rich dimension-
ality to the present, it would not be correct to say that a careful codification of the
components of the past would somehow deterministically reflect on what might be
expected in the future. The present moment reflects powers, forces and organic
interactions among individuals who have made choices. Any individual choice
made in the present moment based on the duplication of the outcome experienced
by that individual occurring during the interregnum between the past and the pres-
ent may very likely be disappointed. For in a social system characterised by inter-
nally related individuals, the next set of forces, powers and organic interactions may
not have any discernible relationship to what was understood by individuals to have
been the previous outcome of those relations. In a timeful world, individuals are re-
quired to use both experience and their intuition when making choices.
Volitional choices, based on the realisation that the social world is related and
uncertain, define a basic sense of openness, even though it must be made clear that
relationality, uncertainty and openness do not imply that there are no anchors that
allow individuals to function with some sense of cognitive clarity. For the recogni-
tion of openness has also necessitated the establishment of social institutions,
rules, cultures which are the creations of but not reducible to human action.
Consequently, the social world is both structured, because there are rules, customs,
mores, power bases, hierarchies, etc. which govern and inform our everyday lives;
and it is open to the extent that the multitude of individual actions that occur in the
world lead to relative powers and influences that result in the world tending in one
direction or the other that cannot be predicted with certainty by any individual
(see Lawson 1997; Rotheim 1998). Most importantly, one should not see the two
phrases ‘structured’ and ‘open’ as separate or mutually exclusive, in a dualist
fashion. They are organically bound notions that transcend the dualism by which
65
R. J. ROTHEIM
66
TIMEFUL THEORIES, TIMEFUL THEORISTS
international) in which those products are sold. The resultant uncertainty would,
in fact, prevent any individual from making any decision beyond the immediate
moment.
And yet workers do work; producers do hire resources, borrow money and pro-
duce; banks and other financial institutions do lend money; etc. These individu-
als live in a timeful world, and they establish practices, conventions and rules of
behaviour which allow them to function in that timeful world. It is for these rea-
sons that current price lists are published which give firms some knowledge of
the nominal revenue they can expect per unit of output. Money price lists also
contribute information to firms regarding the nominal costs of their non-labour
inputs per unit of output. In the same vein, money borrowed today to underwrite
capital expenditure is, by and large, contracted for in money rather than in real
terms, again because the price index to be determined in the future to compute the
real rate of interest cannot be predicted today and is not independent of the cap-
ital expenditures and central bank policies made in the present moment.
In the case of labour, it would be irrational in a world of uncertainty to attempt
to bargain in advance for a given real wage. In an uncertain world, which is rela-
tional and open, labour would be acting rationally, not irrationally, if it were to fix
its wages in terms of something more tractable and observable today than in
relation to prices which were only revealed in the future and which they are not
in a position to predict, because the levels of those prices are not independent of
the decisions labour makes today. The existence of such ontological uncertainty
(see Rotheim 1995) is the reason why Keynes observed that labour, which was not
in a position to bargain for a given real wage, resorted to the convention of bar-
gaining in money wages relative to others in their firm, industry, etc. (see Keynes
1936, chapter 2).
From the vantage point of the producer, fixing wage contracts in money terms,
today, adds to the knowledge base she has, in conjunction with her knowledge of
current price lists, and money rates at which she contracts to borrow money. Each
of these conventional behaviours that has become a part of the social fabric of our
economy, contributes to the structure that allows for commitments to be made in
the present for the future. Individuals recognise that the full extent of the returns
to those decisions will rely partly on factors beyond their control, owing to th
relational and open nature of the economy in which they operate. But they also
recognise that historically the amplitudes of the swings in the economy in which
they function have not been so severe as to prevent them from entering into those
arrangements. All of these points provide some clarity to Chick’s salient insight
regarding the prerequisites for a timeful theory: the object of inquiry must be
characterised, as Keynes called it, as a money-wage as opposed to a real-wage
economy (see Rotheim 1981).
Having addressed some of the distinguishing features of timeless and timeful the-
ories from the perspective of the indicators offered by Chick, we now embark on a
riskier and more contentious elaboration of her assertions about what we might call
timeless and timeful theorists. In the opening quote of this chapter, we saw Chick
67
R. J. ROTHEIM
The habit of ignoring our present moments in favor of others yet to come
leads directly to a pervasive lack of awareness of the web of life in which
we are embedded.
(Kabat-Zinn 1994: 4–5)
In light of these thoughts, one might infer that the present moment reveals it-
self to ‘timeless theorists’ as a moment of insecurity and fear. It is a place where
things need to be accomplished in order to get to the future as quickly as possi-
ble, where the fears and insecurities of being deprived of the elements that define
a good life will be extinguished. Such people more than likely venerate a past that
probably never existed, and long for a future that will be different and better than
the present. Each gets reduced to the present moment and together they become
the sole points of reference that provide definition to the present moment. So
rather than living in the present moment for its own sake, timeless theorists live
in a present moment that has no connection to the ‘greater awareness, clarity, and
acceptance of present-moment reality’ (Kabat-Zinn, ibid.). In their actual lives
the present is not an internally constituted reality, but rather a marker whose
points of reference are a reconstructed past and a future that is to be better than
what is perceived to be at the present moment.
68
TIMEFUL THEORIES, TIMEFUL THEORISTS
It is not their inner sense of being that assigns meaning to the good life nor the
path by which that good life is attained. Rather the person who does not know
how to live in the present moment relies on external sources, especially those
whom they consider authorities, to help define those moments. What emerges is
thus a duality between the present moment and the future. The path to getting to
the future is defined by external circumstances, in our own culture the accumula-
tion of objects and the affirmation by others, the sum of which we have come to
consider as constituting the good life.
Not being able to focus on the present moment causes one to lose the ability
for generating knowledge from the inside. If one requires an authority (someone
or object external to the individual) to provide knowledge and a sense of reality,
then it is clear that one would be threatened about not knowing what is to come
next. With an internally generated sense of self, purpose, being, etc., coming from
the ability to live in the present moment, one has an anchor, roots, home-base
which can allow one to have a tether by which to safely experience ambiguity,
uncertainty and openness. Living in such a ‘timeful’ world cannot exist without
the grounding that allows the individual to feel relatively safer as she ventures
into the uncertain future, where she does not know what will occur, although
where she does recognise that her action may affect the extent to which she may
act subsequently (see Shackle 1970).
Observe, here, the parallel to the critical realist notion that the social world is
both structured and open. The confidence to experience and create the openness in
the world comes with the rootedness that one finds in those aspects of the
social world that constitute the structures of that world. Were it not for the fact that
the world were structured, individuals would not have the ability to function freely,
thereby accepting and internalising the openness that also characterises the world.
It should be clear that the phrases structure and openness are not duals by which we
compare and contrast the outcomes of human actions. Instead, these two phrases
only make sense if they are considered in terms of Chick’s notion of ‘both/and’. The
timeless theorist has no room in his life for the ambiguities and uncertainties that
the future might bring, anymore than he has room for such possibilities in his the-
oretical life. One should not be surprised of this symmetry; a contrast of perspec-
tive on uncertainty in one’s life and one’s theory seems quite unlikely.
For the timeful theorist, on the other hand, who is capable of living in the pre-
sent moment, her conceptualisation of the future is not seen as entirely external
to her existence, but rather emerges in part from the way she lives in the present
moment and in each subsequent ‘present’ moment. This timeful theorist can grasp
a theoretical framework where the future is a creation of human action in a world
that is both structured and open. She does not need to impose or impute rational-
ity on the present moment, based on external objective criteria, as she is capable
of living within the present moment, having an internally generated feeling for
some relationship between her actions today and the extent to which they help to
create the future moment. As such, we see that timeless theories emanate from
timeless theorists, while timeful theories emerge from timeful theorists.
69
R. J. ROTHEIM
Chick’s paradox is then explicable to the extent that individuals who cannot
psychologically cope with the future and yet are dominated by things external to
themselves which are by their very nature constantly changing in the future, must
make order of the present (indicating a preference for statics and order, not open-
ness and ambiguity) even though they have been socialised not to have the slight-
est notion of how to exist in the present moment. They project either to their past
or to the future, because it is their past where a sense of stability is perceived –
although still external to themselves – or to the future where things will always
be better.
And now to the second of Chick’s two observations, this one dealing with a
conflict of what she calls ‘psychic organisation’ between those who prefer static
theories and those who are not bound by that theoretical position. Her argument
is complex and, like the theoretical mind-frame she espouses, open-ended. She
notes clearly that modes of psychic organisation or states of consciousness are
historically rather than biologically determined: ‘The construction of the ego is
matter of socialization or conditioning; the ego is not a biological given, though
it may appear to be inherited, since its early development occurs in families.’
(p. 36). We tend to identify consciousness, according to Chick, with ego-function
associated with left-brain dominance, whereas other hidden qualities (emanating
from right-brain functions) are seen in classic dualistic fashion to be ‘Not-Mind,
emotion; beyond conscious control and therefore untrustworthy; indeed unworthy,
suitable only for women’ (p. 36). Indeed: ‘My specific hypothesis is that the ego
has typically been constructed by the rejection and denial of certain right-brain
functions, resulting in a very partial kind of consciousness.’ (p. 38).
Left-hemisphere activity, according to Betty Edwards, involving analysis,
abstraction, counting and marking time, planning step-by-step procedures, verbal-
ising, making rational statements about logic (1979: 35) are well suited to the time-
less and static configuration of mainstream economics. Right-hemisphere activities
on the other hand: ‘intuitive, subjective, relational, holistic, time-free …’ (1979:
36), have no place in the positive heuristical framework of the mainstream.
Edwards’s description of right-hemisphere activities reflects well on our dis-
tinction between timeless/timeful theorists and timeless/timeful theories. First to
the question of the right hemisphere being ‘time-free’. She comments as follows:
… [T]he right hemisphere hasn’t a good sense of time and doesn’t seem
to comprehend what is meant by the term ‘wasting time’ as does the
good, sensible left hemisphere. The right brain is not good at categoriz-
ing and naming. It seems to regard the thing as-it-is, at the present
moment; seeing things for what they simply are, in all of their awesome,
fascinating complexity (ibid.).
To the extent that as humans we have the potentiality to use either side of our
brain, we must at least wonder why it is, at least since the time of the Enlightenment,
where matters of individual freedom and rational thinking saw their inception, that
70
TIMEFUL THEORIES, TIMEFUL THEORISTS
4. Final observations
At the end of her paper, Victoria Chick sees the future of economic, and in fact
all social theory as not discarding the employment of left-hemisphere in favour of
right-hemisphere thinking (another dual), but rather as progressing to the point
where the discipline and individuals practising in the discipline would blend the
best of both hemispheres (not either/or, but both/and) in what she calls ‘whole-
brained man’. To be considered as a timeful theorist would imply not a preference
for right-hemisphere as opposed to left-hemisphere characteristics or vice versa,
but rather where the individual would know how to use her/his ‘whole brain’ for
describing the economic realm.
Envisioning the economy in whole-brained fashion would, for example, recog-
nise the world to be both structured (left-brained) and relational and open (right-
brained) in an organic fashion. Whole-brained individuals would be capable of
internalising these three categories, not as separate compartments (dualism), but
rather where each presupposed the existence of the other. Then individuals would
be perceived as making decisions in an uncertain world combining their sense
of the present in light of the past and their intuitions about the course that their
current actions might take. Prediction, which requires the closed system of the
current mainstream, would need to give way to a framework of description cog-
nisant of the myriad of structures existing at any moment in time, the powers and
forces acting relationally, and the resultant outcomes of those powers and forces
in light of the existing structures giving a sense of the likely direction that the
economy at the moment is tending.
Feeling comfortable on both sides of the brain, however, is not something that
we have seen in the bulk of the population: it is not something developed in the
family; it is not something taught in the schools; and it is surely not something
rewarded in the workplace. And at the end of the day, we are a long way from
economists and an economic theory that are timeful in this fashion. Victoria Chick
would agree with this conclusion.
71
R. J. ROTHEIM
Note
1 I wish to thank Stephanie Blankenburg, Mary Correa, and Pushi Prasad for their active
listening during the drafting of this chapter, and Judy Wyle for the books. The influence
of Tony Lawson and his work on critical realism have been profound on my thought
processes, as can be evidenced clearly from the text of this chapter.
References
Chick, V. (1995) ‘ “Order out of Chaos” in Economics’, in S. Dow and J. Hillard (eds),
Keynes, Knowledge, and Uncertainty. Aldershot: Elgar, pp. 25–41.
Dow, S. (1990) ‘Beyond Dualism’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, June: 143–57.
Hanh, Tich Nhat (1990). Present Moment, Wonderful Moment. Berkeley: Parallax.
Kabat-Zinn, J. (1994) Wherever You Go There You Are. New York: Hyperion.
Keynes, J. M. (1936) The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money. Reprinted
in JMK VII. London: Macmillan.
Lawson, T. (1997) Economics and Reality. London: Routledge.
Rotheim, R. (1981) ‘Keynes’s Monetary Theory of Value (1933)’, Journal of Post
Keynesian Economics, Summer, Vol 3, no. 4.
Rotheim, R (1995) ‘Keynes on Uncertainty and Individual Behaviour in the Theory of
Effective Demand,’ in S. Dow and J. Hillard (eds.) Keynes, Knowledge, and Uncertainty
Aldershot: Elgar.
Rotheim, R. (1998) ‘On Closed Systems and the Language of Economic Discourse’,
Review of Social Economy, Fall: 324–34, Vol 21, no. 1.
Rotheim, R. (1999) ‘Post Keynesian Economics and Critical Realist Philosophy’, Journal
of Post Keynesian Economics, Fall: 71–103, Vol 22, no. 1.
Shackle, G. L. S. (1970) Uncertainty in Economics. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
72
8
MATHEMATICAL FORMALISM
IN ECONOMICS: WHAT REALLY
IS THE PROBLEM?
Tony Lawson
Is there a problem with the way mathematics is used in modern economics? The
most recently published paper by Victoria Chick with which I am familiar, a con-
tribution to an Economic Journal symposium on the topic of ‘Formalism in
Economics’, calls for a debate on this issue (Chick 1998). But is there really an
overriding or fundamental difficulty here? And if so, what can be done about it?
I want in this chapter to go over these questions and to suggest answers. The an-
swers I defend are mostly already contained in Vicky’s piece. But they are answers,
I think, which bear repeating over and again nevertheless, for they are easily
misunderstood.
Rather than turn immediately to those problems with formalism I regard as
most fundamental, however, I first consider certain related issues sometimes
systematised under the heading of problems with formalism (by both critics and
advocates of formalism alike), but which are really no such thing. It is my hope
that if these latter sorts of ‘criticisms’ are also, and first, addressed, and then set
aside, it will more readily be recognised that there is more to the critique of for-
malism than these other issues which have tended to receive most of the attention.
73
T. LAWSON
But not all mainstream economists accept this advice; a very few do broach
such matters explicitly. The main shortcomings with the responses of the latter
group is not that they are necessarily wrong, but that they tend to ignore the more
telling arguments made against the use of formalism in economics (see Lawson
1997b). Certainly, if there is an overriding problem with formalism in economics
I believe it is not where its (few) defenders most commonly interpret its critics as
supposing it to be. It is some of these less than telling criticisms that I want to dis-
pose of first before turning to others I believe to be rather more serious.
74
MATHEMATICAL FORMALISM IN ECONOMICS
any insight or sensibly formulated project, then it cannot be opposed just because
the opinions of those without a sufficient knowledge of algebra (or of the tech-
nique, etc., in question) cannot easily get a look in. There is a broader issue here
about who is admitted to the academy; I personally am in favour of making
admission as open as possible. But there is no argument here that applies merely
to the mathematising of economics and not to all other branches of study where
specific skills, training, experiences and/or know-how are involved.
A further criticism made of the use of formalism, or at least a charge against
which modern mathematical modellers like Krugman often see fit to defend them-
selves, is that formalists do not use empirical data and fail to draw conclusions
from their models regarding matters of policy. Krugman (1998: 1830) cites some
illustrious exceptions. But to agree with him that the charge is untenable, we need
only to look at modern applied econometricians, all of whom use data, and many
of whom interpret their models as bearing directly on the policy discussion.
One additional apparent charge often responded to by the modellers is that eco-
nomics should not even seek to be scientific or in any sense rigorous. In similar
fashion modellers often see fit to defend their results as producing clarity and/or
consistency. If there are those who rule out on some a priori basis the possibility
of social science, or who think the pursuit of clarity is necessarily to be avoided,
whatever the context, then I myself can be counted against them. Consistency is
more problematic. But as long as we do not treat it in static terms, and accept that
the best which we often can hope to achieve is developmental consistency (like,
say, a tadpole turning into a frog, or initial ideas being transformed into a thesis),
then consistency, I believe, can be accepted as an often desirable and feasible goal.
In short, it is my view that not all (or not all aspects) of the defences made of
the project of mathematising economics are without content. Certainly, any along
the lines of those briefly discussed above appear to fall into this category. The
unfortunate fact remains, though, that defences of the sort just discussed do not
really bear at all on the more fundamental or telling criticisms that can be levelled
against the mathematical project in economics. Two fundamental problems in par-
ticular remain. Let me consider each in its turn.
75
T. LAWSON
76
MATHEMATICAL FORMALISM IN ECONOMICS
situation prevails in which it is rational (in a specific sense) for a situated agent
X to do Y, along with the assumption (ii) that X always acts rationally in the spec-
ified sense. The assumptions about the situation and human capabilities and their
exercise need not be realistic, merely facilitating of mathematical modelling
tractability. What could be more trivial and more pointless? The problem is not
the conclusions per se of formalistic economic models but the manner in which
the conclusions are derived: by way of starting from ‘assumptions’ known to be
descriptively false.
So why use assumptions or specifications already known, or anyway consid-
ered, to be significantly and irredeemably false? Is there something about for-
malistic modelling that necessitates that assumptions adopted are typically false?
I think there is. Moreover it is a feature of formalistic modelling identified by
Vicky in the paper already noted. Basically the sorts of formalistic modelling
methods used by economists require, for their efficacy, that the reality to which
they are addressed be closed, when in fact the social world is found to be every-
where open.
By a closed system I mean merely one that supports regularities of the form
‘whenever event (or state of affairs) x then event (or state of affairs) y’. These reg-
ularities can be deterministic or given a probabilistic gloss. They are the sort of
result sometimes produced, via human intervention, in well-controlled experi-
ments. Basically, through isolating a stable mechanism of interest from the
countervailing effects of all others, a stable correlation between the triggering
conditions of the isolated mechanism and its effects can be recorded. These are the
sorts of conditions mainstream economists, with their near-exclusive focus on
formalistic modelling activities, in effect assume to hold everywhere in the social
realm. The problem with the modelling approach, as I say, is just that the social
realm is of a nature that such conditions are rarely found. As Vicky expresses
matters:
The economy is clearly an open, evolving system. Both static and con-
ventional dynamic models are closed systems; they are self-contained
and predict constant conjunctions of events: whenever x occurs y will
follow … Strictly speaking, closed systems are only applicable to
sharply delineated and largely isolated subsystems … The question of
applicability thus rests on finding elements of the economic system
which can be harmlessly analysed as isolated components (the operative
term is ‘harmlessly’). This returns us to the subject of atomism.
(Chick 1998: 1866)
77
T. LAWSON
prevent other countervailing factors interfering with the results. The (isolated)
mechanism has to be intrinsically stable just so that, when it is triggered (condi-
tions x), predictable effects (outcomes y) always follow. Of course, the purpose of
the experiment is not the production of an event regularity per se, but the
empirical identification of the stable mechanism so experimentally isolated.
Now the metaphor of the atom is intended precisely to represent any theoreti-
cal claim that posits entities or features that possess the properties of being
intrinsically stable and isolated. Of course, real atoms, according to modern
scientific understandings, are not necessarily atomistic in this sense. The concep-
tion intended, rather, is the familiar one where the atom, much like the billiard
ball, responds passively, that is, in a stable predictable way, to the triggering con-
dition of the cue (or being hit by another ball). Of course, if I put my hand on the
ball, the result will be affected. The restriction or condition of isolation is in-
tended to prevent this sort of interference.
Thus, just because the guaranteeing of social event regularities requires ana-
logues to the isolated stable mechanisms of controlled experiments, in modern
mainstream economics individuals are inevitably treated as atomistic in the noted
sense, and formulated as acting in isolated environments. By constructing theoret-
ical conceptions in which (isolated) individual agents are rendered atomistic the
latters’ behaviour becomes deterministic and predictable. This sort of reductionist
theorising is more or less a requirement of formalistic economic modelling. And
in the context of a social reality found to be quite different (in fact it is easily
demonstrated that social reality is mostly far from atomistic, being highly inter-
nally related, open, and of the nature of a process, amongst other things – see
Lawson 1997a), this set of restrictions explains both (i) the prevalence,2 and (ii) the
sorts, of known-to-be-false assumptions about human nature and their conditions
that modellers are repeatedly forced to make.
The sort of criticism to which I am drawing attention here is not new, of course.
And Vicky, a post-Keynesian, is quick to acknowledge parallels with the assess-
ments on formalism in economics made by Keynes more than half a century ago.
Consider, for example, Keynes’s remarks on the presuppositions of econometrics
in particular:
78
MATHEMATICAL FORMALISM IN ECONOMICS
79
T. LAWSON
7. Rectifying matters
So what is to be done? Let me start my saying what I think is not to be done. Just
as defences of the use of mathematical models often miss the more fundamental
criticisms levelled, so I think the changes sought by those who so criticise tend
also to be misunderstood. The legitimate goal of those who are sceptical of the
ability of formalistic methods to illuminate the social world is not to prohibit all
such attempts. Certainly I would not support such a response. Rather the
acceptable solution can only be to recognise that all proposed approaches have a
place, albeit with some onus being placed on the protagonists of each to engage
with others, and demonstrate (or at least continually to work to find some justifi-
cation for) the perceived worth of their favoured strategies, etc., in a pluralist and
open conversation.
I have heard it said (usually in discussions when I give seminars or other pre-
sentations) that when I argue like this I am being somewhat too liberal, even
‘wishy-washy’. After all, have I not argued (over and again) that the conditions of
the social realm are such that mathematical methods are unlikely to be of much
use in their illumination?
This latter observation, of course, is correct. But it must also be acknowledged
that (essentially ontological) arguments of the sort sketched here and elaborated
elsewhere (e.g. Lawson 1997a) are somewhat rationalistic, and that this especially
always carries dangers. Although such arguments as I defend currently seem
80
MATHEMATICAL FORMALISM IN ECONOMICS
(to me) to be at least as sustainable as others with which they compete, they are
of course fallible and partial, and may yet turn out to be quite dramatically wrong,
at least in certain significant respects. It may be found that, on occasion, aspects
of the social world after all approximate a closure, for example. Or new mathe-
matical methods may yet be devised which are found to be (more) appropriate to
open systems. Who knows?
No doubt the best way to advance understanding is a combination of rational
thought and trial and error. We might expect knowledge, even of fruitful social
scientific method, to advance by way of our learning from past mistakes via an
evolutionary process; important insights may in this way be achieved more or less
by accident. The reason ontological analysis remains so important at this juncture
is just that such an evolutionary scientific process is currently blocked. Or rather
the environment of selection is so determined that, for the time being, any flour-
ishing (i.e. widespread) practice must be of a mathematical form. In other words,
real progress, in social understanding, is, undermined by the pervasive insistence
in faculties of economics that the only (or almost only) permitted form of activity
involves the wielding of mathematical models. It is this constraint on evolutionary
progress in knowledge, that makes the input from (somewhat rationalistic) ontol-
ogy at this point so important.
So the preferred solution, as I say, is not to place any prohibition on formalistic
modelling or indeed on any other type of research practice. Rather the defensible
aim can only be to allow supporters of all approaches to justify their projects in
any economic forum. The emphasis, then, has to be on interaction and engagement
with others (for supporting views, see also Dow 1996; Chick and Dow 2000;
Lawson 1999).
So I am bound to conclude that the earlier noted advice from Frank Hahn is quite
wrong. Hahn is one of the best, and in my view more courageous, of mainstream
economists; he is distinguished in being prepared to say and write in public what
most others are willing to say only in private, and yet act upon continuously. But,
contra Hahn, the need is not to ‘avoid discussions of “mathematics in economics”
like the plague and give no thought at all to methodology’ but precisely to engage
with each other on these matters so much more. We need to demonstrate the (rela-
tive) worth of our methods, approaches, theories, and so forth; and, where we are
realists, this means demonstrating (at least continually working to discover or jus-
tify) their worth with respect to furthering our understanding of social reality.
Thus engagement is fundamental. Of course, we can all make mistakes;
approaches yet to justify themselves in any way may yet prove of fundamental
worth. So let us also maintain variety; let no approach be ruled out altogether at
any stage. But also let demonstrated worth and potential equally play a role.
Currently, we seem to have the worst of all worlds. An approach that is found a
posteriori to fail in the task of social illumination, and whose failures are easily
explained by our best contributions to social theory, is actually everywhere
imposed onto the discipline, to the near exclusion of all alternatives. Almost any
other arrangement has to be better.
81
T. LAWSON
It cannot be repeated enough times, however, that the solution does not turn on
replacing one sort of dogma with another. Rather we need to cultivate an open
forum of intellectual honesty and respect for others. The point, I believe, is con-
tinuously to engage alternative positions, to be both respectful and charitable of
opponents’ positions, to recognise the fallibility and partiality of even our best (or
pet) theories or approaches, and to recognise the value to progress of actively
engaging with others on all issues.
In such a forum, the drive to mathematise the study of economics will no doubt
find a place. And this brings me back to the paper by Vicky. For the title of Vicky’s
piece is precisely: ‘On Knowing One’s Place: The Role of Formalism in
Economics’. Basically, I have given my own take on the basic thrust of her con-
tribution. Vicky acknowledges explicitly that the concern to understand social
reality does not mean that we necessarily preclude the wielding of conventional
formal methods; indeed she seems of a strong opinion that the latter will indeed
make a fruitful contribution to understanding (a matter on which I personally wait
to be convinced). But she does insist that their place is at best one amongst many,
a place whose legitimate boundaries or limits are a matter for informed experi-
ment and discussion. As Vicky puts it: ‘Formalism is fine, but it must know its
place. Economists need to debate further the boundaries of that place.’ (Chick
1998: 1868).
On this I suspect most heterodox economists are agreed. So let the debate con-
tinue. Or rather let us instigate a wider ranging conversation that does engage the
more fundamental issues, albeit in a way that recognises the fallibility and limits
of our own positions. This is the sort of position Vicky has always advocated, so
it seems more than appropriate to reemphasise it here in her richly deserved
Festschrift.
Notes
1 Or to the extent that formalistic methods are held to ‘support’ or ‘refute’ anything they
can be ‘found’ to support or refute just about everything (according to one’s wishes), and
so end up again really supporting nothing at all.
2 Of course modellers often seek to ‘justify’ their claims by asserting that we all need to
make unrealistic (i.e. known-to-be-false) assumptions in our analyses. What they fail to
realise is that the ‘we’ in this claim is restricted to formalistic modellers. The rest of us
do not ‘need’ to do so; my claim indeed is that we need not to.
3 Some mainstream economists have recognised all this. Frank Hahn, I believe, is one.
And it may be worth repeating some of his reactions explicitly here, if only because
other mainstream economists may be persuaded thereby to examine whether there is
really much point to the activities in question.
Thus, with respect to any attempts to estimate or test the formal models of economic
‘theory’ using measured data on actual phenomena, Hahn writes:
82
MATHEMATICAL FORMALISM IN ECONOMICS
And elsewhere Hahn reveals, albeit in a somewhat dramatic fashion, what he thinks of
the practice of using mathematical models for drawing policy implications:
When policy conclusions are drawn from such models, it is time to reach for
one’s gun.
(Hahn 1982: 29)
References
Chick, V. (1998) ‘On Knowing One’s Place: The Role of Formalism in Economics’,
Economic Journal 108(451): 1829–36.
Chick, V. and Dow, S. C. (2001) ‘Formalism, Logic and Reality: a Keynesian analysis’,
Cambridge Journal of Economics Volume 25, No. 6, November (forthcoming).
Dow, S. C. (1996) The Methodology of Macroeconomic Thought. Aldershot: Elgar.
Hahn, F. (1982) Money and Inflation. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
Hahn, F. (1985) ‘In Praise of Economic Theory’, in 1984 Jevons Memorial Fund Lecture.
London: University College.
Hahn, F. (1992) ‘Reflections’, Royal Economics Society Newsletter, No. 77.
Hahn, F. (1994) ‘An Intellectual Retrospect’, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro Quarterly
Review: 245–58.
Keynes, J. M. (1938) [1973] ‘The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes: The
General Theory and After: Part II Defense and Development’, Royal Economic Society
XIV.
Krugman, P. (1998) ‘Two Cheers for Formalism’, Economic Journal 108(451): 1859–69.
Lawson, T. (1997a) Economics and Reality. London: Routledge.
Lawson, T. (1997b) ‘Horses for Courses’, in P. Arestis, G. Palma and M. Sawyer (eds),
Markets, Unemployment and Economic Policy: Essays in Honour of Geoff Harcourt
(volume two). London and New York: Routledge.
Lawson, T. (1999) ‘Connections and Distinctions: Post Keynesianism and Critical
Realism’, Journal of Post Keynesian Economics,, Vol 22, No. 1, Fall, pp. 3–14.
83
9
MATHEMATICS AS NATURAL LAW:
AN EPISTEMOLOGICAL CRITIQUE
OF FORMALISM IN ECONOMICS
Jan Toporowski1
84
MATHEMATICS AS NATURAL LAW
85
J. TOPOROWSKI
‘Natural laws’ transcend the observed events which they are supposed to deter-
mine. They cannot themselves be observed, but what is observed is attributed to
their operation. In this way, analysis in terms of ‘natural law’ regresses causation
to the immaterial and unobservable. Most of the natural laws discovered by the
physical and natural sciences in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, like
Newtonian physics, have been superseded in the twentieth century. But these sci-
ences established a tradition of systematic observation which is lost in formalism.
The apparently rapid progress of science in the eighteenth and nineteenth cen-
turies was accompanied by the equally rapid development of mathematics and
mathematical techniques. The fact that scientific and mathematical innovations
were often made by the same individuals, using mathematical notation as a short-
hand and an aid to precision (Marshall’s ‘exactness’), may suggest, as formalists
were to argue, that mathematics was the foundation of scientific understanding.
Kant pointed out that mathematics is a metaphysical system of thought that is
purely abstract, in the sense that it is a mental construct rather than being inher-
ent in the material world. He saw its domain as the refinement of concepts rather
than empirical investigation (Kant 1943: 400). Mathematics is reasoned out, from
axioms, assumptions and conventions of notation and argumentation, what Kant
called ‘intuitions’. Mathematics provides certainty, while empirical perception is
always subject to doubt (Kant 1943: 400–3, 469–70).
While mathematics has been used in economics since the seventeenth century, for-
malism goes beyond quantitative comparisons and the use of algebra in exposition.
86
MATHEMATICS AS NATURAL LAW
87
J. TOPOROWSKI
outcome of the model, and hence as ‘causing’ that outcome. Exogenous variables
may be chosen axiomatically, as in the monetarist view that ‘inflation is always
and everywhere a monetary phenomenon’ and hence that the money supply
determines the price level. Or they may be determined by the availability of par-
ticular courses of action: in setting discount rates, central banks consider their
consequences and therefore attribute to the rate of interest a causal significance
that is revealed by the endogenous, axiomatically derived relations in their
models.
Whether systems of equations can reveal causal processes has been discussed
in economics, from Pareto’s criticism of Walras’s general equilibrium (Pareto
1909: 246–7), through to contemporary Critical Realism (Lawson 1996) and
Keynes’s ontological uncertainty (Vercelli 1992). Because of their axiomatic
antecedents, systems of equations cannot explain causes but only quantitative
outcomes (Vercelli 1992; Chick 1998).
Marshall envisaged economic ‘laws’ as tendencies in economic affairs. Following
Marshall, determining states of equilibrium is justified on the grounds of immanent
outcome: when all the consequences of current decisions have worked themselves
out, the resulting, putative, equilibrium will be realised (Marshall 1938: 36).
According to Friedman the ability to forecast correctly justifies even the most
‘unrealistic’ axioms (Friedman 1953). Knowledge of immanent states is thereby sup-
posed to make comprehensive knowledge of their antecedents unnecessary, if not
redundant. The result is theory without history, or, rather, theory that can be inserted
at any point in history to reveal its outcome. If the pace of history is sufficiently fast
(see Section 4), the novelty of each day inclines even thoughtful observers to forget
the outcomes that were proposed yesterday and concentrate on today’s more exciting
prospects. Where the axioms include assumptions of rationality and optimisation, the
model becomes utopian: an immanent welfare-maximising outcome is revealed
without identifying the social arrangements and institutions that will bring about this
happy state of affairs. This normative economics is typically put forward as ‘positive’
economics. Teleological justifications remove methodological formalism further
from the investigation of matters of fact, and the cause-and-effect connections that
combine, through time, the circumstances and events of actual economies into
coherent processes.
88
MATHEMATICS AS NATURAL LAW
economic processes are observed. Discussing the testing of business cycle theo-
ries, Ralph Hawtrey put the matter as follows:
89
J. TOPOROWSKI
The array is infinite and is not complete until the end of time. Although infinite, the
array is not random. It is ordered by the historical evolution of the economy, the cir-
culation of money and commodities in it, and the human perception of these
processes which arises out of people’s involvement in production, distribution and
consumption.
The practice of statistics consists of arranging X into finite sets X s in such a way
that the categories of X s are related by some function f(s) (cf. Morgenstern 1963:
88–92). In creating finite sets, it is obviously necessary to include in f(s) some lim-
iting postulate to exclude observations outside a defined range. f(s) is therefore a
taxonomy that is not derived from a consideration of the whole of X but is imposed
on it. In this respect, f(s) corresponds to a Kantian metaphysic. Its variables (cate-
gories) are those which the statistician deems to provide a comprehensive coverage
of observations which he or she wishes to present in a systematic and reduced form.
Whereas the purpose of a statistical model is to present a comprehensive set of
data in its range, economic theory is selective. Its purpose is to ‘explain’ by iden-
tifying certain variables (categories) as active, determining variables (cf. Vercelli
1992). For this some kind of causal analysis is necessary. Statistical verification
of the theory, whether by casual inspection or by econometrics, consists of test-
ing the model against the statistical representation of the selected variables.
A fundamental problem now arises because of the ambiguity of the relationship
between the economic model and f(s). Where the relationship that an economic
theory postulates between its selected variables corresponds to f(s), it will be con-
firmed by the data X s. However, this merely shows that the economic theory and
the statistical model are not independent, but that the theory is mathematically
implied in the model used to place X into finite sets X s. (cf.‘… the System is for-
mulated in terms of the System itself ’ (Veblen 1898).)
Here the procedure of statistical verification breaks down. Even the most
analytical economic theory has its verification reduced to circularity by such test-
ing. At best such testing can show that an economic model is compatible with the
statistical taxonomy. As a precaution against this circularity, the principled inves-
tigator may go beyond current econometric practice and try to prove that an
economic model is independent of the statistical model. Since the two models
share the same variables, one way of proving the models’ independence would be
to compare the variables predicted by the economic model with those obtained
from the statistical model. The test of independence then would be the absence of
a correlation between predicted values and the statistical values. Unfortunately
this would also indicate that the economic model is not verified by the statistical
data. Thus it is not possible to verify any economic theory by means of statistics
because any compatibility between them could be due to the coincidence of
the derived economic model with the statistical taxonomy according to which
90
MATHEMATICS AS NATURAL LAW
observed data are arranged. Kalecki’s wry remark that ‘economics consists of
theoretical laws which nobody has verified and empirical laws which nobody can
explain’ (Steindl 1965: 18) highlights a profound methodological dilemma, first
expressed in Kant’s distinction between analytic and synthetic propositions.
91
J. TOPOROWSKI
92
MATHEMATICS AS NATURAL LAW
Note
1 I am grateful to Victoria Chick, for a preliminary discussion of the view presented here
and her comments on successive drafts, and to her student Rogerio Studart, with whom
I first discussed how financial inflation increases the anguish of uncertainty. Thanks are
also due to Stephen Dunn, Alan Freeman, Gary Mongiovi, Warren Samuels and the
editors of this volume for pointing out errors and ambiguities.
References
Backhouse, R. E. (1998) ‘If Mathematics is Informal, Then Perhaps We Should Accept
That Economics Must Be Informal Too’, Economic Journal 108(451) pp. 1848–1858.
93
J. TOPOROWSKI
Black, F. (1989) ‘How to Use the Holes in Black-Scholes’, The Continental Bank Journal
of Applied Corporate Finance 1(1).
Chick, V. (1995) ‘ “Order out of Chaos” in Economics’, in S. C. Dow and J. Hillard (eds),
Keynes, Knowledge and Uncertainty. Aldershot: Edward Elgar.
Chick, V. (1998) ‘On Knowing One’s Place: The Role of Formalism in Economics’,
Economic Journal 108(451) pp. 1859–1869.
Dow, S. C. (1996) The Methodology of Macroeconomic Thought: A Conceptual Analysis
of Schools of Thought in Economics. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
Friedman, M. (1953) Essays in Positive Economics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Galbraith, J. K. (1980) The Great Crash 1929. London: André Deutsch.
Golland, L. A. (1996) ‘Formalism in Economics’, Journal of the History of Economic
Thought. 18(1) pp. 1–12.
Granger, C. W. J. (1963) ‘Testing for Causality: A Personal Viewpoint’, Journal of
Economic Dynamics and Control, No. 2.
Hallwood, C. P. and MacDonald, R. (2000) International Money and Finance. Oxford:
Blackwell.
Hawtrey, R. G. (1927) ‘The Monetary Theory of the Trade Cycle and Its Statistical Test’,
Quarterly Journal of Economics, May pp. 471–486.
Kalecki, M. (1971) Selected Essays on the Dynamics of the Capitalist Economy
1933–1971. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Kant, I. (1943) Critique of Pure Reason, translated by J. M. D. Meiklejohn. New York:
Wiley.
Keynes, J. M. (1921) Treatise on Probability. London: Macmillan.
Keynes, J. M. (1936) The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money. London:
Macmillan.
Kregel, J. A. (1995) ‘Neoclassical Price Theory, Institutions, and the Evolution of
Securities Market Organization’, Economic Journal 105.
Lange, O. (1938) ‘On the Economic Theory of Socialism’, in B. E. Lippincott (ed.), On the
Economic Theory of Socialism. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Lawson, T. (1996) Economics and Reality. London: Routledge.
Marshall, A. (1938) Principles of Economics. London: Macmillan.
Mirowski, P. (1989) More Heat than Light. New York and Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Morgenstern, O. (1963) On the Accuracy of Economic Observation. Princeton, NJ,
Princeton University Press.
Pareto, V. (1909) Manuel d’économie Politique, translated by A. Bonnet. Paris: Giard & Brière.
Schumpeter, J. A. (1954) History of Economic Analysis. London: Allen and Unwin.
Sohn-Rethel, A. (1978) Intellectual and Manual Labour: A Critique of Epistemology.
London: Macmillan.
Steindl, J. (1965) Random Processes and the Growth of Firms. London: Charles Griffin.
Toporowski, J. (2000) The End of Finance: The Theory of Capital Market Inflation,
Financial Derivatives and Pension Fund Capitalism. London: Routledge.
Veblen, T. (1898) ‘Why is Economics Not an Evolutionary Science?’ The Quarterly
Journal of Economics Vol. XII, No. 4, July, pp. 373–397.
Veblen, T. (1904) The Theory of Business Enterprise. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons.
Vercelli, A. (1992) ‘Causality and Economic Analysis: A Survey’, in A. Vercelli and
N. Dimitri (eds), Macroeconomics: A Survey of Research Strategies. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
94
10
THE ENCOMPASSING PRINCIPLE AS
AN EMERGING METHODOLOGY FOR
POST-KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS
95
G. FONTANA AND B. GERRARD
96
ENCOMPASSING PRINCIPLE
97
G. FONTANA AND B. GERRARD
98
ENCOMPASSING PRINCIPLE
99
G. FONTANA AND B. GERRARD
100
ENCOMPASSING PRINCIPLE
101
G. FONTANA AND B. GERRARD
According to the ‘money circulating’ approach (e.g. the quantity theory), money is
a medium of exchange which facilitates the circulation of goods and services.
Money is a means to an end. There are two main implications of that view. First,
money does not have use value but only exchange value. Second, holdings of money
are exclusively represented by the transactions demand for money. As Chick
explains those are not trivial implications, especially considering that the trans-
actions demand for money has always been modelled as an end-of-period stock
demand, but only makes sense over time (Chick 1992b: 128).
The ‘money held’ approach has dominated the analysis of monetary policy.
Money is a store of wealth, just one of many assets in agents’ portfolios. Compara-
tive static analysis shows how asset prices, rates of interest and the composition
of agents’ portfolios are modified following a change in the money supply.
Unfortunately, what is not explained in this literature is how those portfolio
adjustments are ever attained. But, as Chick argues, this analysis is seriously
flawed by its lack of explanation of the actual portfolio-adjustment process
(Chick 1992b: 124). Such an explanation would highlight the problem of treating
money held in isolation from money circulating. In any portfolio-adjustment
process, money acts as a medium of exchange for buying and selling assets.
Chick’s approach to Keynes and the PK school is based on the proposition that
Keynes can be seen as a bridge between the two different monetary traditions.
Keynes was concerned with money as both medium of exchange and store of
wealth. However, in order to understand the particular type of bridge that he rep-
resents (one not readily suitable for modern times as she argues), Keynes’s theory
needs to be carefully ‘dismantled’ and then reorganised around its building blocks.
One of the main features of Keynes’s theory is the interdependence of money
and uncertainty. It was clear to Keynes that agents make decisions in a context
of incomplete knowledge. Uncertainty is both a cause and an effect of agents
holding money as a store of wealth. Similarly, it is again uncertainty that
makes money the only medium of exchange that could possibly be used as the
final means of payment.
Keynes maintained that economic behaviour is determined by: (i) the proba-
bility distribution representing agents’ strength of belief in a set of competing
hypotheses about the current and future state of the world; and (ii) the degree of
confidence of agents as reflected in their assessment of the evidential base from
which competing hypotheses and strength of belief are derived. The complex
interaction of these two determinants of economic behaviour establishes a general
taxonomy of choice situations that includes the analytical case of perfect certainty
and risk as well as the alternative analytical case of fundamental uncertainty
(Fontana and Gerrard 1999).
102
ENCOMPASSING PRINCIPLE
103
G. FONTANA AND B. GERRARD
4. Concluding remarks
We have argued that the encompassing principle provides an operational method
for developing the PK research project. After years of methodological debate
on the proper nature of economic theory, PKE is finally developing a body of
substantive theory within a general framework that can constructively engage
with mainstream theories. Those PK economists who wish to maintain a scho-
lastic purity untainted by orthodox theories will dismiss such developments as a
misguided attempt to gain legitimacy. Nevertheless, it is time to realise that what
PKE needs most is substantive theories utilising formal analytical methods but
with full awareness of the temporary closure assumptions underpinning specific
models. The hope is that the task of developing a more general understanding
of actual economic processes is continued by current and future generations of
economists with the same flair and enthusiasm as that displayed by Chick over her
long and distinguished career.
References
Arestis, P., Dunn, S. P. and Sawyer, M. (1999) ‘Post Keynesian Economics and Its Critics’,
Journal of Post Keynesian Economics 21: 527–49.
Chick, V. (1983) Macroeconomics After Keynes: A Reconsideration of the General Theory.
Oxford: Philip Allan.
104
ENCOMPASSING PRINCIPLE
105
11
A NOTE ON NON-WALRASIAN
MACROECONOMICS
Athol Fitzgibbons
106
NOTE ON NON-WALRASIAN MACROECONOMICS
107
A. FITZGIBBONS
and South East Asia, while Western Europe and the US went through a sequence of
boom and recession. The more deregulated the economy, the more susceptible it
seemed. Just when New Classical theory declared the macroeconomy to be harmo-
nious and tranquil, aggregate demand flew in howling like a banshee in a nightmare.
But now there was no theory of deficient aggregate demand. And since many
found that a return to the old Keynesian synthesis and its philosophy of the state
was intellectually impossible, the subject of macroeconomics became an intellec-
tual wasteland. The two great macroeconomic systems had both relied on the
absolute truth of impossible assumptions, and they had both reached conclusions
that were contradicted by everyday experience. New Keynesian theory dominated
the textbooks, perhaps because it was a compromise doctrine. But its theory of
expectations was incoherent, and it was mostly concerned with the supply side of
the product market, whereas the last two decades of the twentieth century were
characterised by financial crises. The practical response by macroeconomic policy
makers in state treasuries and central banks was to abandon macroeconomic
theory, and to rely on ‘pragmatism’, though this was more as an admission of defeat
than a solution. For pragmatism too can mean different things, and pragmatism
without a theory leaves the policy maker without any systematic way of organising
experience and learning from the past.
108
NOTE ON NON-WALRASIAN MACROECONOMICS
In theoretical terms the IS curve had shifted left because of an increase in the
propensity to save, but it could be counteracted by a rightward shift of the
LM curve which would restore aggregate demand. The parable was advanced to
explain macroeconomic crises in Asia and elsewhere.
However, the international capital markets differ in important respects from
babysitting clubs. Babysitting clubs tend to be small and manageable enough
for the club leadership to know the market, and the warm and fuzzy qualities of
babysitting discourage ruthless speculation in babysitting futures. The babysitting
parable implicitly invites us to think of rational (knowledgeable) regulators and
irrational (not self-interested) markets. But if we take away the warm and fuzzy
aspects, the New Classicals could point out that John Stuart Mill explained the
fault in the babysitting parable 150 years ago.
Excess demand is a sign of rationing, and the failure to charge market prices.
Mill’s heirs could respond that the babysitting club did not need a Keynesian
monetary policy but a free capital market, which could set a natural rate of inter-
est. In such a market babysitting credits could be exchanged, at a premium or a
discount, between those who wanted to babysit now and those who wanted to
babysit in the future. If this market were established there would be no deficient
demand, because everyone should always be able to babysit, and to get a babysit-
ter, provided only that they were willing to pay the going price.
Furthermore, and to add a New Classical objection to the Keynesian theory of
babysitting, the club leadership would not know exactly how many babysitting
credits it should issue, and yet if the wrong number were issued there would be
serious coordination problems. Too many credits, for example, would lead to a
devaluation of the currency, in the sense that more credits would be required to get
a babysitter. This would be unfair on those who had painfully acquired their cred-
its and, if there were reason to fear that the club would continue its inflationary
policy, everyone would try to spend their credits. In addition there would be a
danger of babysitting cronyism, because the club leadership might issue the extra
credits to their friends, on the pretext that this was best for the club. In summary
the New Classicals could reply that the babysitting club would be best governed by
laws, rather than by men and women. The babysitting club could have solved its
problems better by relying on the market.
That would not be the end of a real debate, which would continue at much
greater length, but it is evident that a Keynesian theory which skims over the ques-
tion of ‘who knows what’ is susceptible to attack. The state of knowledge is such
a crucial determinant of the stability of the capitalist system that and assumptions
about it should be explicit. If there is an important knowledge asymmetry between
the government and the capital markets, then it should be justified and explained.
3. Non-Walrasian directions
The two reasons why macroeconomic breakdowns occur are that the markets do
not have enough information about the future, and that neither do governments.
109
A. FITZGIBBONS
Milton Friedman (1969) has argued that US macro-failure mostly occurred because
of bad government decisions, and (without endorsing his specific argument that
the US Federal Reserve was responsible for the Great Depression) it is clear that
governments do indeed cause major macroeconomic breakdowns. In my country,
in Australia, misconceived government policies have unambiguously caused two
recessions, most recently in the early 1990s. However government error is only
part of the story, because the late twentieth-century crises in Asia and Latin
America were caused by destabilising speculation in the capital markets.
The ultimate cause of macro-breakdowns is neither the market nor the govern-
ment, but ‘future illusion’, or the need to make decisions with imperfect knowledge.
If someone was omniscient, then it would be profitable for that person to maintain
perpetual macro-equilibrium via stabilising speculation, but no one has such
omniscience. As for who is the most to blame, ‘government macro-failure’ occurs
when the government is in control, whereas ‘market macro-failure’ occurs when the
markets are unregulated and free. Error does not mean that either side is incompe-
tent, and decision makers are usually rational in the sense that they try to make
intelligent decisions on the basis of the available information, but that information
does not always lead to an optimal and confidently held estimate of the future.
Keynes notwithstanding, the state of radical uncertainty in which there is no
information at all must be very rare. The New Classical School notwithstanding,
the typical case is that there is not enough information to derive a uniquely best
estimate of the future. The economy does not act as if there is radical uncertainty,
and nor does it act as if there is perfect information – it acts rationally in the com-
mon sense, and recognises that there is a mixture of uncertainty and knowledge.
However, when financial decisions are supported by nothing more than informed
judgements, there will always be potential for volatility. No one is actually irra-
tional when the Indonesian rupiah falls 5 per cent in a day without any change in
the underlying situation. Investors do not know the intrinsic value of the rupiah,
and so they are free to assume different futures at different times.
Central banks have the same freedom; the same uncertainty that is responsible
for inconsistent markets causes government inconsistency as well. Since neither the
market nor the authorities can devise a uniquely best strategy, both sets of decisions
will reflect judgements of facts and values that can be justified without being really
proven. Given the availability of macro-information, the government encounters the
same uncertainty that confronts the markets, and whenever the market is most
uncertain about the future, so too will the government be. Macro-paradigms should
concern the behaviour of intelligent people, in both the market and the government,
who do not have enough information to make an optimal decision.
If the future could be reduced to a reliable quantitative estimate, there would be
no need for a macro-policy, but there would be no need to avoid it either, because
it would be completely ineffective. Given a best estimate of the future, everyone
would be able to calculate the natural rate of interest, and so changes in the money
supply would have only nominal effects. Likewise and for New Classical reasons,
fiscal policy would also be ineffective; government deficit spending would fail to
110
NOTE ON NON-WALRASIAN MACROECONOMICS
111
A. FITZGIBBONS
reflect values, have played a large role in recent macro-events. Likewise when
Stiglitz suggests that uncertainty causes the market to act ‘irrationally’
(intransitively), he fails to realise that the government too must act ‘irrationally’,
and for the same reason. Government policy will have to be supported by
unproven judgements of fact, as in the market, and so there is a problem of
policy consistency. As Table 11.1 illustrates, non-Walrasian political economy has
a symmetry that the Keynesian synthesis lacks.
Non-Walrasian theory is neutral towards the extent of government macro-
intervention, which neutrality some will find frustrating and vague. Keynesian
theory says definitively that governments should intervene in the market, and New
Classical theory definitively says that it should not, but these theories can only
reach their definite answers by abstracting from relevant facts. If we ask whether
an entrepreneur, who is just a market decision maker faced by uncertainty, should
invest in particular markets, then the answer is sometimes yes, sometimes no, and
it depends on the philosophy of the firm. Uncertainty, unfortunately, takes away
certainty. Everything depends on situations and minds, and that is also true of
macroeconomic policy. Non-Walrasian political economy merely encourages a full
and open awareness of the values and the variables. Even though a macro-policy
cannot follow from a strict deduction, its supporting reasons, referring to both fact
and value, should be available for scrutiny and discussion.
References
Fitzgibbons, A. (1988) Keynes’s Vision: A New Political Economy. Oxford: Clarendon
Press.
Fitzgibbons, A. (2000) The Nature of Macroeconomics: Instability and Change in the
Capitalist System. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
Friedman, M. (1969) ‘The Supply of Money and Changes in Prices and Output’, in The
Optimum Quantity of Money and Other Essays. Macmillan.
Krugman, P. (1999) The Return of Depression Economics. New York: Norton.
Stiglitz, J. (1998) ‘Knowledge for Development: Economics Sceience, Economic Policy
and Economic Advice’, World Bank’s Tenth Annual Bank Conference on Development
Economics. Washington, http://www.worldbank.org/html/extdr/extme/jsabcde98/
js_abcde98.htm.
112
12
MARSHALL AND KEYNES ON
RATIONAL (ETHICAL)
ECONOMIC MAN
Suzanne W. Helburn
1. Introduction
Whitaker has described Marshall’s ethics and world view as a combination of
German idealism, evolutionism and utilitarianism. Keynes is variously described
as an idealist utilitarian influenced by G. E. Moore, a political utilitarian influ-
enced by Edmund Burke, an idealist with an ethical position similar to that of
Plato and/or Aristotle. These characterizations suggest quite different ethical
foundations for Marshall’s and Keynes’s contributions to economic theory and
policy. However, the importance each attached to the link between ethical con-
siderations and economic progress suggests a kind of influence on Keynes by
Marshall which is worth investigating.
Both men eschewed hedonism and rejected crude nineteenth-century laissez-
faire liberalism. They both emphasized the role played by spirited, visionary cap-
italists in promoting capitalist development and maintaining economic stability.
Both recognized the limits to the rational use of the hedonic calculus in economic
decisions. For both, ethics and economics were interrelated at several levels. The
interrelation informed their visions of the human potential and ‘progress’, both
social and economic, and, therefore, influenced their approach to public policy.
Ethical presuppositions led them to take seriously public duty and guided their
activities and projects as economists. Though politically both Marshall and
Keynes can be considered utilitarians, because they took the ultimate aim of pub-
lic policy to be the well being of the people, neither man considered utilitarian-
ism an adequate ethical theory, because it does not adequately account for human
motivation.
This chapter compares Marshall’s and Keynes’s assumptions about the role
of moral functioning of economic agents in promoting economic stability and
progress. It investigates the kind of ethical behaviour, particularly on the part of busi-
nessmen, each man thought was required to assure steady economic growth. One
conclusion is that Marshall discredited the crucial justification for laissez-faire, that
113
S. W. HELBURN
individuals, acting in their own self-interest, also maximize the general welfare,
possibly alerting Keynes to the importance of fallacies of composition in moving
from micro- to macro-analysis of economic processes. Although Marshall rejected
the laissez-faire doctrine, he embraced an evolutionary view of economic/ethical
development that he thought would limit the need for public intervention in eco-
nomic affairs, a proposition Keynes rejected.
2. Marshall
The founding fathers of economics relied on the invisible hand and Say’s Law to
bring economic actions based on self-interest into line with general economic
welfare. However, by the end of the nineteenth century we find Marshall asking
questions about the fairness of the system, and speculating about the conditions
necessary to assure human progress. He argued that ‘the economist, like every
one else, must concern himself with the ultimate aims of man’ (Marshall 1920,
book 1, chapter 2, p. 14). He was quite explicit in arguing that normal action by
economic actors is not necessarily right morally (chapter 3, p. 29). Although he
considered economic freedom a major precondition for the good society, he
asked:
How should we act so as to increase the good and diminish the evil influ-
ences of economic freedom, both in its ultimate results and in the course
of its progress? If the first are good and the latter evil, but those who
suffer the evil, do not reap the good; how far is it right that they should
suffer the benefit of others?
(chapter 4, p. 34)
114
RATIONAL ECONOMIC MAN
great extent with reference to egoistic motives; but also one who is not
above the frailties of vanity or recklessness, and not below the delight of
doing his work well for its own sake; who is not below the delight of sac-
rificing himself for the good of his family, his neighbours, or his coun-
try, not below the love of a virtuous life for its own sake.
(Marshall 1912: 26; see a similar statement in Marshall 1920, book 1,
chapter 2, p. 22)
In defining economics as the study of men as they act ‘in the ordinary business
of life’, Marshall asserted: ‘Everyone who is worth anything carries his higher
nature with him into business; … And it is true that the best energies of the ablest
inventors and organizers of improved methods and appliances are stimulated by a
noble emulation more than by any love of wealth for its own sake’ (Marshall
1920, book 1, chapter 2, p. 12).
Marshall used character traits to explain the great advances in modern life. He
was most explicit in his discussions of businessmen, the ‘undertakers’ whose en-
ergy, initiative, enterprise, industry, thrift and foresight make progress happen. In
his essay, ‘Social Possibilities of Economic Chivalry’, Marshall commented that
‘the epoch-making discoveries generally come from men who love their work
with a chivalrous Love’ (Marshall 1925: 332). And he claimed that ‘Strong men
are getting more and more to recognize that a deep full character is the only true
source of happiness, and that it is very seldom formed without the pains of some
self-compulsion and some self-repression’ (p. 345).
Marshall’s materialist, evolutionary, view of human nature is reminiscent of
Marx of The Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts (devoid, of course, of any
dialectical process). On the first page of the Principles Marshall noted that ‘man’s
character has been moulded by his every-day work’ more than by any other
source, except, possibly, religion. He rejected the static view of human nature in
favour of a pliable, evolutionary view based on the mutual growth of human
wants and human activities (Marshall 1920, book 3, chapter 1, p. 71). In contrast
to the pessimistic predictions of stagnation and subsistence living for the masses
made by the classical economists, Marshall saw a rosy future for Englishmen
based on a mutually reinforcing evolution of economic and human character
development:
Economists have … learnt to trust that the human will, guided by careful
thought, can so modify circumstances as largely to modify character,
and thus to bring about new conditions of life still more favourable to
character; and therefore to the economic, as well as the moral, well being
of the masses of the people.
(Marshall 1920, book 1, chapter 4, p. 40)
115
S. W. HELBURN
development, and the negative effect on the efficiency of the poor caused by their
poverty. Marshall argued that social science, and economics in particular, would
have to change to reflect the rapid change in human nature.
In ‘Some Features of American Industry’, a paper he read in the fall of 1875,
Marshall claimed that ethical progress is closely connected to economic progress.
He argued that the ethical condition in any society is mainly controlled by the
ethical insight of the masses of the people, by their ability to analyse practical
questions, which depends partly on their level of education, but mainly on the nature
of their work. This has implications for economics: ‘Whereas in other sciences
progress depends mainly upon the capacity of a few specialists, the progress of
one of the chief factors of ethical science – the knowledge of the capabilities of
human nature – is limited by the average capacity of the lowest classes.’
(Whitaker 1975: 374–7).
According to Marshall ethical growth depends on two factors: ‘… the peaceful
moulding of character into harmony with the conditions by which it is sur-
rounded; so that a man … will without conscious moral effort be impelled in that
course which is in union with the actions, the sympathies, and the interests of the
society amid which he spends his life’ (Whitaker: 375). These experiences grad-
ually become incorporated into the society’s moral maxims and customs.
Marshall described the second factor affecting ethical growth as ‘the education of
a firm will through the overcoming of difficulties. This will does not glide care-
lessly into conformity with the conditions by which it is surrounded, but submits
every particular action to the judgement of reason’ (p. 375). When this factor is
operative in a society, it can be ‘the empire of energy, of strong but subdued
enthusiasm, of grand ideals’ (p. 376).
Marshall argued that material productive relations are the most important
determinants of the relative development of the two factors. Of particular impor-
tance are the social cohesion of men who work together, and the existing level of
intellectual and moral functioning of the masses. Marshall concluded that under-
standing the relation ‘in which the industrial phenomena of a country stand to its
ethical’ is of fundamental importance to ‘those who are working their way, as
I am, towards that ethical creed which is according to the Doctrine of Evolution’
(p. 377).
Understanding Marshall’s use of Kantian and Hegelian concepts helps clarify
his view of rationality and the sense in which his conception of rationality includes
ethical considerations. Winslow argues that both Marshall’s metaphysics and
theory of history were deeply influenced by Hegel (Winslow 1990), and Chasse
emphasizes Marshall’s use of Hegel’s concept of freedom and self-actualization
(Chasse 1984). Whitaker chooses to emphasize the Kantian influence on Marshall
(Whitaker 1975: 352; 1977).
Marshall shared with Kant a belief in ‘the power of courageous reasoning and
in the effectiveness of the reform of institutions’ (MacIntyre 1966: 190). Kant can
be heard in Marshall’s emphasis on individual autonomy and the good will, the
good will’s motive to do its duty for the sake of doing its duty. In addition, and
116
RATIONAL ECONOMIC MAN
117
S. W. HELBURN
of production, laissez-faire, social evolution and human nature. Parsons points out,
for instance, that Marshall used his evolutionary theory to argue that growth in
character and morality make government intervention more likely to work, but less
necessary.
Although attempts have been made to integrate Marshall’s economic and evo-
lutionary theories (Maloney 1985; Whitaker 1977), Parsons’ analysis is important
to our argument in emphasizing Marshall’s recognition that higher moral func-
tioning must be assumed in order to conclude that economic and human progress
proceed together in capitalist society. Marshall, in his economic analysis, proved
the inadequacy of the nineteenth century utilitarian defence of capitalism and
laissez-faire. He proved that the system can produce negative externalities: mono-
poly, unequal income distribution, overcrowding, inadequate reproduction of the
working class therefore inadequate quantities of and qualities in workers,
inadequate saving. Marshall needed his evolutionary theory to identify economic
progress with total social welfare.
Marshall assumed that capitalist development would encourage rational deci-
sion making. The market system and freedom of enterprise would encourage the
development of rational business behaviour and cooperative attitudes about work
on the part of the masses. The system creates measurable motives, but reliance on
marginal calculation does not necessarily imply purely self-centred motivation. It
merely implies the existence of a standard of comparison of alternatives based on
monetary costs and benefits. The quality of the projects or opportunities being
compared depend on underlying values of the economic agents. For Marshall,
what was distinctive and progressive about the capitalist system was the incentive
provided for material progress, and the rational forms of calculation and foresight
it produced for comparing the value of alternative courses of action.
In sum, Marshall believed capitalist development would promote the develop-
ment of both moral judgement and rational economic decisions (an uneasy alliance)
such that the defects of capitalism would diminish as people learned to base action
on the Kantian criterion. This would reduce negative externalities, therefore the
need for government intervention. Problems intrinsic to the system, such as those
related to the unequal distribution of income and the tendency to under invest in the
labour force, would, however, have to be solved through collective action.
3. Keynes
Keynes did not share Marshall’s optimistic view of the evolution of capitalism and
he was disparaging of Darwinian social theories, although he did not identify them
with Marshall. Granting that in capitalist society competition promotes the sur-
vival of the fittest, Keynes commented that the most successful profit makers
make it to the top through the ‘bankruptcy of the less efficient’ or the less lucky
(Keynes 1931, ‘The End of Laissez-Faire’). Keynes emphasized the cost and char-
acter of the competitive struggle. Like Marshall, Keynes likened the economy to a
mechanism, but he was decidedly more concerned about the painful adjustments
118
RATIONAL ECONOMIC MAN
which were required if the mechanism had to be relied upon to bring about
structural change. In objecting to the restoration of sterling to its prewar value in
1925, which would require a depression in export industries, he argued that the
‘vast machine’ would ‘crash along, with regard only to its equilibrium as a whole,
and without attention to the chance consequences of the injury to individual
groups’. Those who favour the restoration, he noted, ‘sit in the top tier of the
machine’ (Keynes 1931, ‘Economic Consequences of Mr Churchill’, p. 224).
Keynes, writing in the interwar period, focused on the fundamental economic
instability of modern economies – inflation and depressions and the need to reject
the laissez-faire doctrine. He attributed the success of capitalist growth before the
First World War to enterprising capitalists’ pursuit of business projects for their
own sake. He agreed with Marshall that the great benefits of capitalist develop-
ment are dependent on a faith in the system and motives that involve more than
pure self-interested monetary gain. Instead of evolutionary progress to nervana,
however, Keynes accepted John R. Commons’s analysis that the capitalist system
was in transition from an age of abundance dominated by economic anarchy to an
age of stabilization which required deliberate public intervention to promote social
justice and social stability (Keynes 1931, ‘Am I a Liberal?’). In Keynes’s view
twentieth-century economic instability was directly related to the pursuit of narrow
self-interest and ‘rational’ business decisions and the unlikely prospect that indi-
viduals acting alone will consider fallacies of composition inherent in the system.
He recognized a contradiction immanent in an entrepreneurial system motivated
by monetary gain – a tendency for capitalists to substitute speculation for enter-
prise in unsettled times, possibly an appropriate business strategy for the individ-
ual under the circumstances, but one which both increases economic instability
and lowers long-run growth.
Did Keynes adopt Marshall’s view of the nineteenth-century capitalist? Keynes
never seemed to reject his earlier description in The Economic Consequences of
the Peace of the ‘entrepreneur class of capitalists’ as the ‘active and constructive
element in capitalist society’ (Keynes 1919: 149). However, there are differences
between Marshall’s and Keynes’s character assessment of capitalists that explain
his conclusion in chapter 12 of The General Theory that investors in the twen-
tieth century were increasingly attracted to speculation rather than enterprise.
Clearly Keynes moved from Marshall’s insights to a more complex assessment of
the role of businessmen in his own (and our) era.
Keynes was not a Kantian and he did not value purposefulness for its own sake.
His valuation of the captains of industry was based, at least partly, on his views
of excellence acquired at Cambridge under the influence of G. E. Moore. In his
Apostle essay, ‘Science and Art’ written in 1909, Keynes compared the value of
a businessman with that of the artist and the scientist. While the artist is most
highly valued, Keynes argued that the scientist should be valued more than the
businessman because ‘the beauties of argument and the excitement of discovery’
are ‘not imaginary goods’ whereas much of the life of the businessman is ‘irk-
some toil’. Admitting the importance of the work of a businessman, Keynes
119
S. W. HELBURN
claimed that the value of the work is quite a different thing from the value of the
process.
In 1921, in a dinner speech to the Apostles, remembering a member of the
‘brethren’ who had died that year, Keynes wondered why Moulton had chosen to
become a businessman. Keynes concluded: ‘I fancy … that, rightly judged, his act
was one of artistry, not of avarice; and the impulse came, not at all from greed, but
from the necessity still to exercise a perfected talent.’ Keynes asked, what is a man
to do if he is highly intelligent, creative, vital, has the egotism of an artist and the
genius, but not the talent? He suggested that Moulton, through his activity as a busi-
nessman, may have come as close as he could to the satisfactions of an artist (Keynes
1921, Juvenilia manuscripts). While admiring of the character traits of such a man
of action, Keynes seems to be suggesting that the successful businessman is moti-
vated more by the desire for self-actualization than by a disciplined will to do good.
In1927 in a book review of H. G. Wells, The World of William Clissold, Keynes
clearly veered from Marshall’s view of the tandem development of economic and
ethical growth in questioning the potential for the great businessmen of the day
to lead society into the good life. Although Keynes reiterated his admiration of
the creative intellect and energy of the great modern businessmen, he suggested
a shallowness of character. He commented that because they lack a creed, ‘they
fall back on the grand substitute motive, the perfect ersatz, the anodyne for those
who, in fact, want nothing at all – money … they flutter about the world seeking
for something to which they can attach their abundant libido. But they have not
found it. … They remain businessmen’ (Keynes 1931, ‘Clissold’, p. 320).
In the economic turmoil following the First World War, Keynes considered the
great captain of industry a tarnished idol (Keynes 1931, ‘The End of Laissez-Faire’,
p. 287). With the postwar inflation, business lost ‘its genuine character and becomes
no better than a speculation in the exchanges, the fluctuations in which entirely
obliterate the normal profits of commerce’ (Keynes 1919: 154). In chapter 12 of
The General Theory, Keynes presented a still more critical analysis of business
behaviour, attributing the ills of the economy to speculation and the pursuit of short-
run monetary gains. Keynes emphasized the effects of the development of stock and
other asset markets that made it less risky to invest in securities that could be bought
and sold at will, than in long-term investments whose profitability could not really
be evaluated at all. The development of capital markets encouraged speculation,
buying and selling based on forecasting the psychology of the market. With their
increasingly efficient organization, Keynes noted that investment institutions and
private individuals preferred to invest in liquid assets. In substituting speculation for
long-term investment, businessmen lower the rate of aggregate real investment,
therefore aggregate demand, further increasing the instability of the system. Keynes
seems to consider speculative investing a reasonable response by individual
investors to the circumstances, but antisocial since it detracts from real investment
for the community as a whole.
Keynes credited Marx’s analysis of the circulation of capital for providing
insight about capitalist motivation and the fallacy of Say’s Law. Marx described
120
RATIONAL ECONOMIC MAN
… it is our innate urge to activity which makes the wheels go round, our
rational selves choosing between the alternatives as best we are able, cal-
culating where we can, but often falling back to our motive on whim or
sentiment or chance.
(p. 163)
121
S. W. HELBURN
means rather than ends. Fitzgibbons argues that the tendency for businessmen to
substitute speculation for enterprise involves a kind of self-deception – the
assumption that today’s conditions will continue in the future. Keynes, he asserts,
is arguing that ‘a gravitational tendency toward bad faith is ultimately responsi-
ble for the instability of the capitalist system’ (p. 82). Fitzgibbons argues that
Keynes was trying to show that when investors lose their animal spirits, their
moral courage, they become subjective and irrational and the economy becomes
volatile.
Carabelli claims that Keynes’s use of animal spirits comes from Descartes and
represents unconscious mental action led by the soul (1988: 214, 298). Applying
Keynes’s theory of probability, she points out that Keynes had less faith than
Marshall in the existence of measurable motives, because, he argued, the future
cannot be converted into the same quantifiable status as the present. She argues
convincingly that Keynes rejected the dichotomy between rationality and irra-
tionality, preferring to use the criterion of reasonability (p. 219). Economic actors
take into account uncertainty, making reasonable choices based on intuition and
partial knowledge. This interpretation of rationality seems consistent with the
passage quoted above.
4. Conclusion
Keynes progressed and diverged from Marshall’s view of the upstanding and coura-
geous nineteenth-century industrialist. He did not seem to consider entrepreneurs
necessarily virtuous, only spirited (and subject to fits of bad faith when economic
conditions deteriorate). Their motive for investing is based on ‘whim or sentiment
or chance’, dependent on ‘spontaneous optimism … whether moral, hedonistic or
economic’. Investment decisions, according to Keynes, are based on subjective
expectations and often, particularly in good times, non-economic motivations
which could involve high-minded goals. Clearly, Keynes rejected the assumption of
investor as ‘rational economic man’ in favour of investor as a reasonable, egotisti-
cal man who often is motivated to do good, but tries to protect his capital during bad
times. Such men make reasonable decisions, given the circumstances, that is, given
their incomplete state of knowledge and the quality of their intuition. At least, for
the purposes of understanding investment behaviour, Keynes found it necessary to
avoid the abstraction, ‘rational economic man’.
Capitalists may or may not act as ethical agents, but they are necessary to con-
tinuing economic progress, making it essential to maintain a business climate that
encourages their enterprise. The virtuous are among the elites who try to keep the
economic system on an even keel while encouraging the ‘arts of life’ that Keynes
considered to be of greater and more permanent significance (Keynes 1931,
‘Economic Possibilities for Our Grandchildren’, p. 332).
This brings us back to the question of fallacies of composition. Marshall
expected economic agents (workers as well as the propertied) to evolve morally to
the point where they recognize and take them into account in their own decisions.
122
RATIONAL ECONOMIC MAN
Keynes recognized that most people will continue to make decisions more narrowly
based on their own self-interest, although not usually based on precise calculations
of monetary gain. Thus, it is the function of public officials, aided by economist
technicians, to offset the effects when the whole does not equal the sum of the
parts. Their job is to control the environment and curb the abuses of the system so
that the free play of economic forces can realize the full potential of production,
which, in turn, makes more possible the good life:
Individualism, if it can be purged of its defects and its abuses, is the best
safeguard of personal liberty in the sense that, compared with any other
system, it greatly widens the field for the exercise of personal choice. It
is also the best safeguard of the variety of life, which emerges precisely
from this extended field of personal choice … For this variety … colours
the present with the diversification of its fancy; and, being the handmaid
of experiment as well as of tradition and of fancy, it is the most power-
ful instrument to better the future.
(Keynes 1936, chapter 24, p. 380)
References
Carabelli, A. (1988) On Keynes’s Method. London: Macmillan and New York: St Martin’s
Press.
Chasse, J. D. (1984) ‘Marshall, the Human Agent and Economic Growth: Wants and
Activities Revisited’, History of Political Economy 16: 3.
Coats, A. W. (1990) ‘Marshall and Ethics’, in R. McWilliams (ed.), Alfred Marshall in
Retrospect. Tullberg: Edward Elgar.
Fitzgibbons, A. J. (1988) Keynes’s Vision: A New Political Economy. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
Keynes, J. M., Juvenilia manuscripts housed in the Modern Archives at King’s College
Library, Cambridge. ‘Science and Art’ (1909). ‘Vice President and Brethren’, from a
dinner speech at the Apostles annual dinner (1921).
Keynes, J. M., in Donald E. Moggridge (ed.), The Collected Writings of John Maynard
Keynes. Macmillan Cambridge University Press for the Royal Economic Society. Vol. 2,
The Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919). Vol. 9, Essays in Persuasion (1931).
Vol. 10, Essays in Biography (1933). Vol. 29, The General Theory and After (1979).
Keynes, J. M. (1936) The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money. Harcourt
Brace Jovanovich.
MacIntyre, A. (1966) A Short History of Ethics, New York Collier Books, New York:
Macmillan.
MacIntyre, A. (1984) After Virtue, 2nd edn. Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre
Dame Press.
Maloney, J. (1985) Orthodoxy and the Professionalization of Economics. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Marshall, A. (1912) Elements of Economics of Industry, 3rd edn. Macmillan.
Marshall, A. (1920) Principles of Economics, 8th edn. Philadelphia: Porcupine Press.
Parsons, T. (1931) ‘Wants and Activities in Marshall’, Quarterly Journal of Economics. 46:
101–40.
123
S. W. HELBURN
Pigou, A. (ed.), Memorials of Alfred Marshall. London: Macmillan, 1925, for the Royal
Economic Society.
Whitaker, J. K. (1975) The Early Economic Writings of Alfred Marshall, 1867–1890, Vol. 2.
Macmillan for the Royal Economic Society.
Whitaker, J. K. (1977) ‘Some Neglected Aspects of Alfred Marshall’s Economic and Social
Thought’, History of Political Economy 9: 2.
Winslow, T. (1990) ‘Marshall and Hegel: Organicism and Marshall’s Accounts of Method
and Historical Development’, manuscript.
124
13
COGNITION AND COORDINATION
Brian J. Loasby
125
B. J. LOASBY
126
COGNITION AND COORDINATION
than money was the basic cause of macroeconomic problems has a long history;
Robertson (1915) anticipated Schumpeter in suggesting that business recessions
might be a partly unavoidable consequence of innovation. Since we are frequently
told that economics is about trade-offs and that there is no free lunch, we should at
least be prepared to entertain the idea that unemployment is a pathology of progress
and, more generally, that every method of coordinating economic activity has its
particular limitations and its particular ways of generating problems. In the remain-
der of this chapter we shall consider coordination from the perspective of human
cognition, without being constrained by standard assumptions of rationality.
127
B. J. LOASBY
As a young man, Hayek worked out a psychological theory that would account
for the prevalence of pattern making and pattern using, published much later as The
Sensory Order (1952); this order emerged as a classification system to be imposed
on phenomena, thus economizing on the scarce resource of attention, which has
been a theme of Simon’s work. It does not correspond closely to the order which
has since been created by natural scientists – indeed it was the disparity between
these two classification systems that provoked Hayek’s enquiry, in a striking illus-
tration of Pounds’s (1969) proposition that problems are defined by differences.
Since the two kinds of order are used for different purposes such a disparity should
not be surprising, for a range of domain-specific patterns can be more closely
adapted to particular applications than a unified scheme. The argument that domain-
specific patterns are better adapted than rationality for human living, and therefore
more likely to have emerged from a selection process during which the size of the
human brain grew quite rapidly, has been made by Cosmides and Tooby (1994); the
basic idea, in the form of a mechanical analogy, was produced soon after the pub-
lication of Darwin’s Origin of Species by Marshall (1994) who, like Hayek, was at-
tracted to evolutionary psychology early in his career.
Of particular interest in Marshall’s model is his conjecture of two stages of pat-
tern formation. The first stage relies exclusively on the clustering of impressions
and actions and the selective reinforcement of links between classes of impressions
and classes of actions which are apparently effective. These processes are influ-
enced by the characteristics of each machine’s environment and the sequence of
events and responses, thus providing the basis for the ‘tendency to variation’ which
Marshall subsequently identified as a major factor in economic development.
When, and only when, this mechanism is working well enough to ensure satisfac-
tory performance, there may begin to emerge a second category of patterns, based
not on impressions and actions but on ideas of impressions and actions. The
immediate value of this second category is that it provides a means, consistent
with the first, of allowing (fallible) images of the future to influence decisions; its
greater cognitive demands imply (on familiar economic principles) that it should
be used selectively, leaving most actions to unconscious, but still potentially adap-
tive, procedures, and drawing on these procedures to orient its own speculation.
Here again we can make a connection to Knight’s discussion of decision making;
since there is no basis for rational expectations in uncertainty, we must create an
image of the future, and we cannot do so without assuming that the future will be
somewhat like the past, even though the need for decision arises from the belief
that it will be somewhat different from the past (Knight 1921: 313). Imagination
requires an anchor.
The ability to consider future possibilities as well as past experiences makes
possible a new kind of cognition, based on conjectures which are modified or
replaced through trial and error, leading to an experimental and evolutionary
process for the development of knowledge. The most notable outcomes of this kind
of cognition in contemporary society are organized science and organized indus-
try; it is therefore entirely appropriate – and, I believe, not coincidental – that
128
COGNITION AND COORDINATION
Adam Smith approached both from what we would now call a cognitive viewpoint.
Smith accepted Hume’s argument that there was no procedure which could prove
the truth of any general empirical proposition, and that logical reasoning about
empirical issues, being necessarily based on premises which might be false, there-
fore offered no guarantee against error. Like Marshall and Hayek later, Smith turned
to psychology for an explanation of how people developed what came to be
accepted as knowledge; and he anticipated Popper in identifying scientific discov-
ery as a particularly clear and analysable manifestation of a general human process.
Smith (1795 [1980]) begins his analysis of ‘the principles which lead and direct
philosophical enquiries’ with an account of the general human desire for a way
of accommodating experience within familiar categories, the discomfort of being
unable to account for phenomena, and the pleasure experienced when this dis-
comfort is removed by a plausible and aesthetically appealing system of thought.
It is important to note the emotional basis of Smith’s analysis. No doubt it would
be possible to include these emotions in a suitably enlarged preference system,
but that would not be very helpful because the discomfort results from the
absence of any credible premises from which to reason, and is relieved only by
the construction of a new set of ‘connecting principles’, which is not a logical
process; cognition has an essential emotional component. Smith focuses on
astronomical ideas, and traces the succession of cosmological systems, each cre-
ated to resolve perplexities and eventually failing to accommodate new experi-
ence, until we arrive at the Newtonian system – which, Smith is careful to point
out, might also eventually prove unsatisfactory. In contrast to Kuhn’s (1962, 1970)
account of the succession of paradigms, which emphasizes discontinuity, Smith
explains how each new system, though clearly a work of imagination, adapts and
rearranges elements into what Schumpeter was to call ‘new combinations’.
The search for connecting principles encourages the emergence of a distinctive
scientific community, and subsequently of subcommunities, each paying increasing
attention to the details of particular classes of phenomena, and therefore becoming
increasingly demanding in its requirements for a satisfactory theory. This division
of labour accelerates the growth of knowledge by increasing the likelihood of
experiencing discomfort. More than two centuries later, Shackle (who was unaware
of this work of Smith’s) reinvented Smith’s account in order to explain the ‘land-
slide of invention’ in economics between 1926 and 1939 as a consequence of the
increasing specialization of economics as a discipline and the attempts to provide
it with a precise theoretical structure. ‘The question for the scientist is what
thought-scheme will best provide him with a sense of … order and coherence’
(Shackle 1967: 286), thus holding at bay ‘the uneasy consciousness of mystery
and a threatening unknown’ (Shackle 1967: 288). Smith had cited the restoration
of order among ‘the noblest works of nature’ as Copernicus’s explicit motivation
and drawn attention to the rhetorical power of Newton’s unified explanation of
cosmological and terrestrial phenomena.
Because science was for Smith (as for Shackle) a quintessentially human activ-
ity, we should not be surprised that Smith subsequently applied the proposition
129
B. J. LOASBY
130
COGNITION AND COORDINATION
more reliable propositions from the less reliable (Ziman 1978), and improving
our understanding of the range of convenience of particular simplifications.
Leijonhufvud’s ‘corridor hypothesis’, that an economic system may be stable
within a particular range of variation but suffer serious coordination failure
outside that range, is in effect a hypothesis about the range of convenience of
an intersecting set of theories (many in the rudimentary form of classification
systems) on which people have come to rely in managing their activities; and it is
as useful in explaining organizational behaviour, and also individual behaviour
(Kelly 1963), as in macroeconomics. The cognitive foundations are common to
all three applications.
131
B. J. LOASBY
132
COGNITION AND COORDINATION
improvement, but it may also, as Schumpeter (1934) argued, cause the collapse of
existing businesses and the abandonment of existing practices without the emer-
gence of any adequate replacements. Schumpeterian employment, like Keynesian
employment, grows because people do not know what to do: there are no credi-
ble premises for rationality, and no patterns that seem to fit the situation. Even
entrepreneurs are baffled, because they have no means of deciding which of their
visions is capable of realization. Successful change requires a substantial element
of predictability, the principal source of which, as Schumpeter recognized, is the
prevalence of routine behaviour. Our cognitive limitations cause us to rely on our
own routines to provide space for thinking, and other people’s routines to provide
an empirical context for our thoughts. Thus the general absence of originality may
be said to be a necessary condition for selective innovation.
133
B. J. LOASBY
failure, on a very large scale, cannot be excluded, as has been demonstrated many
times in many contexts. It is part of the pathology of human cognition.
References
Ayer, A. J. (1971) Language, Truth and Logic, 2nd edn. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
Barnard, C. I. (1938) The Functions of the Executive. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press.
Choi, Y. B. (1993) Paradigms and Conventions: Uncertainty, Decision Making and
Entrepreneurship. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Coase, R. H. (1937) ‘The Nature of the Firm’, Economica NS 4: 386–405.
Cosmides, L. and Tooby, J. (1994) ‘Better than Rational: Evolutionary Psychology and the
Invisible Hand’, American Economic Review 84: 327–32.
Hayek, F. A. (1952) The Sensory Order. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Heiner, R. A. (1983) ‘The Origin of Predictable Behavior’, American Economic Review
73: 560–95.
Hutchison, T. W. (1937) ‘Expectation and Rational Conduct’, Zeitschrift für
Nationalökonomie 8(5): 636–53.
Kelly, G. A. (1963) A Theory of Personality. New York: W. W. Norton.
Keynes, J. M. (1921) [1973] A Treatise on Probability, reprinted in D. E. Moggridge (ed.),
Collected Writings, Vol. 8. London: Macmillan.
Keynes, J. M. (1937) ‘The General Theory of Employment’, Quarterly Journal of
Economics 51: 209–23, reprinted in D. E. Moggridge (ed.), Collected Writings, Vol. 14.
Knight, F. H. (1921) Risk, Uncertainty and Profit. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
Kuhn, T. S. (1962, 1970) The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, 1st and 2nd edns.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Lachmann, L. M. (1986) The Market as an Economic Process. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
Marshall, A. (1994) ‘Ye Machine’, Research in the History of Economic Thought and
Methodology, Archival Supplement 4. Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, pp. 116–32.
Penrose, E. T. (1959) The Theory of the Growth of the Firm. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. 3rd
edn. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995.
Pounds, W. F. (1969) ‘The Process of Problem Finding’, Industrial Management Review
11: 1–19.
Robertson, D. H. (1915) A Study of Industrial Fluctuation. London: P. S. King.
Schlicht, E. (2000) ‘Aestheticism in the Theory of Custom’, Journal des Economistes
et des Etudes Humaines 10(1) 33–51.
Schumpeter, J. A. (1934) The Theory of Economic Development. Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press.
Shackle, G. L. S. (1967) The Years of High Theory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Shackle, G. L. S. (1972) Epistemics and Economics. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
Simon, H. A. (1982) Models of Bounded Rationality, 2 volumes. Cambridge, MA and
London: MIT Press.
Smith, A. (1759) The Theory of Moral Sentiments, reprinted in D. D. Raphael and
A. L. Macfie (eds) (1976a), Glasgow Edition of the Works and Correspondence of Adam
Smith, Vol. 1. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
134
COGNITION AND COORDINATION
Smith, A. (1776) An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, reprinted
in R. H. Campbell, A. S. Skinner and W. B. Todd (eds) (1976b), Glasgow Edition of the
Works and Correspondence of Adam Smith, Vol. 2. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Smith, A. (1795) ‘The Principles Which Lead and Direct Philosophical Enquiries:
Illustrated by the History of Astronomy’, in Essays on Philosophical Subjects, reprinted
in W. P. D. Wightman (ed.) (1980), Glasgow Edition of the Works and Correspondence
of Adam Smith, Vol. 3. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 33–105.
Ziman, J. M. (1978) Reliable Knowledge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
135
14
KEYNES’S NOTION OF CAUSA
CAUSANS AND ITS APPLICATION
TO THE GLOBALISATION PROCESS 1
Keynes was dealing with a complex system in which there are many interacting
factors. This is indeed the case in economics and the social sciences. In any complex
system it is difficult to go to the heart of the problem and identify what is most
important. Keynes suggests a way out of this difficulty, namely that we should try
to discover a causa causans or dominant cause. This he identified as the factor
whose variation produces the largest effect on the system as a whole. The reason for
focusing on the factor ‘which is most prone to sudden and wide fluctuations’ is the
fact that his aim was to explain fluctuations in the level of output and employment.
136
KEYNES’S NOTION OF CAUSA CAUSANS
Keynes’s theory was devised in order to provide the basis for an understanding
of the persistent mass unemployment and in order to devise relevant policies.
However, Keynes is very careful to distinguish his economic theory from its
possible applications. As he says (1937: 121–2):
This that I offer is, therefore, a theory of why output and employment are
so liable to fluctuation. It does not offer a ready-made remedy as to how
to avoid these fluctuations and to maintain output at a steady optimum
level. But it is, properly speaking, a theory of employment because it
explains why, in any given circumstances, employment is what it is.
Naturally I am interested not only in the diagnosis, but also in the
cure; … . But I consider that my suggestions for a cure, which, avowedly,
are not worked out completely, are on a different plane from the diagno-
sis. They are not meant to be definitive; they are subject to all sorts of
special assumptions and are necessarily related to the particular condi-
tions of the time.
This passage makes it clear that, in his analysis, Keynes was looking for a causa
causans for both diagnostic and curative purposes. He distinguishes carefully
between his diagnosis (the isolation of the causa causans), and his suggestions
for a cure based on that diagnosis. He has great confidence in his diagnosis, but
thinks that his suggestions for a cure need further elaboration. Nonetheless,
action and policies play a large role in his analysis of causa causans.
In the next sections we will attempt to apply a similar causal methodology to a
contemporary example: globalisation. We start with a brief analysis of various
theses on globalisation and then, following Keynes’s approach, we will try to
isolate its dominant causes, or causae causantes.
137
D. GILLIES AND G. IETTO-GILLIES
the more quantitative aspects, the most cited ones are cross-countries flows in
relation to trade, foreign direct investment and financial transactions.2 We should
also add the flows of profits, dividends and interests related to international
investment, the inter-organisation – particularly inter-firm – collaborative agree-
ments as well as the movements of people across frontiers.3
There are some attempts at a broad analysis of the globalisation process and its
policy implications. These attempts have been categorised by Held et al. (1999)
into various theses. The authors consider three main theses in the globalisation
debate.
At one end of the spectrum they put the proponents of what they call the
‘Hyperglobalist Thesis’, of which the main exponent is Kenichi Ohmae (1991,
1995, 1996). Ohmae sees the brave new world at the turn of the millennium dom-
inated by large successful multinational companies (MNCs).The MNCs are seen
as a source of efficiency and progress which can deliver wealth and well-being
throughout the world – or at least the developed part of it. Globalisation – largely
the outcome of MNCs’ activities – is seen as an unstoppable force for progress
and efficiency. It is market driven and indeed the logic of the market must be
allowed to prevail by pushing forward with deregulation and liberalisation. The
constraints still posed by nation states must come down: the era of the Nation
State is over and it must give way to the Region State.
Such a death warrant for the nation state was bound to generate support for its
survival. One group has indeed been led to deny (or play down considerably) the
very existence of globalisation in order to maintain that news of the death of the
nation state are grossly premature. Indeed, the nation states and their governments
are alive and kicking and there are calls for them to kick harder and more effec-
tively. Held et al. (1999), as well as Giddens (1999), name this the ‘Sceptic Thesis’.
It is represented by Carnoy et al. (1993) in the US and by Hirst and Thompson
(1996) on the other side of the Atlantic.
Carnoy et al. (1993, chapter 3) examine the growth and development of multi-
national enterprises (MNEs) since the 1970s. They find that, in spite of consider-
able qualitative and quantitative changes in their activities, MNEs are still very
much embedded in the home country. The majority of their activities and profits –
except for a few MNEs – are based in the home country and so is their R&D.
Therefore, the contemporary MNEs are strongly dependent on the home-country’s
infrastructure, business culture and government policies. There is a very strong
interaction between home nation state and MNEs. The performance of the home
economy is affected by the success of its MNEs; conversely, the MNEs’ success
worldwide depends on the success and support they have in their home base. In
this perspective, national policies in the globalisation era become more, not less,
relevant. They affect the level of competitiveness of the economy, as well as the
physical and human-capital infrastructure. This, in turn, affects the performance
and competitiveness of MNEs.
Hirst and Thompson (1996) question the whole notion of globalisation on the
basis that: (a) It is not a new phenomenon. Large international flows of trade,
138
KEYNES’S NOTION OF CAUSA CAUSANS
portfolio and direct investment, as well as migration flows, are nothing new. The
beginning of this century saw a similar, if not higher, intensity of transactions
across borders. (b) Multinational companies are not borderless institutions. They
are well embedded in their own home nation state in terms of share of overall
activities. (c) Most international flows take place within well-defined regions
rather than spread across the globe. (d) Capital mobility is confined within the
developed countries and does not produce massive shifts from developed to
developing countries. Similar arguments are used by Kozul-Wright and Rowthorn
(1998b) to support the view that ‘… there has been a tendency to exaggerate the
extent of truly global production relocations’ (p. 78).
Thus, if globalisation is a hyped myth, it follows that the nation state is still
the key unit of governance within its own borders and also in terms of establishing
appropriate international institutions and securing appropriate and consistent
cross-country governance. The sceptics’ defence of the nation state is based on the
denial or playing down of globalisation.
139
D. GILLIES AND G. IETTO-GILLIES
They reject the hyperglobalist views of the demise and redundancy of the
nation state. They see the development of new forces (spatial and social) in the
domains of politics and power and the need for a rethinking of democracy in a
world of overlapping communities.
Does this mean that there is a conflict or separation of roles and aims of in-
dustrial and finance capital? Chesnais’s answer is definitely negative because he
sees industrial and financial groups as closely interlinked and enmeshed in their
working towards more profitable accumulation worldwide.
Chesnais gives detailed empirical support to his thesis with data on the acceler-
ated growth of financial transactions6 (chapter 2). For example, the daily average
transactions on the stock exchanges of the UK, the US and Japan have increased
by 100 per cent between 1986 and 1990 and by about 200 per cent between 1990
and 1992 (Graph 10.3, p. 253).
140
KEYNES’S NOTION OF CAUSA CAUSANS
as such there is nothing that can or should be done. Milberg (1998) identifies the
driving forces of globalisation as: the transnational corporations; technological
change; macroeconomic conditions; liberalisation and privatisation, and other
policies in both developed and developing countries.
Held et al. (1999) tackle the issue of causation in their concluding chapter in
their search for ‘principal driving forces underlying contemporary globalization’
(p. 436). They write later on the same page:
This notion of causality is more akin to a statement about the fact that global-
isation is a confluence of globalising tendencies in a variety of social, economic,
political and cultural domains. These tendencies are mediated and fuelled via
specific factors, that is via the technologies of transportation and communication.
However, we are not told whether there are dominant or main causes and if so
what they are, or whether there are unifying underlying elements that affect glob-
alisation in all the domains. In other words we are told the domains of impact
of globalisation and the fact that they reinforce each other, but nothing about
the ‘causae causantes’, the primary or dominant causes of the whole process. The
authors start from the plan to give driving forces but end up by giving us domains
of impact of globalisation while assigning a mediation role to the revolution in the
technology of transportation and communication.
Can we identify causes and driving forces in the globalisation process? Is it
indeed useful to do so and why? Let us start with tackling the latter question.
We start from the premise that globalisation is indeed a process which involves
many factors interacting often in a cumulative way.
A considerable amount of debate in the various theses on globalisation sum-
marised above develops around the issue of state intervention and power of nation
states. It therefore centres around whether and how governments can and should
intervene to regulate the economies and the globalisation process itself. The range
of views on the extent of government intervention as we saw above is varied.
141
D. GILLIES AND G. IETTO-GILLIES
142
KEYNES’S NOTION OF CAUSA CAUSANS
However, the spatial reach is not the only dimension affected by these innovations.
The combination of technological and organisational innovation has led to the adop-
tion of flexible production systems which have profound effects on many areas of
economic and social life including the following ones: the introduction of new
products and processes; the range of skills required in the new economy; and the
relationship between producers and their suppliers/distributors as well as between
producers and consumers. Some of these changes have a spatial dimension, some
have not. Some of the changes bring considerable efficiency and/or qualitative gains.
Others do not or indeed bring serious problems.7 None of these elements is new,
including the spatial reach (as highlighted by Held et al. 1999). However, in the last
twenty years all of them have received a considerable boost – in relative terms –
because of innovation. The overall result is a qualitatively new system, a new phase
in capitalist development.
Second, it is useful to distinguish between the driving forces of the globalisation
process and its dominant causes. We consider the driving forces to be all those
elements that contribute to the process and help it to take the current shape and
patterns. In particular, the following ones: the activities of transnational companies
(TNCs) and of financial institutions; the diffusion of information and communi-
cation technologies; the macro-policies of many governments; widespread liberal-
isation and privatisation programmes; and the policies of international institutions
such as the IMF.
A subset of the above driving forces, we consider to be dominant causes, those
at the root of the globalisation process. We follow Keynes in looking for causae
causantes in a complex system. However, the test of what is a causa causans
differ because of the different context to which it is applied. Keynes’s main
preoccupation was the fluctuations in the level of output and employment, there-
fore he looked for that factor which fluctuates most. Our main preoccupation is
with the analysis of globalisation as a new phase of capitalist development and
therefore in terms of the development of productive forces. Hence, we look for
those factors that most contribute to the development of the productive forces.
This means that, in identifying the causae causantes of globalisation, a differ-
ent litmus test will be followed compared to Keynes’s. Keynes’s litmus test was
‘fluctuations’. We shall use the following litmus test8: (a) The driving forces con-
tribute to the development of the productive forces at the basis of the globalisa-
tion process. (b) Given such a contribution, these forces are largely irreversible.
(c) It follows also from (a) that, without them, the contemporary globalisation
process would be inconceivable.
On the basis of these conditions which form the litmus test, we identify the
dominant causes or causae causantes of globalisation in the following areas of
innovation:
143
D. GILLIES AND G. IETTO-GILLIES
It would have been tempting to look at the relevance and growth of quantitative
flows and to identify the dominant causes of globalisation with the largest or fastest
growing ones. Looking at the purely quantitative flows there is no doubt that the
largest increases in flows are to be found in the sphere of international finance.We
have two objections to this approach. First, it does not consider the contribution of
the various driving forces to the development of productive forces. Second, it fails
to distinguish between trends which are largely irreversible and those which could
be halted or further enhanced by political will and the intervention of governments.
Third, it does not lay enough stress on the actors which participate in the process,
their relative positions within it and their active or passive participation in it.
The financial explosion across countries was largely fuelled by macro-policies,
by liberalisation and privatisation policies, and by deregulation in the cross-country
acquisition of assets. It could be reversed by reversing those policies. Of course,
while those policies are implemented the finance sector does exercise a very con-
siderable impact on the globalisation process: it affects geographical patterns; it
increases divergence between countries and communities and classes within coun-
tries; and it changes the economic structure of countries and the social fabric of its
communities. However, this process is largely reversible if the political will is there.
The ICTs have a dominant role in the globalisation phase of capitalist develop-
ment because of the contribution they make to the development of the productive
forces. None of the quantitative or qualitative elements could have changed to
such a large extent without the adoption and diffusion of ICTs. Moreover,
this element is irreversible. We could not possibly conceive of going back to the
pre-ICTs era, except as a result of major earth-shaking catastrophes.
The defining characteristic of TNCs is their ability to plan, organise and control
business activities across countries. It is a characteristic that, at present, is specific
mainly to them, compared to the other major players in the economic and social
system such as labour, consumers, uninational companies and governments.
The key role played by TNCs as causa causans of globalisation manifests
itself in a variety of ways and in particular: (1) Given their size, economic power
and technological basis, they are in the best position to use the ICTs and indeed
to affect its further development and rate of diffusion. (2) They are the institutions
that truly operate across nation states. They own assets across borders and they
can plan, organise and control production/activities across countries. They are not
just part of the institutional infrastructure; they are the key to the whole process.
They participate in the process actively rather than passively like most other
actors. In this role they shape the pattern of globalisation rather than bear its con-
sequences. (3) Many international financial flows originate with them.10 (4) They
have a comparative position of power that this gives them vis-à-vis other actors
144
KEYNES’S NOTION OF CAUSA CAUSANS
in the economics system who do not possess – so far – the same ability to plan,
organize and control across borders. These other actors are labour, governments,
uninational companies and consumers.
6. Policy implications
There are specific long-term policy implications from the analysis developed
above. First, the fact that those driving forces of the globalisation process which are
not dominant causes can be reversed. Thus, for example, this approach considers
the growth of financial transactions to be a driving force though not a dominant
cause. Much financial activity, far from contributing to the development of the pro-
ductive forces, is a hindrance to it and has a purely distributive purpose. Moreover,
the financial dominance of domestic and international economies is reversible if the
political will is there. Regulation of financial flows will affect most economic
actors including the TNCs. However, it will not affect their potential for organising
production across countries.
The TNCs play the key role in the development of organisational innovation within
and across borders; indeed they are, at present, the only actor who can truly plan,
organise and control activities across borders. This puts them in a position of consid-
erable power vis-à-vis other actors and in particular labour, national governments,
consumers and uninational companies. Here the policy implications are twofold.
First is the development of policies designed to enable other actors to participate
fully and actively in the globalisation process, in other words policies
designed to develop countervailing transnational power in the other actors, be they
workers, smaller companies, consumers or national governments.
Second, we must accept that there are gains to be realised from technological
and organisational innovation but that there may also be considerable undesirable
effects and social costs. The TNCs’ activities and the direction of their innova-
tion are not always in the interest of other groups in society, be they consumers or
labour or smaller companies or all of us in relation to our environment.
Governments must regain control over strategic direction for the economy and
society and support or discourage activities of TNCs accordingly.
Third, in a world in which much activity takes place across borders, there is a
need for transnational governance. This can be achieved via the establishment of
appropriate supranational institutions with the aim of monitoring transnational
activities and encouraging some or deter others on the basis of overall strategies
worked out in conjunction with national governments. In this context, we see the
latter as having a larger not a smaller role.
There is a need for strengthening industrial policies11 in order to: deal in a
balanced way with the strategies of TNCs; support other actors in developing
transnational power; and coordinate with supranational institutions. The national
state must strengthen both its coordinating and a conflict-resolution functions
(Kozul-Wright and Rowthorn 1998, Introduction). The two functions can be
applied to the relationship between state and TNCs, between TNCs and other
145
D. GILLIES AND G. IETTO-GILLIES
actors in the economic system, between the national and international community,
and between national and international governance.
Finally, there are also wider implications for analysis and policies in other areas
of economics. The globalisation process and its causae causantes may have to be
taken into account in wider theoretical analyses leading to policy recommenda-
tions. In a volume dedicated to one of the world’s major contributors to the study
and interpretation of Keynes, it seems appropriate to ask ourselves how the ana-
lysis of the previous sections might be of help in applying Keynes’s analytical
framework to the present economic system. Keynes developed his analysis in a
pre-ICTs and TNCs era. Nonetheless, his analysis is still very relevant as Victoria
Chick and other post-Keynesian economists have demonstrated. However, it must
be updated to take account of the technological revolution and of the activities of
TNCs. In the 1937 paper we quoted above, Keynes concludes that any suggestion
of cures must be ‘… related to the particular conditions of the time’ (p. 122). The
two main defining characteristics of the contemporary globalisation stage of cap-
italism are the ICTs and the transnational organisation of production by TNCs.
Notes
01 The authors have benefited from comments and suggestions on a previous version of
this chapter by T. Lawson and V. Chick.
02 Cf. empirical evidence in Held et al. (1999, chapters 3 and 4), Hirst and Thompson
(1996), Chesnais et al. (2000) and UNCTAD, World Investment Report (various issues).
03 On cross-countries flows of profits from foreign direct investment cf. Ietto-Gillies
(2000); the movements of people is dealt extensively in Held et al. (1999, chapter 6);
on inter-firm collaborative agreements in technological areas cf. Hagedoorn (1996).
04 Chesnais’s thesis is not discussed in Held et al. (1999).
05 Translation from French by Grazia Ietto-Gillies. See also Chesnais and Simonetti
(2000 p. 11).
06 Evidence on such growth is also in Held et al. (1999, chapter 4), Akyuz (1995) and
Obstfeld (1998).
07 An example of the latter in the field of organisational ‘innovation’ can be seen in the
UK rail industry following privatisation. The difficulties of coordinating an industry
fragmented between many operators and their subcontractors are leading to high
social costs in terms of safety as well as government subsidies.
08 We are grateful to Tony Lawson for pointing out to us that this test of what constitutes
a causa causans differs from Keynes’s.
09 Freeman (1992) and Perez (1983) talk of a new technological paradigm. Cf. also
Castells (1996, 1997), Dalum et al. (1999) and Oliner and Sichel (2000).
10 Chick (1979) discusses the need to take account of TNCs’ activities in the reshaping of
the international financial system.
11 Cf. various essays in Cowling and Sugden (1990) and Cowling (1999).
References
Akyuz, Y. (1995) ‘Taming International Finance’, in J. Michie and J. Grieve Smith (eds),
Managing the Global Economy, Chapter 3. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 55–90.
146
KEYNES’S NOTION OF CAUSA CAUSANS
Carnoy, M., Castells, M., Cohen, S. S. and Cardoso, F. H. (1993) The New Global Economy
in the Information Age. Reflections on our Changing World. University Park,
Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania State University Press.
Castells, M. (1996) ‘The Information Age: Economy, Society, and Culture’, The Rise of the
Network Society, Vol. 1. Oxford: Blackwell.
Castells, M. (1997) ‘The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture’, The Power of
Identity, Vol. II. Oxford: Blackwell.
Chesnais, F. (1997) La mondialisation du capital, Nouvelle édition augmentée. Paris:
Syros.
Chesnais, F. and Simonetti, R. (2000) ‘Globalisation, Foreign Direct Investment and
Innovation: A European Perspective’, in F. Chesnais, G. Ietto-Gillies, and R. Simonetti
(eds), European Integration and Global Corporate Strategies, Chapter 1. London:
Routledge, pp. 3–24.
Chesnais, F., Ietto-Gillies, G. and Simonetti, R. (2000) European Integration and Global
Corporate Strategies. London: Routledge.
Chick, V. (1979) ‘Transnational Corporations and the Evolution of the International
Monetary System’, in G. J. Crough (ed.), Transnational Banking and the World Economy,
Chapter 5. Sydney: Transnational Corporations Research Project.
Cowling, K. (ed.) (1999) Industrial Policy in Europe. Theoretical Perspectives and
Practical Proposals. London: Routledge.
Cowling, K. and Sugden, R. (eds) (1990) A New Economic Policy for Britain. Essays on
the Development of Industry. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Dalum, B., Freeman, C., Simonetti, R., von Tunzelman, N. and Verspagen, B. (1999)
‘Europe and the Information and Communication Technologies Revolution’, in
J. Fageberger, P. Guerrieri and B. Verspagen (eds), The Economic Challenge for Europe:
Adapting to Innovation-Based Growth, Chapter 5. London: Edward Elgar, pp. 106–29.
Freeman, C. (1992) The Economics of Hope: Essays on Technical Change, Economic
Growth and the Environment. London: Pinter Publishers.
Giddens, A. (1999) Reith Lectures 1999. ‘Runaway World. Lecture 1: Globalisation’,
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/...c/events/reith_99/week1/week1.htm.
Hagedoorn, J. (1996) ‘Trends and Patterns in Strategic Technology Partnering since the
Early Seventies’, Review of Industrial Organization 11: 601–16.
Held, D., McGrew, A., Goldblatt, D. and Perraton, J. (1999) Global Transformations.
Cambridge: Polity Press.
Hirst, P. and Thompson, G. (1996) Globalisation in Question. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Ietto-Gillies, G. (2000) ‘Profits from Foreign Direct Investment’, in F. Chesnais,
G. Ietto-Gillies and R. Simonetti (eds), European Integration and Global Corporate
Strategies. London: Routledge.
Keynes, M. (1937) ‘The General Theory of Employment’, The Collected Writings of John
Maynard Keynes, Vol. XIV, 1973. London: MacMillan, pp.109–23.
Kozul-Wright, R. and Rowthorn, R. (eds) (1998a) Transnational Corporations and the
Global Economy. London: MacMillan.
Kozul-Wright, R. and Rowthorn, R. (1998b) ‘Spoilt for Choice? Multinational
Corporations and the Geography of International Production’, Oxford Review of
Economic Policy 14(2): 74–92.
McGrew, A. G. (1992) ‘Conceptualising Global Politics’, in A. G. McGrew and
P. G. Lewis (eds), Global Politics: Globalisation and the Nation-State. Cambridge:
Polity Press, pp. 83–117.
147
D. GILLIES AND G. IETTO-GILLIES
148
15
TECHNOLOGY AND THE NEED FOR
AN ALTERNATIVE VIEW OF THE
FIRM IN POST-KEYNESIAN THEORY
We first met Victoria in 1995 when we both came to the UK for our Ph.D. As a
student and a friend both of us had the privilege to share her companionship. For
a younger generation of economist coming from Brazil, struggling against all the
difficulties of leaving our country, families and friends, we found in Victoria
comfort, friendship, support, and above all guidance and constant stimulation.
The passion with which she embraces her convictions and beliefs is a continuous
source of strength and inspiration for us.
To honour Victoria we choose to develop a point first raised by her in one of our
many conversations. Prompted by Victoria’s insightful comments, we set out to
write more about technology and post-Keynesian views on the theory of the firm.
1. Introduction
There has been a widespread agreement among economists as to technical change
as a fundamental factor to explain economic development and its importance for
investment behaviour. Despite Keynes’s unequivocal acceptance of Schumpeter’s
explanation of the ‘major movements’ of investment in capitalist societies (1930:
86), neither Keynes nor the Keynesians followed up this recognition of the crucial
role of technical change. Post-Keynesian economists have given little attention to
the whole dimension of the technical change phenomenon, for they are concerned
with purely quantitative aspects of investment and employment. As a result, they
have avoided the analysis of technical change and innovation, by considering it a
phenomenon exogenous to the system.1 However, in the same way as ‘money mat-
ters’, the way technical change is generated and incorporated into the system also
‘matters’. Therefore, it is necessary to analyse technical change in its all institu-
tional dimensions, and not only through variations on capital/output and
labour/output ratios or shifts in the production function. Also, it should be recog-
nised that the approach to technical change proposed here has some implications
149
F. S A N TO S A N D M . C RO C C O
for the institutional setup upon which the expected aggregate demand and the
supply functions are based. The most important of these implications, which we
shall explore in this work, is the fact that the incorporation of technical change
into post-Keynesian analysis clearly calls for a new approach to the firm.
It is important to say that we are neither searching for new microfoundations to
macrodynamics, nor do we have sympathy for methodological reductionism.
However, we believe that there are some interactions, not microfoundations, between
the micro- and macro-level of analysis, as we shall see in the following discussion
about the relationship between the process of firms’ decisions and the determination
of the point of effective demand.
The expected position of the demand curve it [the small firm] faces in the
near future will determine the price it should set for its product and the
quantity it should produce.
(1983: 26)
150
ALTERNATIVE VIEW OF THE FIRM
process may be entered into, in which the now past level of actual demand influ-
ences the current expectations, causing the producer to choose another hypotheti-
cal level of demand as the basis for his decision’ (1983: 86). If the expected de-
mand turns out to be equal to the actual demand, equilibrium is achieved and there
is no incentive to change the expected level of demand for the following periods.
The megacorp theory, on the other hand, considers a market structure composed
of interdependent, growth maximising, large firms. The ‘imperfections’ of com-
petition in this case endow the business environment with a degree of stability
sufficient to make investment decisions possible (Richardson 1972, 1990 [1960];
Shapiro 1997). The behaviour and organisation of the megacorp is based on the
managerial theory of the firm, where there is a clear separation between ownership
of capital and management of the corporation. Moreover, the scope and scale of
megacorp’s production requires a professionalised management that is impossible
to be observed in the traditional neoclassical firm (Shapiro 1992: 20).
In this framework the objectives of the firm coincide with the objectives of the
executives, what Shapiro calls ‘managerial firm’s dominance’. This understanding
grounds Eichner’s (1976, 1991) view of the megacorp’s behaviour. The modern
corporation aims at maximising growth, as it is the main interest of management.
It should be noticed that this does not mean that the megacorp has no interest
in making as much profit as possible. The point is that profit will be obtained by
its rate of growth. In this sense, all operations inside the megacorp are aimed at
facilitating the objective of maximising growth. In Shapiro’s words:
Firm growth is the ‘long-run’ expression of the profit objective, and while
the firm cannot maximize its ‘long-run profit’ (there is no such profit), it
can strive for an ever-increasing profit. It can ‘maximise’ profit growth.
(1995: 297)
It is according to this framework that the process of pricing and the role of tech-
nical change should be analysed. The market power of the megacorp will be used
to set a price (through a markup mechanism) that should be sufficient to gener-
ate the funds that investment requires. Continuous investment is a precondition
for maximising growth and the price mechanism is the instrument that allows the
generation of the necessary profits to finance it.
In its turn, technical change is essential to make profits by increasing the com-
petitiveness of the firm, that is to say,
151
F. S A N TO S A N D M . C RO C C O
prices play many roles other than (or in addition to) the allocative/
co-ordinating one. Gerrard (1989) identifies this as conductive, positional,
strategic and financial. The conductive role relates to the passing on of
costs in to prices through say mark-up pricing, and of prices into wages.
The positional role concerns the relativity of the price of one economic
agent with another (e.g. the importance of relative wages). The strategic
role of prices reflects firms adopting competitive strategies, whilst the
financial role is to enable firms to generate sufficient funds to finance
expansion.
(1995: 304)
152
ALTERNATIVE VIEW OF THE FIRM
Therefore, as far as we admit into our formal reasoning the reality of technical
change and innovation, geometric representations of either small or large firms
based on cost curves say too little about how firms obtain ‘sufficient’ knowledge
to take an investment decision.
As this is an essential point, let us take a closer look at the discussion of this
distinctive concept of the firm for it will be easy to see its implications for some
macroeconomic factors.
153
F. S A N TO S A N D M . C RO C C O
As noted by Loasby (1994: 255), the corollary of this proposition is that the lack
of appropriate organisation impedes knowledge. The task ahead of an organisa-
tion is not to ‘make the best of what is known’, but instead to find out ‘what is at
present unknown’ and this requires co-ordination. Again, as Marshall puts for-
ward, a firm is a form of organisation that aids knowledge, that is, firms provide
the institutional framework and co-ordination needed for ‘the generation and
testing of new conjectures’. Firms thus undertake knowledge-creating activities,
which are the underpinning of economic growth.
A firm should therefore be viewed as a repository of knowledge, which is man-
ifested (or embodied) in its capabilities. Capabilities refer to the ways of organis-
ing and getting things done (indirect knowledge) and of doing things (direct
knowledge). As defined by Richardson, the capability of a firm is its possession
of ‘knowledge, experience and skills which enable it to undertake “activities”
such as discovery and estimation of future wants, research, development, design,
execution and co-ordination of processes of physical transformation, the market-
ing of goods and so on’ (1972: 888). And this ‘know-how’ can only be fully
understood if one keeps in mind that it is the outcome of an interactive process
involving all the firm’s constituent parts (as well as external organisations, such
as suppliers, customers, rivals and financial institutions).
In order to create an environment that allows interactive learning to occur,
cooperation between various (and possibly conflicting) groups within the firm
and continuity of relations are important. Information sharing, codification of
procedures, adaptation of work routines, common language and culture – in short,
the creation of ‘routinised behaviour’ (Nelson and Winter 1982) – cannot be done
overnight. Once a set of routines is created, the capabilities of the firms will
depend not just on the individuals of whom it is composed but also on the partic-
ular pattern of ‘intimate connections’ between them (Loasby 1994: 254). Thus,
external transfer of an individual’s knowledge beyond a firm’s boundary may be
difficult if not impossible, since taken out of the context it may be quite useless
(Teece 1982: 45).
As a matter of fact, the knowledge embodied in capabilities contains a signifi-
cant degree of tacitness, which cannot be codified and transferred, but rather must
be acquired through practical experience and learning. We may then say that
capabilities are firm specific and ‘sticky’ in the sense that they cannot be acquired
or passed on easily, quickly and at low cost (Penrose 1995 [1959]; Teece et al. 1990).
Penrose (1995 [1959]) has already shown, through the concept of the firm’s
‘productive opportunities’, how a firm’s knowledge base conditions its growth
and diversification. Internal learning combined with the entrepreneurial vision of
where, when and how the acquired learning can be put into use compromises the
‘productive opportunities’ of a firm. Each success (or failure) will lead to fresh
learning and new ‘visions’; new knowledge being created from past experience
(Loasby 1994: 256).
The firm’s knowledge base grows from the knowledge accumulated through
learning and experience, contingent on the firm’s past history (path dependency).
154
ALTERNATIVE VIEW OF THE FIRM
155
F. S A N TO S A N D M . C RO C C O
Even if the same person that is being dismissed is re-hired in the future some cost
will be involved. Moreover, according to Teece and Pisano (1994) there is no mar-
ket for capabilities, except possibly through the market for businesses (to buy or
to sell a whole firm). In other words, capabilities must be built because they
cannot be bought. As a consequence, a firm becomes much more cautious when
dealing with its labour force, as individual and organisational skills
acquired in the learning process demand time and are costly. Hence, these costs
become an important element when a firm has to decide about its optimal level
of employment.
A second important element to take into account is the fact that firms, accord-
ing to the approach used here, can affect their own demand. As we are dealing
with product innovation, firms know that there is a possibility for their market
share to increase due to the novelty of the product. Moreover, it is well recognised
that every new successful product has a life cycle. As a result, every firm expects
that, whenever it launches a new product into the market, demand for its product
will show oscillations similar to those predicted by the product cycle theory.
From a theoretical point of view, the above discussion sheds light on the ques-
tion of whether or not it is still acceptable to assume that a firm varies the size of
its labour force every time its production expectations are not validated. In other
words, in the case of considering an institutional framework where the firm
regards its capabilities as a valuable asset, is an invalidation of the firm’s produc-
tion expectations sufficient to alter the level of employment it offers?
The claim made here is a negative answer to the last question. Firms will
define the amount of labour to hire according to expectations related to the whole
life cycle of its products. The implication of this view is that, in the enquiry of the
point of effective demand, production expectations are no longer theoretically
adequate and should be replaced by what we call ‘medium-period expectation’ or
‘single-product expectation’ (Crocco 1999). The latter have been defined as the
expectations concerning the quasi-rents arising from the introduction of a new
product. It involves many production decisions, although it also involves a shorter
perspective of time and less monetary resources than the acquisition of a capital
good. In other words, we are claiming that the level of employment at a specific
point of time is defined by the medium-period expectations (MPEs hereafter),
given the total level of investment.
Two consequences can be derived from the replacement of MPEs by produc-
tion expectations. First, the variation of employment becomes less frequent
because of the longer time involved in the formation of MPEs. Second, as we are
assuming that a firm can interfere with its own demand, it is necessary to rethink
how present expectations are formed in the face of a possible mismatch between
previous expectations and actual demand.
The fulfilment or not of previous expectations certainly will affect expectations
about the next product innovation. However, MPEs are concerned with a new
product that is, at the same time, a development of the previous one. Holding
everything else constant, this means that a firm can affect its own demand by
156
ALTERNATIVE VIEW OF THE FIRM
launching a new product in the market. The main implication of this special
feature is that there is no one-to-one relationship between the mismatch of previ-
ous expectations and the formation of the next one, as in the case of short-period
expectations. The disappointment of previous expectations does not necessarily
imply a negative revision of expectations for the new product. As the latter has
some element of novelty, there is a possibility that the firm’s demand will be pos-
itively affected. Of course, if disappointment is great, the expectations will have
to be revised. The key element in this discussion is that the firm’s demand cannot
be considered stable when product innovation is considered. Product innovation
implies that a firm cannot be seen as passive in relation to its own demand. As we
have seen, the concept of competition used here means rivalry, which, in turn,
implies an active behaviour of the firm in relation to market conditions.
By the same token, in the case of MPEs, the match of previous expectations
and realised outcomes does not necessarily produce an equilibrium that equates
the prospective yields of sequential products. As we are dealing with a new prod-
uct that belongs to a technological trajectory, a successful prediction of the
prospective yields of a previous product can positively affect the expectations for
the next ones.3
According to the quotation above, one has to be guided by the facts of the
present situation when deciding whether to invest or not. The usual approach
in this case is to introduce into the framework conventions that are held by
investors at the moment of the decision. While this cannot be denied, our previous
157
F. S A N TO S A N D M . C RO C C O
6. Conclusion
We tried to show that if technical change is to be understood in all its dimensions,
a specific theory of the firm must be considered. As we have discussed, a firm
viewed as a repository of knowledge seems to be the best way to deal with tech-
nical change. We have argued that post-Keynesian theories of the firm (poly-
polistic and megacorp) are insufficient to cope with the learning process that is
inherent to innovative activity. Moreover, and finally, we have demonstrated that
there are some macroeconomic implications of whether we assume a theory
of firm to be based upon the concept of capabilities or based upon a pricing
mechanism.
Notes
1 We are not saying that they do not incorporate technical change in their analyses, as the
works of Kaldor and Mirrlees (1962), Joan Robinson (1965) and Eichner (1991) have
shown. What we are claiming is that their treatment, although functional to the analysis
of income distribution, is unable to deal with all the dimensions of technical change. For
a review about the way post-Keynesians deal with innovation, see Crocco (1999).
158
ALTERNATIVE VIEW OF THE FIRM
2 We draw on ideas of Marshall, Penrose, Richardson, Nelson and Winter, Loasby and
Teece to understand how firms deal with the world of continuous product and process
development.
3 What is behind this analysis is the discussion about the development of a technological
trajectory and its relation to the weight of argument (Crocco 1999, 2000). The success
or failure of the introduction of an innovation changes the weight of argument in rela-
tion to the introduction of the next innovation (Crocco 1999). In situations where the
previous product innovation has been successfully introduced (expectations were con-
firmed), there is an increase in the weight of argument related to the introduction of the
new one, and so, there is an increase in confidence allowing for higher expectations for
the next product.
4 If the latest innovations have been introduced successfully, the confidence about the
introduction of the new product innovation increases along with the weight related to
this decision (Crocco 1999).
References
Chick, V. (1983) Macroeconomics After Keynes: A Reconsideration of the General Theory.
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Crocco, M. (1999) ‘Uncertainty, Technical Change and Effective Demand’, Ph.D. Thesis,
Economics Department, University of London – UCL, London.
Crocco, M. (2000) ‘The Future’s Unknowability: Keynes’s Probability, Probable
Knowledge and the Decision to Innovate’, in F. Louçã and M. Perlman (eds), Is
Economics an Evolutionary Science? Aldershot: Edward Elgar.
Eichner, A. (1976) The Megacorp and the Oligopoly. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
Eichner, A. S. (1991) The Macrodynamics of Advanced Market Economies. London:
M.E. Sharpe.
Gerrard, B. (1989) Theory of the Capitalist Economy. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
Kaldor, N. and Mirrlees, J. (1962) ‘A New Model of Economic Growth’, Review of
Economic Studies 29: 174–92.
Keynes, J. M. (1936) [1973] The General Theory of employment, Interest and Money, The
Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes, Vol. VII. London: Macmillan.
Kozul-Wright, Z. (1995) ‘The Role of the Firm in the Innovation Process’, UNCTAD,
Discussion Papers, n. 98.
Loasby, B. (1994) ‘Organisational Capabilities and Interfirm Relations’, Metroeconomica
45: 3.
Marshall, A. (1961) Principles of Economics, 9th (variorum) edn. London: Macmillan.
Nelson, R. and Winter, S. (1982) An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change.
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Penrose, E. (1995) [1959] The Theory of the Growth of the Firm. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
Richardson, G. (1972) The Organisation of Industry. Economic Journal 82: 883–96.
Richardson, G. (1990) [1960] Information and Investment: A Study in the Working of the
Competitive Economy. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Robinson, J. (1933) The Economics of Imperfect Competition. London: Macmillan.
Robinson, J. (1965) The Accumulation of Capital. London: Macmillan.
Sawyer, M. (1995) ‘Comment on Earl and Shapiro’, in S. Dow and J. Hillard (eds), Keynes,
Knowledge and Uncertainty. Brookfield: Edward Elgar.
159
F. S A N TO S A N D M . C RO C C O
Shapiro, N. (1992) ‘The “Megacorp”: Eichener’s Contribution to the Theory of the Firm’,
in W. Milberg (ed.), The Megacorp and Macrodynamics: Essays in Memory of Alfred
Eichner. London: M.E. Sharp.
Shapiro, N. (1995) ‘Markets and Mark-ups: Keynesian Views’, in S. Dow and J. Hillard
(eds), Keynes, Knowledge and Uncertainty. Brookfield: Edward Elgar.
Shapiro, N. (1997) ‘Imperfect Competition and Keynes’, in G. Harcourt and P. Riach (eds),
A ‘Second Edition’ of the General Theory. London: Routledge.
Teece, D. (1982) ‘Towards an Economic Theory of the Multiproduct Firm’, Journal of
Economic Behaviour and Organization 3: 39–63.
Teece, D. et al. (1990) ‘Firm Capabilities, Resources and the Concept of Strategy’, CCC
Working Papers, 90–8, University of California, Berkley.
Teece, D. and Pisano, G. (1994) ‘The Dynamic Capabilities of Firms: An Introduction’,
Industrial and Corporate Change 3(3): 537–56.
160
16
CONSUMER BELIEFS AND
A POSSIBLE WELFARE ‘GAIN’
FROM MONOPOLY
Ian Steedman1
Although this chapter is but brief, it has a twofold purpose. First, a simple
example will be used to raise the possibility that a monopolized industry might
yield a greater social surplus than a competitive industry, even when the horizon-
tal industry cost curve is the same or, indeed, somewhat higher under monopoly.
Discussion of this example will then lead into a far broader topic, that of the
treatment of consumer beliefs in social surplus calculations (and, implicitly, other
economic analyses). If consumers can be ill-informed about the characteristics of
commodities, what does that imply for familiar arguments in welfare economics?
1. An example
Our example lies squarely within the now conventional framework for discussing
the effects of monopoly on welfare, that exemplified in Harberger (1954). No fur-
ther reference will be made, for example, to ‘Austrian’ objections to that framework.
(See West (1987) for a convenient introduction.) Nor will any of the powerful
objections to consumers’ surplus analysis be considered here – which is not to say
that we reject them! The analysis is to be interpreted in strictly comparative static
terms; one is comparing a permanent situation under competition with a permanent
situation under monopoly, there being no reference whatever to any process of
change through time. Moreover, the example will be of the simplest kind, with
a linear market demand curve and (initially at least) zero marginal, average and
total costs of production (as in Cournot’s famous example of the production of
spring-water).
Let the market inverse demand curve be given by
p ⫽ a ⫺ bq. (1)
161
I. STEEDMAN
The standard calculations show that the total surplus (all of it consumers’ surplus)
under perfect competition will be given by
a2
Sc ⫽ . (2)
2b
a2
Pm ⫽ (3)
4b
3a2
Sm ⫽ ⬍ Sc.
8b
Suppose, however, that the market demand curve is not the same under monopoly
because the monopolist finds it profitable to engage in sales expenditure; follow-
ing Chamberlin (1933), we take sales expenditure to be any expenditure intended
to alter the demand curve. Such expenditure will not necessarily be on advertising
but it is still to the point here to recall Schmalensee’s summary statement (1989:
978) that, ‘In broad samples of manufacturing industries producing consumer
goods, advertising intensity is positively related to industry-average accounting
profitability.’ (Schmalensee also notes that, ‘Advertising is not the dominant com-
ponent of selling costs in [producer goods] industries’, p. 979.)2
Let the monopolist’s inverse demand curve be given by
where e is sales expenditure and the a and b in (1), (2) and (3) should now be
thought of as a(0) and b(0). Profit is given by
PM ⫽ 冤 冥
a2(e)
4b(e)
⫺e (5)
冤3a8b(e)(e)冥 ⫺ e
2
SM ⫽ (6)
162
CONSUMER BELIEFS AND A POSSIBLE WELFARE ‘GAIN’
There is no reason at all why (7) should not hold good and, when it does, the
monopolized industry, with the same (zero) production costs, yields a larger
social surplus than that generated under perfect competition.
We may now modify the example slightly, replacing the common industry
average cost curve C ⫽ 0 by the average cost curve C ⫽ C0. It will be obvious
from continuity considerations that with small enough C0 the qualitative result of
our example would be unchanged. Thus monopoly could yield the greater social
surplus even if it involved slightly higher production costs.
2. Caveat
Before we begin our discussion of the above example, it will perhaps be as well
to guard against some possible misunderstandings as to the nature of that exam-
ple. It might be objected that consumer surplus arguments are unacceptable, for
one reason or another; it might be urged that the partial equilibrium nature of
the example may be misleading because conditions in ‘other’ markets will not be
the same in the two (monopoly and perfect competition) situations; or it might
be questioned whether perfect competition with zero sales expenditure is the
relevant case with which to compare the monopoly situation. The reply to all three
‘objections’ is the same, namely that whatever their strengths or weaknesses
may be, they apply with equal force to the standard ‘Harberger’ analysis, having
nothing specifically to do with the particular version of it which is presented
here. Our example points to a further possible problem with the standard
‘Harberger’ approach and, in order to do so, inevitably stays as close as possible
to that approach. To offer as ‘objections’ to our example considerations which
apply equally to every Harberger-like analysis would be to miss the mark
completely.
It must also be insisted that our consideration of sales expenditure and of
the consequently higher demand curve in the monopoly situation is not to be
conceived of as introducing some extraneous or arbitrary factor into the familiar
‘Harberger’ account. That account already supposes the monopolist to be a profit
maximizer and our example is such that profit-maximizing behaviour on the
part of the monopolist entails that there be positive sales expenditure. In the
context of the example, then, it would be quite meaningless to say that one should
only compare the competitive situation with that of an ‘e ⫽ 0 monopolist’ rather
than with that of the ‘e ⬎ 0 monopolist’. (Some readers might see here an anal-
ogy with the ‘Schumpeterian’ insistence that it may be meaningless to presuppose
equal ‘research and development expenditures’ when comparing competitive and
monopolistic situations; but note that our argument is not in the least reliant on
the acceptance of any such analogy.)
Finally, it perhaps bears repetition that our example is of a purely comparative
static nature, involving no changes, no learning, no dynamics, no … . Thus if
we adopt below the common practice of referring to welfare ‘gains’ and welfare
‘losses’, we always really intend ‘positive’ or ‘negative’ welfare differences.
163
I. STEEDMAN
3. A welfare gain?
In the above example the conventionally calculated social surplus under perfect
competition is smaller than the conventionally calculated social surplus under
monopoly. Does it follow that the monopoly situation is preferable from a welfare
point of view? The answer is obviously positive3 if the calculated areas under the
demand curves are genuinely comparable – but are they?
(a) Anyone who takes the relevant areas to be comparable must immediately
accept that there is a welfare gain from monopoly and hence that the convention-
ally calculated welfare ‘loss’ from monopoly can be positive, zero or negative;
i.e. that the conventional calculation in fact yields no qualitative, a priori result.
(b) It might be objected, however, that the areas in question are not really com-
parable and hence that no conclusion can properly be drawn about the presence or
absence of a welfare gain. Thus it might be suggested that the positive sales expen-
diture under monopoly can only shift the market demand curve because it implies
different preferences of potential consumers and that, because of the difference
in preferences, our calculated social surpluses are simply non-comparable. If
accepted, this response would naturally avoid the conclusion that monopoly yields
a welfare gain. But it would be no less destructive of the conventional argument
than is response (a) above, at least for a world in which positive sales expenditure
is known often to be an aspect of profit-maximizing behaviour.
While response (a) leads to the conclusion that ‘anything can happen’, response
(b) leads to the conclusion that (in the world we inhabit) ‘nothing whatever can
be said’, because the competitive and monopoly surpluses are non-comparable.
Although responses (a) and (b) are diametrically opposed, at one level, they nev-
ertheless lead to a single conclusion: in a world in which a profit-maximizing
monopoly may make positive sales expenditures, the conventional, Harberger-like
argument that a monopoly always yields a welfare loss just cannot be made. And
this for reasons having nothing to do with the rejection of consumers’ surplus
measures, or with economies of scale, or with the monopoly case involving (for
whatever reason) a lower industry cost curve.
4. Consumer beliefs
It would certainly be possible at this point to enter into a discussion of whether, in
the context of the above example, the monopoly market structure is to be consid-
ered the first-best solution4 – or whether it would be better to have a competitive
structure, with government-backed sales expenditure financed in some appropri-
ate manner. One could also consider cases with sub-additive or non-sub-additive
cost functions; discuss sustainable equilibrium and entry deterrence; etc. However,
with no implied disparagement of such concerns, we turn in a different direction
to consider further the response (b) introduced above. For it would not really be
correct to say that sales expenditure could give a different market demand curve
under monopoly only if that expenditure involved changed consumer preferences.
164
CONSUMER BELIEFS AND A POSSIBLE WELFARE ‘GAIN’
Such expenditure might involve different beliefs rather than different preferences –
would that render our calculated areas non-comparable or not? (For a closely related
discussion not involving sales expenditure, see Currie and Steedman (2000).)
Even without adopting the specific and very rigid framework employed by
Lancaster (1966, 1971, 1979), we may certainly accept the general idea that
consumer preferences are over the attributes/characteristics/properties/qualities
of commodities and not over these latter per se. Suppose then that the sales expen-
diture considered in our example has no effect whatever on consumers’ prefer-
ences over characteristics but does affect their beliefs about the extent to which
the product in question has various (desirable or undesirable) characteristics.5 By
assumption, response (b) cannot now be made, at least in its initial form, for now
exactly the same preferences do underlie all our calculations. Does the difference
in the underlying beliefs about the product nevertheless entail that the areas under
the demand curves are still non-comparable, albeit for a new kind of reason?
To be more specific, suppose first that the sales expenditure has brought
all the relevant consumers’ beliefs about the product’s characteristics closer to the
objective truth of the matter. In the absence of that expenditure, potential
purchasers would have underestimated the product’s ‘endowment’ of (what they
regard as) good attributes and/or have overestimated its ‘endowment’ of (what they
regard as) bad attributes. In this case, then, the two market demand curves are
underpinned by exactly the same fundamental preferences (over characteristics)
but that for monopoly expresses the (market level) demand of better-informed
consumers than does that for perfect competition. It seems unlikely that anyone
will take this difference in beliefs to mean that the conventional calculations
carried out above overestimate the welfare gain from monopoly. But some might
well respond by saying that the difference in beliefs means that the calculations
underestimate that welfare gain. Yet others might respond by insisting that the
relevant ‘areas’ simply are not comparable.
Now consider the contrary extreme case, in which the sales expenditure has led
all the relevant consumers’ beliefs about the product to be further from the truth.
That is, potential purchasers have been led to overestimate the product’s ‘endow-
ment’ of ‘positive’ attributes and to underestimate its ‘endowment’ of ‘negative’
ones. In this case, presumably, few if any would take the calculated welfare gain
from monopoly to give an underestimate of the true gain. Most would probably
respond by saying either that the calculation overestimates the gain, or that the
relevant ‘areas’ are again non-comparable. Finally (and most realistically?) one
must consider the non-extreme case in which sales expenditure draws some rele-
vant beliefs closer to the truth but leads others further away from it. What does
this case imply for the (non-)comparability of the ‘areas’ in our calculations?
The most simple basis for a determined ‘non-comparability’ response to the
kind of question raised above would be, presumably, the judgement that the econ-
omists’ familiar treatment of preferences – that ‘they are just whatever they are
and the economist qua economist has nothing whatever to say about them’ –
should be extended to their treatment of consumers’ beliefs. On such a view, the
165
I. STEEDMAN
166
CONSUMER BELIEFS AND A POSSIBLE WELFARE ‘GAIN’
that it has had a mixture of such effects – and a mixture, at that, which is not even
close to either extreme case – how then ought one to ‘expand’ or to ‘shrink’ (to
‘multiply’ or to ‘discount’) the relevant areas under monopoly in order to make
them really comparable with those under perfect competition? We have no answer
to offer here, so again we may pose questions: Can it really make sense to ignore
any differences in relevant beliefs when comparing social surpluses in two alter-
native situations? If so, why? And if not, how should those differences be ‘reck-
oned into’ social surplus calculations? Unless it be seriously denied that we live
in a world in which some sales expenditures do affect some relevant beliefs, it
would seem that answering these questions is a necessary precondition for mak-
ing responsible use of at least certain social surplus calculations.
5. Concluding remarks
Our example, simple minded as it is, suffices to show that the conventionally
calculated social surplus can be greater under monopoly than under perfect com-
petition – and this even when the monopoly actually has a higher cost curve.
Although this finding certainly depended on the presence of positive sales expen-
diture under monopoly, it did not necessarily depend on any resultant difference in
preferences (over characteristics) and thus could not be dismissed on the grounds
that a difference in preferences made the two calculated surpluses non-comparable.
Rejecting any suggestion that differences in beliefs are just as much a source of
non-comparability as differences in preferences are often held to be, we have posed
a number of questions about how such differences in beliefs ought to be allowed for
when alternative situations are compared, as in the standard ‘welfare loss (gain?)
from monopoly’ literature.8
Notes
1 I am grateful to J. Broome, J. M. Currie, J. Kemp, D. Leslie, J. S. Metcalfe, S. Parrinello,
M. Sawyer, H. Steiner and participants in a seminar given at Notre Dame, Indiana, for
helpful discussion and comments.
2 More generally on advertising, see Schmalensee (1972).
3 ‘Obviously’, that is, given that one is taking the consumer-surplus frame of reference to
be adequate for the making of welfare comparisons. For a recent and sustained objec-
tion to so taking it, see Hausman and McPherson (1996), especially chapter 6.
4 As J. M. Currie has pointed out, there might be scope here for defining a new concept
of ‘natural monopoly’, which has nothing to do with any reduction in production costs.
5 Whilst not wishing to sully the main text with the controversial distinction between ‘per-
suasive’ and ‘informative’ sales promotion, we may perhaps float the idea that the
‘informative’ kind may be more related to belief changes than to preference changes (but
certainly without implying that any persuasive/informative distinction coincides with a
preference-/belief-changing distinction). Nelson (1974) argues that many features of
advertising can be explained in terms of information provision, without reference to
preference changes. (He has a section, pp. 749–51, on ‘Deceptive Advertising’.) Of
course, for many ‘industrial organization’ purposes all these distinctions can be left
aside, as when Spence (1980: 494), e.g., simply says that ‘advertising is designed to
167
I. STEEDMAN
influence demand and prices’ and then moves straight on to an inverse demand function.
Note though that Telser (1964: 538–9) is an early example of using the commodity/char-
acteristics distinction in relation to advertising. (We do not imply, of course, that advertis-
ing by firms is the only type of organized information provision directed to consumers.)
6 But note that Dixit and Norman (1978) forcefully reject the claim that no welfare state-
ments can be made when advertising alters preferences, insisting that one can always try
to assess the different situations in terms of both no-advertising and with-advertising
preferences. After reading our next few paragraphs the reader might wish to consider
whether it would be appropriate, by analogy, to assess alternative situations in terms of
both less-well-informed beliefs and better-informed beliefs; at least some readers, we
suppose, will decide that it would not.
7 Cf. ‘Social preferences, the ex-post school [of Peter Hammond et alia] argues, should
be based on people’s preferences. But it is not so clear that they should be based on peo-
ple’s beliefs. Beliefs are subject to standards of truth and falsity, or at least to standards
of rationality and irrationality. And that means people’s beliefs should not automatically
be accepted as a basis for social preferences. It would be wrong, for instance, to base
social preferences on a belief that was mistaken.’ (Broome 1991: 161). And, ‘Even if
policy-makers should in general honour people’s preferences, they should not necessar-
ily agree with their beliefs.’ (Hausman and McPherson 1996: 76). See also Caven (1993,
section 4). Griffen (1986) argues at length the case for giving weight to what he calls
‘informed-desire’.
8 It might well be thought that far more attention needs to be given to consumers’ beliefs
in welfare economics more generally and the reader is encouraged to pursue this idea.
All ‘positive’ consumer theory which refers centrally to beliefs (e.g. Cosgel 1994) is of
course likely to have implications for welfare theory. And the relevance of beliefs is not
confined to ‘actual-preference-satisfaction’ theories of welfare; cf. Hausman and
McPherson (1996: 123–4) on misleading information as reducing the capacity for
autonomy.
References
Broome, J. (1991) Weighing Goods. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
Caven, T. (1993) ‘The Scope and Limits of Preference Sovereignty’, Economics and
Philosophy 9: 253–69.
Chamberlin, E. H. (1933) The Theory of Monopolistic Competition, Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press.
Cosgel, M. M. (1994) ‘Audience Effects in Consumption’, Economics and Philosophy
10, April, pp. 19–30.
Currie, J. M. and Steedman, I. (2000) ‘Consumer Perceptions of Commodity Characteris-
tics: Implications for Choice and Welfare’, Manchester School 68: 516–38.
Dixit, A. and Norman, V. (1978) ‘Advertising and Welfare’, Bell Journal of Economics
9: 1–17.
Griffin, J. (1986) Well-Being. Its Meaning, Measurement and Moral Importance. Oxford:
Clarendon Press.
Harberger, A. C. (1954) ‘Monopoly and Resource Allocation’, American Economic
Association, Papers and Proceedings 44: 77–87.
Hausman, D. M. and McPherson, M. S. (1996) Economic Analysis and Moral Philosophy.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Lancaster, K. J. (1966) ‘A New Approach to Consumer Theory’, Journal of Political
Economy 74: 132–57.
168
CONSUMER BELIEFS AND A POSSIBLE WELFARE ‘GAIN’
169
17
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
ECONOMIC GROWTH AND
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
David Pearce
1. Introduction
Thirty years ago the application of economics to environmental problems was a
novelty. The first stirrings of real concern about environmental degradation had
already occurred, with Rachel Carson’s The Silent Spring (Carson 1964) being an
early warning about the pervasive effects of pesticides. Some of the foundations
for an economic approach were set out in Kenneth Boulding’s seminal ‘spaceship
earth’ essay (Boulding 1966), in which the Earth was likened to a spaceship with
finite resources and fuel and limited waste assimilation capacity. In turn, this led
to the ‘materials balance’ view of economic systems (Ayres and Kneese 1969).
The essence of the materials balance approach was that it traced the flows of
energy and materials through the economy from resource extraction through the
conventional production and consumption sectors to emitted waste and environ-
mental problems. While depicted in materials flow and energy flow terms, the
implications for economics were formidable, even if they now seem rather tame.
First, endless textbooks on economics ignored both resource extraction and waste
emissions, as if they somehow belonged to another discipline. Materials balance
showed that economic systems are ‘nested’ in a wider economic–ecological sys-
tem. The textbooks were (and many continue to be) ignorant of the environment.
Second, the laws of thermodynamics applied. The first law – that matter and
energy cannot be created or destroyed – meant that whatever was removed from
the natural resources sector had to reappear somewhere else as waste. The tonne
of coal extracted reappeared as ash, and as nitrogen, sulphur and carbon gases.
For any fixed assimilative capacity of the environment to receive and degrade
these wastes, the first law showed the potential for externalities to be pervasive to
any economic system. This contrasted dramatically with the early discussions of
externality in economic analysis, including that by Pigou, whereby externalities
were seen as a modest deviation from the beautiful workings of the competitive
economy. The reality was and is that externalities are everywhere and alone
170
ECOLOGICAL GROWTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
171
D. PEARCE
(a) that the absolute level of consumption should be constrained to fit given bio-
physical limits such as waste emissions being less than assimilative capacity,
renewable resource use being less than regeneration rates, and non-renewable
resources being substituted for over time by renewable resources;
(b) the absolute level of consumption should be regarded as being unconstrained,
but with biophysical limits being honoured through marked increases in the
ratio of consumption to resource inputs (including assimilative capacities as
a resource), and investment in assimilative capacity; and
(c) some combination of (a) and (b).
Position (b) appears the most logical because it is comparatively simple to see
what the menu of policies would be: policies aimed at materials/energy effi-
ciency, materials recycling, reducing entropy by making products recyclable and
more durable and investing in assimilative capacity. Population policy would be
consistent with all three positions. Policies aimed at reducing overall consump-
tion (and economic growth) fit (a), depending on the nature of the anti-growth
position which, as we have seen, is often confused in terms of what is meant by
consumption. Now suppose an anti-growth position of type (a) above was
accepted. What policies could be used to reduce aggregate consumption?
Reducing consumption can only come about either (a) by raising the fraction
of income that is saved for future consumption (investment), or (b) by reducing
incomes generally. The savings fraction is open to manipulation by governments
through the taxation system or through control of the incentives to save (e.g.
interest rates). It seems clear that the anti-growth school of thought favours income
reduction rather than savings increases. But income reductions mean reduced
production and reduced production means rising unemployment and social insta-
bility. This perhaps explains why ‘reduced consumption’ arguments are often
associated with suggestions for work sharing and investment in improved
(forced) leisure activities. Such suggestions are designed to overcome the fact that
172
ECOLOGICAL GROWTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
no-growth societies are ‘zero sum’ societies, i.e. not everyone can gain and there
would therefore have to be losers, establishing the basis for worse, not better dis-
putes over the appropriate distribution of resources. Others argue that any reduced
consumption effects on employment would be offset by increases in employment
due to spending elsewhere on non-consumer goods. Much depends on how the re-
duced consumption is brought about. If it is taxed away by government, then this ar-
gument is persuasive. The government’s tax revenues will be spent somewhere else.
But if the consumption simply does not materialise, because, say, people are
persuaded to work less hard, there will be no compensating expenditure (although,
even here, that depends on what people do with the resulting increase in leisure
time).
Now suppose that economic growth is something that can be changed. The
modern theory of economic growth says that growth is due mainly to ‘endogenous’
technical change – technical change embodied in capital – including R&D, edu-
cation as formation of human capital, and perhaps social capital. If this approach
is correct, then to lower economic growth means lowering technical change,
reducing education, etc. This is a strange way to tackle an environmental problem,
not least because there are good reasons to suppose that increasing education is
one of the ‘best’ ways of solving environmental problems. A much simpler option
for controlling the level of consumption, if that is desired, is to increase consump-
tion taxes – either income taxes (assuming people respond by reducing consump-
tion rather than saving) or indirect taxes on consumer goods.
Probably the most debated policy for reducing consumption is ‘lifestyle change’.
This would essentially involve encouragement of increased savings and reduced
consumption if the aim is to reduce aggregate consumption, and encouragement
of low resource-intensive goods and services if the target is materials and energy
throughput. The problem with this requirement is how to bring it about, and
especially how to bring it about if it involves overriding human wants and desires,
a tendency to totalitarianism at worst, and paternalism at best. Brown and
Cameron (2000) argue that these wants and desires of ordinary people are them-
selves ‘socially constructed’ by the prevailing socioeconomic system. Change the
system and the values will change to become more oriented towards sustainability.
Policies of persuasion and information will not work because they exist in a
context where individuals’ values are already pre-ordained to be hostile to such
policies. The difficulty remains of how to create a shift to ‘post-materialist’ values
away from ‘egocentric self-enhancement’. Brown and Cameron (2000) suggest
that a significant minority of people actually hold both sets of values, so that they
might be targeted for information and persuasion campaigns in the expectation
that they may then influence the rest. Restricting advertising of consumer goods,
changes to educational programmes, ‘ecological labelling’ of products all appear
as part of a menu of measures designed to persuade people to be more
environmentally friendly. But campaigns of this kind have not been successful in
other spheres without there being either a severe financial or criminal penalty
(drink-driving), or a clearly related personal health risk that people can identify
173
D. PEARCE
But can decoupling succeed? Three factors will determine the likely success of
decoupling:
Decoupling means that the resource efficiency ratios M/GNP and E/GNP, where
M is materials and E is primary energy, decline over time. Such declines are com-
posed of two parts: (a) autonomous resource efficiency and (b) policy-induced
resource efficiency. Inspection of UK data suggests that the rate at which E/GNP
174
ECOLOGICAL GROWTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
declines over time has been about 0.5 per cent per annum. Are autonomous
efficiency changes of 0.5 per cent per annum enough to secure sustainability?
This is not an easy question to answer, but to provide a benchmark, suppose we
see what rate of efficiency change is required to offset anticipated population
change and economic growth in the next fifty years. To see what is required, con-
sider the ‘IPAT’ formula (Ehrlich and Holdren 1971):
I⫽P 䡠A 䡠T (1)
or
Environmental impact ⫽ Population ⫻ Affluence ⫻ Technology (2)
or
GNP
I ⫽ POP 䡠 䡠 I . (3)
POP GNP
Equation (3) is in fact an identity, not an equation and, as such is devoid of
behavioural meaning. More usefully, it can be re-expressed in terms of rates of
change. Writing POP as p, GNP/POP as y, and I/GNP as t (for ‘technology’,
which in this case is resource use per unit GNP),
⌬I ⫽ ⌬p ⫹ ⌬y ⫹ ⌬t
I p y t. (4)
We require that ⌬I/I ⫽ 0 to honour the biophysical limit argument that no further
damage be done to the environment, so
⌬p ⌬y ⌬t
p ⫹ y ⫹ t ⫽ 0,
and hence
⌬t ⌬p ⌬y
t ⫽ p ⫹ y. (5)
The rate of improvement in resource efficiency must be at least equal to the rate
of change in population plus the rate of growth of income per capita.
As a broad check, consider the world as a whole. In 1998 world population was
5.90 billion people and in 2050 it is expected to be 8.91 billion (United Nations
2000). This is a growth rate of 0.8 per cent per annum. The rate of growth in income
per capita over the next fifty years or so is obviously more difficult to estimate, not
least because eqn (5) assumes this rate is exogenous, i.e. is not affected by popula-
tion growth, and vice versa, the rate of growth of population is not affected by eco-
nomic growth. Neither is a tenable position in reality. Available data suggest that
the rate of change in world per capita GNP was around 1 per cent per annum from
1975 to1998 (UNDP 2000). If this rate were to continue, then eqn (5) suggests
175
D. PEARCE
that ⌬p/p ⫹ ⌬y/y ⫽ 0.8 ⫹ 1.0 ⫽ 1.8 per cent per annum. Thus, globally, resource
efficiency must improve by at least 1.8 per cent per annum to offset this potential
rising impact from economic growth and population change.
If the UK’s past development path could be regarded as typical, we see imme-
diately that autonomous resource efficiency improvements will not be enough.
They would account for only 0.8/1.8 ⫽ 44 per cent of the required improvement.
This appears to be a pessimistic conclusion, but the rate of resource efficiency
improvement in the UK was chosen so as to exclude policy interventions which
came after 1970. Studies of ‘environmental Kuznets curves’ (EKCs) – relationships
between income per capita and environmental impact per capita – suggest that
policy has a very large potential to shift the EKC downwards, effectively produc-
ing the result that pollution per capita can decline even at fairly early stages of
economic development. It is more relevant, therefore, to look at recent changes
in resource efficiency since these will have been affected by both autonomous
improvements and policy measures. The policies in question include efforts to
raise energy prices domestically, but it should be recognised that energy prices
have also been influenced by political events that have affected world oil markets,
such as OPEC’s oil price activities. From a policy standpoint, however, these
effects are still relevant to the analysis because they help to show just how effec-
tive price changes can be in influencing resource efficiency.
Globally, the ratio of energy use to GNP has improved by about 1.3 per cent
per annum since 1970. This is much closer to the ‘breakeven target’ of 1.8 per cent
for ⌬t/t above. But even world data are misleading because policies affecting
energy and materials efficiency were not undertaken in many parts of the world.
What matters is what achievements can be secured given aggressive policy ini-
tiatives. Catalogues of technological potential abound, probably one of the more
famous being ‘Factor Four’ (von Weizsäcker et al. 1997) which argues that
resource efficiency can be improved fourfold. Assuming this occurs over fifty
years, the rate of change in efficiency would be 2.7 per cent per annum, more than
adequate to meet the ⌬t/t target of 1.8 per cent per annum. Manufacturing energy
intensity in advanced economies has improved at rates around 2.2 per cent per
annum 1960–94, even when the mix of industrial output is held constant (the mix
will change and will generally improve efficiency more) (International Energy
Agency 1997). United States transport fuel efficiency improved at 1.6 per cent
per annum 1970–95 (International Energy Agency 1997).
176
ECOLOGICAL GROWTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
177
D. PEARCE
178
ECOLOGICAL GROWTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
power through public information. Highly successful efforts have been made in
Sweden and the USA to release information on the release of pollutants or uses
of harmful substances such as fertilisers. More complex is the need to reduce the
attractions of regulatory capture by changes in the culture and perhaps the organ-
isation of regulators, away from policy networks that encourage industry/regulator
fraternisation towards separation of operational and regulatory functions.
On fears that market-based approaches will harm equity, it is necessary to carry
out ‘incidence studies’ as part of regulatory impact assessment, something that is
rarely done in practice. The reality is that it is often difficult to tell who is being
harmed by regulatory measures, and whether they would be better or worse off
under traditional regulation. What matters is the net incidence of the policy mea-
sure. The baseline issue arises again because the social incidence may be worse
under some other form of regulation than with market-based approaches, even
where regulations are targeted to industry and the domestic sector is ‘ring fenced’
to avoid the direct impacts of the measure. Moreover, the regressivity of policy
measures can easily be exaggerated by the media and by vocal pressure groups.
The ‘academic’ truth is that tackling equity concerns instrument-by-instrument is
inefficient and it is better to address such concerns in the context of overall policy
packages. The political difficulties of relying on this overall assessment alone are
acknowledged, since the ‘loser syndrome’ makes it difficult to persuade losers that
they are better off when all measures are accounted for. But if equity impacts are
genuine, or even if they are perceived to be genuine, there are actions that can be
taken, for example lifeline tariffs, compensation via special allowances for the tar-
geted source of pollution (e.g. pensioners’ winter fuel allowances), compensation
not directly targeted at the source of the pollution (e.g. lump sum payments via so-
cial security), and the hypothecation of revenues from policy instruments to fund
compensation measures.
5. Conclusions
The ‘growth–anti-growth’ debate of the 1970s has resurfaced in the 1990s and
the new millennium under various guises: ‘sustainable consumption’, ‘sustainable
development’, ‘biophysical limits’, etc. A persistent confusion in the popular and
political literature equates the requisite policy measures to achieve ‘sustainabi-
lity’ with actions to reduce consumption in rich countries. More enlightened
contributions note the distinction between consumption and the resource inputs
into consumption, a distinction that should be clear from the materials balance
characterisation of the economic system. Reducing consumption is neither a
politically feasible nor an economically sensible strategy, even if governments
were in control of long-run economic development. Changing the ratio of inputs
to consumption outputs is very much a realistic policy option. The technological
scope for reductions in such ratios is enormous. The means of achieving it are prob-
lematic, however. Continued use of command-and-control regulations designed
to ‘decouple’ the economy and environment appear doomed to failure because of
179
D. PEARCE
the regulatory cost of compliance. Even if there is evidence that such costs are not
large, they are perceived as being large and governments have usually failed to
demonstrate otherwise. Hence the regulatory stance has to be based on compliance
cost minimisation and that points towards market-based instruments. Yet progress
with environmental taxes, tradable permits and the like has been painfully slow.
Analysing the reasons for the slow progress thus becomes an important dimension
in the political economy of environmental regulation. The reasons are complex and
often reduce to the complexity of demonstrating the counterfactual: what would
have happened if a particular action had not been taken. Counterfactuals do not sit
easily with political communication: what is perceived is the impact of the meas-
ure under consideration, not some measure of relief that a worse alternative has not
been adopted. There is therefore a long way to go in understanding the politics of
regulation, an understanding that will require as much input from psychologists and
political scientists as it does from economists.
References
Ayres, R. and Kneese, A.V. (1969) ‘Production, Consumption and Externalities’, American
Economic Review 59(3): 282–97.
Baumol, W. and Oates, W. (1988) The Theory of Environmental Policy, 2nd edn.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Boulding, K. (1966) ‘The Economics of the Coming Spaceship Earth’, in H. Jarrett (ed.),
Environmental Quality in a Growing Economy. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University
Press, pp. 3–14.
Brown, P. and Cameron, L. (2000) ‘What Can be Done to Reduce Overconsumption?’,
Ecological Economics 32: 27–41.
Carson, R. (1964) The Silent Spring. New York: Houghton Mifflin.
Daly, H. (1991) ‘Towards an Environmental Macroeconomics’, Land Economics 67(2):
255–9.
Ehrlich, P. and Holdren, J. (1971) ‘Impact of Population Growth’, Science 171(3977):
1212–19.
International Energy Agency (1997) Indicators of Energy Use and Efficiency. Paris:
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
Meadows, D.H., Meadow, D.L., Randers, J., and Behrens, W. (1972) Limits to Growth.
London: Earth Island.
United Nations (1997) Critical Trends: Global Changes and Sustainable Development
Department for Policy Co-ordination and Sustainable Development. New York: United
Nations.
United Nations, Population Division, Department of Social and Economic Affairs (2000)
World Population Projections 1998, available at www.popin.org/pop1998.
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) (2000) The Human Development
Report 2000. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
von Weizsäcker, E., Lovins, A. and Lovins, L. (1997) Factor Four: Doubling Wealth,
Halving Resource Use. London: Earthscan.
180
18
FIRMS AND BANKS INTERACTING
IN A MONETARY PRODUCTION
ECONOMY
In this chapter we deal with some issues that are raised when we focus our at-
tention on the accommodation at the macroeconomic level of the actions of indi-
vidual agents. We pay special attention to the generation of profits by the firm and
itspossibilities in the aggregate to explain economic growth. We are interested in ex-
ploiting two main aspects. One concerns the interaction between the firm and its en-
vironment, which limits present choices of courses of action and supplies elements
on which firms form expectations about the future. The other one, as proposed by
post-Keynesian theory, deals with the interaction of firms with other firms and
other economic agents, including banks and the State. The success of plans depends
not only on the appropriateness of a firm’s decision, but also on the decisions and
behaviours of other economic agents. In this context modern market economies
181
C. A. FEIJÓ
1. Fallacies of composition
The assumption of uncertainty in the post-Keynesian model does not imply the
absence of rules of economic behaviour or established standards of rational eco-
nomic behaviour. On the contrary, in a world of uncertainty, institutions, rules and
conventions emerge to support decisions. In this sense, as noted by Dow (1985: 100),
post-Keynesians try to combine the acknowledgement of individual freedom from
deterministic rules with the recognition that in reality there are standards of
behaviour that have their origin in society rather than in the individual itself.
Macroeconomics emerges as a field of study when it is recognised that the
logic of aggregate behaviour is not simply given by the sum of individual actions.
It assumes that there is a logic of a system’s behaviour that both transcends and
limits the possible courses of actions of its elements. In other words, macroeco-
nomics is created when ‘fallacies of composition’ are identified and shown to be
theoretically significant.1
Fallacies of composition emerge from the fact that external restrictions on
individual choices and actions are, in many cases, endogenous to an aggregate
approach of the economy. Budget constraints and the size of markets, for example,
are given to an individual decision maker but are really determined by the action
of agents as a whole.
The best-known fallacies of composition in macroeconomics are those related
to the effects of an increase in the propensity to save on the rate of capital accu-
mulation and of a reduction in money wages on the level of employment.
In the firm’s case, it can be shown that an act of saving unaccompanied by an
act of new investment, rather than stimulating capital accumulation is more likely
to lead to a reduction in the level of employment. While it is reasonable to
suppose an individual can get wealthier by saving increasing proportions of his
income, if everybody does the same society will end up impoverished; aggregate
demand will be reduced, and employment will fall.
Keynes emphasised that it is possible for an individual to increase his saving
by buying either a newly created asset or an old asset. If a new asset is created,
investment is taking place, and this is what really counts for capital accumulation.
182
MONETARY PRODUCTION ECONOMY
Otherwise, the savings of that individual equals the dissaving of somebody else
who is selling an old asset.
This happens because income is created when saleable production takes place.
If saving increases beyond the non-consumable share of production, markets will
shrink and with it aggregate income, forcing some people to dissave. Therefore,
if it is possible for any individual to save as much as he wants from his income,
for the economy as a whole it is not possible to save more than is being invested.
An increase in the propensity to save, without an increase in net investment,
can only be equivalent to the losses of firms with unsold production or unused
capacity. According to Chick, for the economy as a whole, it may be better to
eliminate the propensity to save function and keep the concept only at the micro-
level where such a choice is possible (Chick 1983, chapter 9).
Something similar takes place in the second case. As emphasised by both
Keynes and Kalecki, a reduction in the money wages of the workers of a given
firm may improve the latter’s profitability. However, a general reduction of money
wages will lead to a contraction of aggregate demand. Prices will go down, and
profits will be reduced.2
What these cases point to is the necessity to verify the implicit requirements
for a given plan, at the macro-level, to be successful. Aggregate results must be
explainable in terms of the decisions and acts of the agents that actually caused
them. On the other hand, atomistic individualism misses the essential point that
goals and methods are not only historically and institutionally specific but also that
they are restrictions on individual behaviour explainable only at the macro-level.
To the well-known fallacies of composition mentioned above we add another
one. Profits are the goal and fuel of economic expansion in a monetary economy
in which production is organised by private firms. Profits, however, depend
directly on income distribution and so on what accrues to firms to accumulate.
Income distribution, therefore, is a subject that requires an integrated micro–macro
treatment. In the remainder of the chapter we will address this question, examin-
ing the macro-restrictions on the formation and accumulation of profits by firms.
183
C. A. FEIJÓ
For an individual firm to see its sales plans confirmed it is sufficient that
its own demand be sustained. But the demand for any specific good or service
depends on its buyers being able to implement their purchase plans of which that
good or service is an element. In a specific market, of course, it may be largely
a question of chance, that is to say, about how many buyers a firm attracts.
The deeper in detail one delves, the more arbitrary becomes the distribution of
demand. In what follows, we will assume that the demand for each market is
related in a stable way to aggregate demand, given the relevant income-elasticities,
and that the distribution of demand within a given market is such as to keep
market shares constant. On these assumptions, then, both aggregate and individual
profits are dependent on the level of aggregate demand.3 Following Kalecki
(1971, chapter 8), for a closed economy without government, the confirmation of
profit expectations by firms depends, at least partially, on the consumption
expenditures of capitalists and on the investment expenditures of firms themselves.
There is then a complex interconnection between the micro- and macro-levels of
analysis at this point: firms, at the micro-level, form expectations of sales to
obtain target profits; the confirmation of these expectations depends, on the other
hand, on the firms themselves spending the amount necessary to validate the sales
expectations.
The point is that aggregate profits are generated by aggregate demand, not by
the markup decision of the firm. Pricing determines the distribution among firms
of aggregate profits, but not their generation. The actual generation of profits thus
depends on enough acts of spending on consumption goods and on investment
goods taking place. As long as the marginal propensity to consume is smaller than
one, growth becomes a condition of survival of firms also in this sense.
If firms entertain optimistic expectations as to the possibility of earning prof-
its from their activities, they will issue liabilities to absorb funds and extend their
scale of operations. This introduces a crucial requirement of stability operating
in the economy related to the validation of expectations. Capitalist firms issue
liabilities on the expectation of future cash inflows. If these flows do not materi-
alise, insolvency may follow.4
In sum, for firms to be able to obtain the receipts that will allow them to vali-
date their debts and to earn the profits they expected it is necessary that the right
volume and structure of aggregate demand be generated. We can consider, with
Keynes and Kalecki, that consumption expenditures are induced by income. This
means that, in a closed economy without government, aggregate profits depend
on investment. If investments are not realised, not only do some firms have losses
but also, through the financial linkages, suppliers of funds are hurt.
Investment expenditures perform a strategic role, then, not only because on
them depends the validation of profit expectations by firms, but also because they
are autonomous with respect to current income. In Keynesian theory, to be
autonomous means that investment decisions are independent of current income,
both because investment is induced by expectations of future profits and because
it is sustained largely by discretionary funds, accumulated assets and external
184
MONETARY PRODUCTION ECONOMY
funds obtained from credit institutions. According to Keynes (1973, Vol. 14,
pp. 215–23), banks perform a crucial role in making investment possible.5
To the need for funding we will return later. To provide finance, according to
Keynes, is a function of banks. Banking institutions fix their policy of lending
money according to, at least, two main factors. One is the amount of reserves in
cash thought to be ‘safe’ in relation to their liabilities. The second factor is that
banks will provide loans depending on the margins of safety they can guarantee
for their application. Banks cannot know how their loan is being used, and so this
185
C. A. FEIJÓ
is a sort of risk always involved in the operation. But the main risk incurred
by banks concerns the liquidity of their loan. As Keynes puts it ‘a loan may be
liquid from the point of view of an individual banker, because he knows he can
get his money back if he wants, although the proceeds of it are being employed
in fixed forms’ (Keynes 1973, Vol. 13, p. 7).
Uncertainty about future prospective yields may erode the safety margins,
causing a contraction in the supply of loans. Banks, then, in order to avoid a
devaluation of the market value of their assets, will try to recover their position,
and a way of doing this is by refusing to provide new loans, either absolutely or,
more likely, in relative terms, raising interest rates of safety margins require-
ments. So, although banks can create credit, there is a limit to the process given
by their own liquidity preference. To take banks’ liquidity preference into account
also implies that credit is not offered in an indiscriminate way; customers are
selected according to the evaluation by the bank of the future profitability of the
business or, secondarily, the liquidity of the assets it can offer as collateral.
Moreover, the disposition to expand or contract credit depends on expectations
about the performance of the whole economy.
This argument about the position of banks to expand credit at their will sug-
gests that the supply of money is, at least in part, endogenously created (Chick
1983, chapter 12).8 So, being firms, banks make their decisions based on expec-
tations and the assumption that money is endogenously created becomes an addi-
tional element to amplify the potential instability of the economic system.9
186
MONETARY PRODUCTION ECONOMY
So, the point is that in a monetary production economy even if individual profit
expectations are not promptly validated by demand, firms may survive as long
as the financial system is able to meet their demands for cash. This is Minsky’s
assumption that the financial system in modern economies amplifies the move-
ments of aggregate output as it provides resources to firms to produce and invest.
As Minsky puts it, ‘A fundamental attribute of our economy is that the ownership
of assets is typically financed by debts and debts imply payment commitments.’
(Minsky 1986: 42).
At the macro-level then, the extension to which aggregate profits are sufficient
to validate aggregate debts is a crucial factor to give stability to the growth of the
economic system. Minsky postulates that market economies are by nature unsta-
ble. Uncertainty about the unknown future is the ground for instability. But what
allows uncertainty to spread over the economic system, generating instability,
is the financial links economic agents make among them. Once investment in
long-lived assets relies on external finance to be carried out, a synchronisation
between payment on debts and receipts of income must occur to keep the func-
tioning of the system on a smooth basis.
All this means that, in discussing macroeconomic stability, one should pay
attention not only to indebtedness, but also to the temporal profile of debt payment
commitments for they are crucial to determine the nature of financial pressures a
firm may suffer. At the firm level the financial postures that may be adopted –
hedge, speculative or Ponzi – determine the health of the business. In the macro-
level, ‘The mixture of hedge, speculative and Ponzi finance in an economy is a
major determinant of its stability.’ (Minsky 1986: 209). The changes in the aggre-
gate temporal profiles of payments are at the root of the financial fragility and
instability post-Keynesian economists attribute to modern capitalism.
5. Financial instability
In a period of prosperity, the degree of confidence attached to expectations is
increased as decisions undertaken in the past prove to be correct. Entrepreneurs
become more willing to take risks as they wish to expand their business. More
ambitious investment projects are pursued. Financial institutions in such a context
play their role of supporting this greater ambition of the private sector by
expanding the supply of credit.
A period of prosperity may begin with hedge units being dominant, and so liq-
uidity is plentiful as the asset structure is heavily weighted by money or liquid
assets and the quasi-rents yields by current expenditure on capital assets are high.
The degree of indebtedness is low, as the debt commitments are low in relation to the
expected yields of capital assets. The interest rate structure is such that it encourages
investment in fixed assets as ‘short-term interest rates on secure instruments will be
significantly lower than the yields from owning capital’(Minsky 1986: 211). The
confirmation of expectations about sales revenues and the robustness of the balance
sheet of firms encourage them to make more ambitious investment plans.
187
C. A. FEIJÓ
The passage from a situation where hedge units dominate to a situation where
speculative units dominate occurs because capitalists and bankers are seeking
more profit opportunities to be exploited.
As long as this process of ‘money now in exchange for money later’ continues,
the margins of safety involved in financial contracts (the proportion of money and
other easily negotiable financial instruments to the necessity of cash to fulfil con-
tract obligations) are being reduced. At the same time the demand for funds tends
to become more inelastic, because investment in capital assets is a time-consuming
activity and, before an investment project is completed, it has no value as deter-
mined by the future streams of profits. Because of that, a rigidity in the demand for
funds is likely to occur and so an increase in the cost of finance (an increase in
interest rates) diminishes (or even eliminates) the margins of safety.
But, while an investment boom is taking place, further credit can be found, how-
ever, at a higher cost. An increase in the cost of finance leads firms to commit
larger portions of their expected cash flow to debt servicing. This means that port-
folios become more speculative and more fragile. As long as profits are rising,
increasing indebtedness will be stimulated and lower margins of safety will be
accepted. For speculative finance to continue it must be expected that financial
resources will remain available so firms engaged in speculative and Ponzi finance
can refinance their debts.
This trend changes when the degree of confidence in the ongoing situation
decreases. In general this means a decline in the net expected cash inflow and
eventually a shortfall of cash and an increase in demand for liquid assets (liquidity
preference rises). An unexpected shortfall of cash, an increase in the interest rate
together with a change in the degree of confidence about the future behaviour of
business will make speculative units review their desired degree of indebtedness. As
Dow writes, ‘Mistaken expectations are costly when financing is highly geared.’
(Dow 1986–7: 246). This will lead firms with high indebtedness to reduce their
investment expenditure in an attempt to reduce their dependence on external finance.
This attempt of individual firms to improve their degree of indebtedness may,
as suggested by Steindl (1976),
not put matters right. Assuming that outside savings are relatively
inelastic, the further drop in the accumulation of real capital will not be
accompanied by a corresponding drop in the accumulation of outside
savings, and consequently internal accumulation must drop more than
total capital accumulation, and the entrepreneurs will find that their
relative indebtedness (gearing ratio) continues to grow. In other words,
the impact of any reduction in investment owning to the inelasticity of
outside saving must be mainly on internal accumulation.
(p. 114)
So, a reduction in the rate of investment of individual firms slows down the
growth of aggregate demand, which implies slower growth of aggregate profits.
188
MONETARY PRODUCTION ECONOMY
Furthermore, a shortfall of profits in face of the needs for cash to validate debts
and a decrease in confidence in business, increases furthermore the cost of additional
debt (as demand for liquidity increases) and the weight of speculative and Ponzi units
in the economic system. The consequence of portfolios becoming more speculative
is that the economic system becomes more vulnerable to shocks or to the disap-
pointment of expectations. These will have an amplified negative effect on further
economic decisions. This is an environment propitious to a recession or depression.
The growth path to be followed by the system as a whole will then depend on
how financial institutions and economic policy react to changes in the degree of
confidence. The dynamics of the system depend not only on how much entrepre-
neurs decide to spend in new capital equipment, but also on how they finance new
investment plans. In other words, it is not only the rate of investment that matters,
but also how portfolios change to accommodate different rates of growth of aggr-
egate demand. One should notice that the preceding discussion, based on the
well-known concepts proposed by Minsky, suggests an approach alternative to
Keynes’s distinction between finance and funding, referred to in discussing the
role of banks. Instead of two clear-cut sequentially defined procedures as sug-
gested by Keynes in an approach that sharply distinguishes the role of banks from
that of other financial institutions, Minsky opts for a more general approach in
which many types of financial procedures are possible.
6. Summing up
In this chapter we turned our attention to some issues trespassing over the borders
between micro- and macroeconomic analysis. For post-Keynesians, under the
non-probabilistic uncertainty assumption, the validation of individual expecta-
tions is not a priori secured, and some accommodation of plans at the macro-level
must probably take place. The study of his process of accommodation is in the
core of macrodynamics.
The main variable to explain growth is the rate of investment in fixed assets,
which is autonomous in relation to current income and governed by long-term
profit expectations of individual firms. The confirmation of profit expectations,
in turn, depends on the volume and structure of aggregate demand being gener-
ated, according to the expenditure plans of economic agents. In this sense we
identified a complex interconnection between the micro- and macro-levels of
analysis, and post-Keynesian theory pays particular attention to the links between
capitalist firms and other economic agents (in special banks and financial insti-
tutions) and capitalist firms among themselves.
Investment expenditures made by individual capitalists will determine how fast
the economic system will grow, but for post-Keynesian theory it is also relevant
to discuss the stability of the growth path. This discussion touches an important
crossing between micro and macro – how investment in fixed assets is financed.
The interrelation between firms and financial institutions is expressed in the
conditions in which finance on fixed assets is agreed.
189
C. A. FEIJÓ
Capitalist firms issue liabilities on the expectation of future cash inflow. Banks,
because they can create money, have the flexibility of accommodating demand for
funds by firms. Bankers are, like businessmen, subject to the same expectational
climate when making their decisions and, as they are profit seeking institutions,
modern market economies tend to be unstable.
A period of high expectations and high liquidity is propitious for more aggres-
sive financing practices to develop. This will lead to more speculative financing,
that is to say, using short-term debts to finance long-term positions. Margins
of safety deteriorate and changes in expectations lead to new demands for funds
being rejected. A phase of more conservative financial practices then follows. So
banking practices can be ‘highly disruptive’, but in economic systems with long-
lived capital assets they are needed to make it dynamic.
Notes
1 According to Dow, ‘The fallacy of composition is a central feature of any discussion of
microfoundations; according to this fallacy, individual actions, if common to a large
number of individuals, will generate an outcome different from what was intended by
each.’ (Dow 1985: 82).
2 See Keynes (1936, chapter 2) and Kalecki (1971, chapter 14).
3 The assumption of given market shares may be seen as a variant of the procedure of
Keynes in the General Theory, who assumes a fixed production structure.
4 Insolvency, nevertheless, need not be the only possible outcome. Steindl (1976: 112–14)
described an adjustment of balance sheet on the liabilities side that may be necessary
when expectations of cash inflows are disappointed. An increase in indebtedness may
avoid the curtailment of the firm’s current expenditures. The same factor, however, may
depress plans for future expenditures.
5 Chick (1992a,b, chapter 12) describes the evolutions of the banking system, connecting
its behaviour with changes in the theory of saving, investment and interest rate.
6 See also Chick (1992a,b, chapter 10).
7 After the publishing of The General Theory, Keynes wrote two articles where he made
clear his point about the irrelevance of ex ante saving in financing investment. These
articles are reprinted in volume 14 of his Collected Writings (pp. 201–23). As already
mentioned, this point is developed by Chick (1983, chapter 9).
8 An interesting discussion about the relevance of liquidity for the determination of
aggregate demand is in Chick (1979, chapter 4).
9 Anything that increases the elasticity of the credit system increases potential instability.
This potential instability is further increased by the role of the central bank in modern
market economies.
References
Chick, V. (1979) The Theory of Monetary Policy, revised edition. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
Chick, V. (1983) Macroeconomics after Keynes: A Reconstruction of the General Theory.
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Chick, V. (1992a) ‘Monetary Increases and Their Consequences: Streams, Backwaters and
Floods’, in P. Arestis and S. Dow (eds), On Money, Method and Keynes: Selected Essays
by Victoria Chick, Chapter 10. London: Macmillan.
190
MONETARY PRODUCTION ECONOMY
Chick, V. (1992b) ‘The Evolution of the Banking System and the Theory of Saving,
Investment and Interest’, in P. Arestis and S. Dow (eds), On Money, Method and Keynes:
Selected Essays by Victoria Chick, Chapter 12. London: Macmillan.
Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes, The General Theory and after. Part I:
Preparation, Vol. 13. London: Macmillan.
Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes, The General Theory and after. Part II:
Defense and Development, Vol. 14. London: Macmillan.
Dow, S. (1985) Macroeconomic Thought: A Methodological Approach. Oxford: Basil
Blackwell.
Dow, S. (1986–7) ‘Post Keynesian Monetary Theory for an Open Economy’, Journal of
Post Keynesian Economics 9(2): 237–57.
Kalecki, M. (1971) Selected Essays in the Dynamics of the Capitalist Economy.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Keynes, J. M. (1936) The General Theory of Employment Interest and Money. New York:
Harcourt Brace and World.
Minsky, H. (1986) Stabilizing an Unstable Economy. New Haven and London: Yale
University Press.
Steindl, J. (1976) Maturity and Stagnation in American Capitalism, 2nd edn. New York:
Monthly Review Press.
191
19
THE REGIONAL IMPACT OF THE
INTERNATIONALIZATION OF
THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM:
THE CASE OF MERCOSUL
Adriana M. Amado1
1. Introduction
The economic debate of the 1990s was largely based on issues relating to the role
of markets in leading the economy toward stability at full employment. The focus
of the contemporary debate was a matter of whether or not to give support to the
two interlinked processes of economic liberalization and globalization that
became increasingly embedded during this decade, at the national and international
levels. On the one hand, the orthodoxy pointed out the main benefits of markets,
and the disturbances caused by the state and by the frictions created artificially by
certain institutions (see Silva and Andrade 1998). Globalization and liberalization
enlarged the operating space of markets and approximated real economies to the
assumptions that their models were based on. On the other hand, the heterodoxy
was pointing out the problems inherent to market mechanisms that, instead of
leading to stability and full employment, tended to create instability and involuntary
unemployment.
The processes of globalization and liberalization did not occur without some
tension in the 1990s, and a certain degree of protection of the national economies
that were involved in them. Countering globalization there was a strong tendency
towards the formation and intensification of economic blocs. This period was
marked by the negotiation towards European Monetary Union, the deepening of
the relations of Mercosul,2 the negotiations on NAFTA, etc. All these processes
were in one way or another a reaction by national governments to the globalization
process and an attempt to promote a better, strongly positioning in the world econ-
omy. Nevertheless, while economic integration was in one sense a movement con-
trary to globalization, inside the economic blocs the two processes created a strong
movement towards the breaking down of the economic barriers that different
nations represented. In this way, when the economic integration of different nations
192
INTERNATIONALIZATION OF THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM
reaches the stage of monetary union, the concept of national economies virtually
disappears and is substituted by the notion of an economic bloc, which becomes
the relevant unit of analysis.
This chapter is concerned mainly with the internal consequences of processes
of economic integration, especially with aspects associated with the financial and
monetary spheres. It points out that economic integration mainly transforms the
international dynamic into something very close to the regional dynamic, and so
the proper reference space is no more nations but regions, mainly defined eco-
nomically. Another important issue focused on here is the distinction between
central and peripheral economies which are integrating with each other, and the
possible outcomes for these economies of the two processes of liberalization and
globalization. In order to do this, we consider first the position of the orthodoxy
on the convergence of growth trends between regions, demonstrating that their
case for convergence rests mainly on the assumption of decreasing marginal
returns to capital. Moreover, this is the result of a certain conception of money in
which it is a ‘mere convenience’ which cannot have real consequences. This is
because they assume a that allows agents to know the future, and so they are able
to predict the state of the world through the theory of probability and thus oper-
ate under risk and not true uncertainty.
We will then analyse the heterodox position, that the outcome of the two
processes of globalization and liberalization is the divergence of growth trends,
and demonstrate that this divergence is more rapid in regional terms than in
national terms as a consequence of the absence of economic frontiers to regions.
However, this framework does not adequately analyse the role of money at the
regional level.
The emphasis on real variables identified in these theories will be argued to be
a consequence of the absence of an adequate monetary theory that takes into
account the characteristics of a monetary production economy, that is, an economy
which is in historical time and in which crucial events are fundamental. If the rel-
evant notion of time is historical time and so there are crucial events, these
economies are subject to true uncertainty and agents cannot use probability theory
as a base for their decision-making process. So, they have to use conventions to
guide their decisions. Finally, this kind of economy has an asset with some pecu-
liarities that can ‘rule the roost’ in the accumulation process. This asset is money.
In this general environment, it is perfectly rational to demand it in particular cir-
cumstances (Keynes 1936).
As will be pointed out, Chick and Dow (1988, 1997) include money in theo-
retical models that deal with regional trends of growth, basing their case precisely
on the notion of the non-neutrality of money at the general level. Regional
non-neutrality of money in turn requires the concept of a monetary production
economy.
This general theoretical framework will be developed here in order to highlight
some important aspects of the possibility of monetary integration of Mercosul, a
hypothesis that is sometimes discussed by the policy makers of the countries that
193
A. M. AMADO
form the economic bloc. It will be pointed out that, contrary to other international
experiences where financial integration was a sovereign process led by national
economies, in the case of this peripheral bloc, Mercosul, financial integration has
been led by market mechanisms specially associated with the rapid process of
internationalization of the domestic financial system of the countries of the bloc.
This process was conducted taking the bloc as a whole, not only the national
economies separately, and this will have important consequences for the regional
economic organization of those countries.
194
INTERNATIONALIZATION OF THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM
theory and assume the idea of a non-frictional environment. (Agents know the
world without great information costs, therefore they form their expectations
correctly, and there are no barriers to the flow of goods and factors and prices are
flexible.) In this world the imbalance between development levels among regions
tends to disappear.
What those theorists have in mind is the fact that capital has decreasing marginal
returns.3 Therefore, as capital accumulation proceeds, and as the stock of capital
increases, there is a reduction in the marginal return to capital. As capital has two
alternatives – the first gives it a smaller marginal return (richer regions) and the
second one a larger marginal return (poorer regions) – it will migrate to the region
in which the marginal productivity is larger. Therefore, capital would flow from
more developed regions, as they have a larger stock of capital, to regions where the
capital accumulation is not so developed. This makes clear the tendency towards
homogenization of patterns of growth. This process is made easy by liberalization
and globalization since those two processes accelerate the action of market mech-
anisms, as they remove the frictions of exogenous elements that slow down the
economic relations among nations.
Those theories discount the role of money in the process of growth. This is per-
fectly understandable since, in their macroeconomic theory, money has a neutral
role and so does not interfere in the growth trends of the economy as a whole.
There is, therefore, no reason for it to interfere in the growth trends of regional
economies, unless there are short-run imperfections that make agents mal-form
their expectations and, thus, there is room for short-run non-neutrality of money.
However, as the economy passes from the short-run period to the long-run, the
intervention of money in the growth pattern of the economy is eliminated and
growth becomes only a function of real variables. And it is precisely those real
variables which lead to the homogeneity of growth patterns.
195
A. M. AMADO
196
INTERNATIONALIZATION OF THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM
economy and re-establish their liquid position by the end of the process. Another
form of increasing the liquidity of the economy is the consent of the Monetary
Authority in expanding the money supply. Therefore, if there is a limit to the
expansion of the money supply in one region, and this limit does not exist in the
other region, there is a tendency in the second to grow more rapidly than the first.
Thus, the analysis of the process of regional growth depends on the behaviour of
agents in relation to liquidity in each system.
The lower the level of per capita income of an economy, the more agents will
use cash instead of deposits. This causes a leak in the flow of loans/deposits on
which the money multiplier is based. Therefore, each time banks extend credit
towards a backward region, they receive less deposits as a consequence of this
credit extension than if they were doing the same thing in a richer economy. This
has a negative impact on the pattern of growth of the poorer economies, as the ca-
pacity of private money creation is more constrained in peripheral regions than in
central ones. On the other hand, these peripheral economies tend to be more un-
stable than the central ones. Given the higher instability, agents present a higher
liquidity preference in these economies (because of precautionary and speculation
motives). And, so, in the periphery, banks are again penalized because of the drain
of deposits from those regions to the central ones, as a result of the higher liquid-
ity preference (Dow 1982, 1990; and Chick and Dow 1988).
Another important aspect of this analysis is the openness of regional
economies. Peripheral economies present a higher marginal propensity to import
than central ones. This causes a drain of the finance created in peripheral regions
towards richer regions and this reduces the capacity of banks to create money
through the money multiplier and thus to finance economic growth. This element
has important impacts on both the money and income multipliers. Those effects
tend to reduce the growth potential of peripheral systems and amplify growth in
central systems (Dow 1982).
Finally, we should analyse one of the important peculiarities of regional
economies in terms of the demand for liquidity. Since one assumes that there is no
barrier to capital movements in regional economies, agents will prefer to speculate
with assets that have higher liquidity, as a consequence of more solid institutional
arrangements. Moreover, agents in the periphery will have a higher liquidity pref-
erence as a consequence of the higher instability of those regions, as pointed out
previously. As central regions present more solid institutional arrangements, their
assets are more liquid. So, peripheral agents tend to speculate with central assets.
The higher liquidity preference in itself is a problem in terms of the creation of
finance, but there is an extra problem that refers to the use of central assets to spec-
ulate. This causes an extra drain of finance from the peripheral regions towards
central regions via the capital account (Dow 1982; Chick and Dow 1988).
Banks that have their head offices in the central regions could, however, create
credit in the periphery, returning part of the finance that was drained from that
system by market mechanisms. However, it is not so easy to assume that this will
happen effectively. Centre’s banks form their expectations in relation to the
197
A. M. AMADO
198
INTERNATIONALIZATION OF THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM
199
A. M. AMADO
countries (Argentina and Brazil), that is the region on the South of São Paulo and
Buenos Aires, and to reduce the participation of those banks in the periphery of
those countries. That is, the Brazilian economic centre integrates with the
Argentinian economic centre and the national peripheries disintegrate in relation
to the other national periphery and to the bloc periphery as a whole. In Brazil this
can be observed by the increase in the number of municipalities that do not have
any kind of financial provision following the intensification of the process of
internationalization and concentration of the banking system. In Brazil in 1994,
23 per cent of the towns/cities did not have financial institutions; in 1998, 31 per cent
of towns had no financial services (Amado and Silva 1999).
In the case of Mercosul there is another element that puts strong limits on the
idea of monetary union within the bloc. The stabilization plans of Brazil and
Argentina in the 1990s were based on the idea of exchange anchors. The
exchange regime of Brazil had a certain flexibility, however in the Argentinian
case flexibility was nil, which made the country lose its monetary policy tools.
After the external crises of 1998, Brazil left this regime and entered a flexible
exchange rate regime. Therefore, it is difficult to consider the possibility of
homogenizing those two kinds of exchange regime in order to promote monetary
union. Another issue is how far this homogenization is desirable, considering that
the main proposal on this issue is to integrate Brazil with the Argentinian regime,
which constitutes the transformation of those two countries into appendages of
the USA.
6. Epilogue
It is important to consider whether it is possible for these two countries to deal
with the degree of monetary rigidity that this kind of solution asks for. Moreover,
it is fundamental to consider the consequences of the loss of the monetary tool for
dealing with the process of development of these countries.
In this sense, the analysis of the institutional development of these countries is
fundamental. The State provided the main pillars of the industrialization process
of these countries and played an especially important role in the provision of
finance and funding of the growth process. The liberalization process and the
rigidity that the monetary regimes of Argentina and Brazil adopted in the 1990s
eliminated the possibility of State action in financing development. This goes
exactly in the opposite direction of what should be the case according to a model
that assumes the non-neutrality of money, in which one of the roles of the State
should be to create adequate institutional mechanisms and support those mecha-
nisms in order to remove financial bottlenecks in the process of development.
Therefore, a process of monetary/financial integration conducted along the
lines that have been proposed by the policy makers in Mercosul tends to create
further financial constraints in the region and emphasizes the divergence of
growth rates among the economic regions inside the bloc.
200
INTERNATIONALIZATION OF THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM
Notes
1 The author gratefully acknowledges the financial support of CNPq.
2 Mercosul is the Common Market of the South and is formed by Argentina, Brazil,
Uruguai and Paraguai.
3 There are recent attempts to derive models which present a tendency toward conver-
gence at the same time as assuming increasing marginal returns (Sala-I-Martim 1996).
4 See Furtado (1964, 1971, 1982), Paz and Sunkel (1975), Prebisch (1970), Rodriguez
(1981), Baran (1957), dos Santos (1970), Frank (1967) and Cardoso (1972, 1979).
5 This can be observed by the impacts of the emerging markets’ external crisis that began
with the Mexican crisis in 1995. All this crises had deep consequences for the external
and internal positions of Mercosul countries, especially Brazil and Argentina, demon-
strating the increased vulnerability of these countries. For further details see Silva
(1999) and Andrade et al. (2000).
6 There is a significant difference of dimension with respect to the internationalization of
the two financial systems. The internationalization of Argentina is much more intense
than for Brazil. However, until the middle of the decade, Brazil had only a marginal par-
ticipation of international banks in its financial system and by the end of the decade
these figures were expressive.
7 This was the basis for the models that deal with herd behaviour.
References
Amado, A. (1997) Disparate Regional Development in Brazil: A Monetary Production
Approach. Aldershot: Ashgate.
Amado, A. M. (1998) ‘Impactos Regionais do Recente Processo de Concentração
Bancária no Brasil’, In Proceedings of the III Encontro de Economia Política.
Amado, A. M. and Silva, L. A. S. (1999) ‘Integração Monetário-Financeira do Mercosul’,
In Proceedings of the XXVI Encontro de Economia, ANPEC.
Andrade, J. P., Silva, M. L. F. and Carneiro, F. G. (2000) ‘Contrasting Monetary Policies
Within the Mercosul Experiment’, Economia Aplicada 4(2): 223–232
Baran, P. A. (1957) The Political Economy of Growth. London: John Calder.
Cardoso, F. H. (1972) ‘Dependency and Development in Latin America’, New Left Review
July-August.
Cardoso, F. H. and Faletto, E. (1979) Dependence and Development in Latin America.
Berkeley: University of California Press.
Chick, V. and Dow, S. (1988) ‘A Post-Keynesiana Perspective on the Relation Between
Banking and Regional Development’, in P. Arestis (ed.), Post-Keynesian Monetary
Economics. Aldershot: Edward Elgar.
Chick, V. and Dow, S. (1997) ‘Competition and The Future of the European Banking and
Financial System’, in A. Cohen, H. Hagemann and J. Smithin (eds), Money, Financial
Institutions and Macroeconomics. Kluwer, pp. 253–70.
dos Santos, T. (1970) ‘The Structure of Dependence’, American Economic Review 60(2).
Dow, S. C. (1982) ‘The Regional Composition of the Money Multiplier Process’, Scottish
Journal of Political Economy 29(1).
Dow, S. C. (1987) ‘The Treatment of Money in Regional Economics’, Journal of Regional
Science 27(1).
Dow, S. C. (1990) Financial Markets and regional Economic Development: The Canadian
Experience. Aldershot, Avebury.
201
A. M. AMADO
202
20
ASSESSING CREDITWORTHINESS
AND SMALL-FIRM BANK LENDING
Jochen Runde1
203
J. RUNDE
questions about how agents actually arrive at their probabilities. They are simply
assumed to ‘have’ well-defined probability functions, usually taken to correspond
to objective frequencies, and the analysis proceeds from there.
Rather than proceeding in this way, then, it is useful to distinguish between case-
and class-based judgements of probability. Case-based judgements of probability
are best understood as a weighing of the balance of the arguments (on the basis of
the information available) for and against a particular conclusion. Judgements of
this kind are typically qualitative and take the following form: ‘x on evidence e is
more probable than not-x on evidence e’, or ‘x on evidence e is more probable than
y on evidence e’. That such judgements are in fact probability judgements may
sound strange to those accustomed to thinking about probabilities as numerical
ratios. But the idea should be familiar enough from everyday life. In a court of law,
for example, the guilt of a defendant is not decided on the basis of the number of
times similar persons have been found guilty of a similar crime in similar situa-
tions, but on the basis of the arguments for and against the defendant’s guilt on the
basis of whatever is known about the specifics of the case. The same is true of the
traditional ‘judgemental’ lending decision, based predominantly on a weighing up
of information specific to the applicant firm and its proposed venture.
Class-based judgements of probability are beliefs about possible outcomes based
on the frequency such outcomes have occurred in similar instances in the past. Thus
a cunning gambler’s judgement of the probability that the next toss of the weighted
die will land six up may be based on a knowledge of the relative frequency with
which six has come up in a long sequence of past throws. Similarly, a banker’s
judgement of the probability that an applicant will default on loan may be based on
his or her knowledge about the default rate in a class of similar business ventures.
The essential difference between these two approaches is that whereas case-
based judgements of probability are made in respect of individual cases as indi-
vidual cases, class-based judgements of probability focus on individual cases
only insofar as they are members of a class of similar cases. In the context of the
lending decision, this difference translates into whether the lender asks:
1 ‘is this applicant x creditworthy, given what I know about his or her particu-
lar situation?’; or
2 ‘is this type of applicant creditworthy, given what I know about the average
quality of borrowers of this type?’
204
CREDITWORTHINESS AND SMALL-FIRM BANK LENDING
Faceless banking
The movement from case- to class-based assessment procedures tends to reduce
face-to-face interaction between bank managers and their clients. Indeed, some
advocates of credit scoring believe that it removes altogether the need to interview
applicants for small-firm loans. How then may this increase in the ‘distance’
between bank managers and their small-firm clients affect small-firm lending?
First, class-based assessment procedures allow banks to maintain an arm’s
length relationship with their small-firm clients. This makes it easier for banks to
extend and roll over short-term finance in good times and withdraw it in bad
(Hughes 1994: 219); prevents any improvement in their generally low level of
205
J. RUNDE
206
CREDITWORTHINESS AND SMALL-FIRM BANK LENDING
the desired improvements will actually be achieved for any given case. There are
two main reasons for this. First, the class-based approach is narrowly inductive,
aiming to predict the quality of potential borrowers strictly on the basis of past
experience with borrowers of a similar type. As such, it faces all the standard prob-
lems of inductive inference when applied in an open and dynamic world. Second,
and even given a suitably stable economic environment and the absence of adverse
selection and moral hazard problems (see below), the class-based approach is
restricted to measuring the creditworthiness of applicants on the basis of their
membership of a class of similar applicants grouped together on the basis of some
shared, general characteristics (more specific or particular differences between
members of that class are assumed to be randomly distributed and therefore irrel-
evant). The trouble is that this may lead to the neglect of specific information that
may be both readily available and relevant to the loan application. The traditional
approach is better suited to picking up differences of this kind.
The move towards class-based assessments of loan applications does not guar-
antee improvements in the quality of small-firm lending. It follows that there may
be no benefits to small firms from this source.
207
J. RUNDE
208
CREDITWORTHINESS AND SMALL-FIRM BANK LENDING
It is evident from (1) that as r rises, low return firms will begin to drop out. For
it is a necessary condition for a firm to take a loan that Ri ⫺ (1 ⫹ r) (K ⫺ W) ⬎ 0
(although it will of course only do so as long as E() ⬎ (1 ⫹ b)W . Because higher
Ri’s are necessarily accompanied by higher levels of risk (lower pi’s, because
E[Ri] ⫽ R), it follows that the level of interest that firms are prepared to pay on
loans is directly related to their riskiness.
(ii) Individual borrowers know their pi’s and Ri’s; banks only know that the ex-
pected gross return of all borrowers is R. Assumption (i) is open to various
objections. First, it places extreme demands on firms’ capacity to assess the risk
of their projects and to match this to particular interest rates. I shall return to this
point in the discussion of (ii) below. Second, the posited direct relationship
between the interest rate and the riskiness of borrowers may be reversed in a sit-
uation that is just as plausible as the one assumed by S&W. Suppose that all firms
have a common gross return Rg if successful but different probabilities of suc-
ceeding (de Meza and Webb 1987). The expected profit for the period of the ith
firm is then
As before, the firm will only borrow so long as E(i) ⬎ (1⫹b)W . But in this case,
over some ranges of the variables, higher-risk borrowers will withdraw from the
market as the interest rate rises, and the proportion of low-risk borrowers de-
manding loans will rise.
This theoretical indeterminacy about the relationship between the level of
interest that small firms are prepared to pay on loans on the one hand, and their
riskiness (profitability) on the other, was mirrored in the interviews conducted
with the banks. But an interesting point that emerged here was that although most
of the banks claimed that they were (or would be) attempting to price risk, some
of them indicated that low-risk borrowers are sometimes actually charged higher
interest rates on loans than are high-risk borrowers. If so, this would indicate that
such borrowers are irrational or, more likely, that they are unaware of the riski-
ness of their projects and/or that they should be able to obtain credit on better
terms than they are currently receiving. Either way, however, assumption (i) is
violated in this case.
With respect (ii), borrowers do typically have private information not accessi-
ble to their bankers. The question is whether such information would be relevant
to the bank’s decision to refuse or grant a loan. Borrowers typically know more
than do their bank about such things as the technology employed, local demand
conditions, supply relationships and so on. Banks are likely to know relatively
more about the typical pitfalls small businesses face, the macroeconomic climate,
financial management and, importantly, the hit rate of ventures of similar kinds.
An interesting possibility that emerged from the interviews was, contrary to the
assumptions of S&W, that the banks often achieve a more realistic assessments of
209
J. RUNDE
the prospects of the individual borrowers’ ventures than do the borrowers them-
selves. The reasons for this are partly that small firms often lack financial expert-
ise and have less information than does the bank about the success rates of ven-
tures of similar kinds. Further, and as their historically high failure rates suggest
(Daly 1990), they tend to be unduly optimistic about their prospects of success
(de Meza and Southey 1996). If so, a significant proportion of small firms may
be over-keen to borrow at prevailing rates and banks may be justified in turning
them away. Again any unsatisfied demand for credit at these rates will not be due
to AS along the lines of S&W.
On the moral hazard side of the argument, two key assumptions are:
(iii) The level of interest that firms are prepared to pay on their loans is directly
related to the riskiness of the proposed projects. This assumption is identical to
(i) above, but in this case the firms are assumed to be identical and to choose from
a range of investment projects with varying levels of riskiness.
(iv) The bank is unable to observe the actions of the borrower, namely the risk-
iness of the project he or she undertakes. The first of these assumptions was
already considered above. Even if it is granted, however, the image of small firms
having a portfolio of possible investment projects, each of them offering a differ-
ent risk/return combination and all of them being implementable at will in
response to variations in the interest rate, seems implausible. The problem is not
only that the necessary financial and forecasting skills are typically not available
to small firms. More importantly, it flies in the face of the normal order of things,
namely that ideas for business ventures almost invariably precede questions about
their financing and that the bulk of small-firm lending is made to firms that are
already established and where instant variations in the nature of investment proj-
ects pursued are not feasible. Also, with high and increasing sanctions that apply
to loan failures (loss of credit ratings), it is by no means clear that small-firm bor-
rowers would deliberately choose riskier projects when faced with higher rates of
interest.
Assumption (iv), in contrast, is plausible: small firms typically do know more
than do their banks about how they use the money loaned to them. Moreover, pri-
vate information of this kind does provide scope for MH, even if perhaps not of
the kind considered by S&W. The responses of the banks on this issue suggested
that it is useful to distinguish between ex ante MH (where potential borrowers
deliberately misrepresent their position prior to securing a loan), a strong form of
ex post MH (where borrowers’ post-contract behaviour violates the formal terms
of the loan contract) and a weaker form of ex post MH (where existing borrowers
take actions which, while not necessarily at variance with the formal terms of the
loan contract, are not in the banks’ best interests). The general view was that
the first two forms of MH are rare. This was attributed to the ‘basic honesty’ of
the majority of borrowers, reinforced, in the case of ex ante MH, by the fact that
some of the information provided by the applicant is verifiable, and in the case of
ex post MH, by legal sanctions and the threat of the loss of credit ratings.
Moreover, as the majority of small-firm borrowers are pre-existing clients of the
210
CREDITWORTHINESS AND SMALL-FIRM BANK LENDING
bank, some screening is possible. Overall, the banks were sceptical about the idea
that more extreme forms of MH may be directly related to the interest rate.
Weaker forms of ex post MH were regarded as more common, however, par-
ticularly as manifested in small-firm borrowers attempting to cope with financial
difficulties without notifying and/or requesting assistance from the bank. It has
been argued that ex post informational asymmetries of a related kind may lead to
credit rationing. Williamson (1986), for example, suggests that banks may
respond to the possibility of borrowers falsely declaring returns that are insuffi-
cient to repay their loans, by committing themselves to costly monitoring in the
event of bankruptcy. Given that higher loan rates are likely to lead to increases in
genuine bankruptcies, they are also likely to lead to higher monitoring costs. If so,
the bank may attempt to avoid raising monitoring costs by choosing a non-market
clearing loan rate. The kind of MH that Williamson has in mind here is of the
stronger, fraudulent variety that, according to the banks interviewed, is only rarely
encountered in practice. It is nevertheless possible that weaker forms of ex post
MH could conceivably have similar effects. But again, the possibility that banks
may set loan rates specifically with a view to avoiding self-imposed high moni-
toring costs seems far-fetched.
For all of these reasons, then, AS and MH problems à la S&W seem unlikely
to be dominant causes of credit rationing in the small-firm sector. Certainly all of
the banks interviewed denied setting interest rate ceilings in order to avoid AS and
expressed scepticism about any significant link between the interest rate and the
incidence of MH. These responses were all the more noteworthy in view of the
fact that many of them admitted to adhering to implicit interest rate ceilings for
other reasons: to avoid placing further pressure on small firms whose survival
prospects may already be marginal, to avoid losing market share, and to avoid the
possible political pressure that might accompany significant interest rate increases
in what is an important and relatively fragile sector of the economy. All in all,
then, if there is an unsatisfied demand for small-firm credit at these ceiling rates,
its dominant causes appear likely to be other than AS or MH problems. If so, and
even if the shift towards class-based procedures does lead to overall improve-
ments in the assessment of the creditworthiness of individual firms, it is
unlikely to have much impact on the climate for small-firm lending through the
reduction of these problems per se.
211
J. RUNDE
4. Summary
Small-firm lending has become an increasingly impersonal affair with the banks
adopting an ‘arm’s-length’/‘playing the numbers’ approach to lending. Although
this development has some positive implications for small firms, two of the more
important ones are likely to be negative: banks are likely to remain relatively
poorly informed about their small-firm customer businesses activities and to have
an incentive to increase their emphasis on collateral as a result.
Given a suitably stable economic environment, it is possible that the use of
class-based assessment methods may lead to improvements in the average quality
of loans to small firms. The downside is that an exclusive reliance on these meth-
ods makes it difficult to employ specific information about applicants (informa-
tion that is more readily available to lending officers employing the traditional
case-based approach). It is not clear that class-based loan assessment procedures
will lead to general improvements in the accuracy of individual assessments of
small-firm creditworthiness.
Adverse selection and moral hazard problems may be less significant than is
suggested by the theoretical literature on credit rationing. If so, the transition
from case- to class-based assessment procedures will be unlikely to have much of
an impact on the climate for small-firm lending, even if informational asymme-
tries are reduced by more effective screening procedures.
A major driver of the move towards class-based assessment procedures is the
reduction of the costs of assessing and processing loan applications. It is possible
that the adoption of such procedures may benefit banks even without dramatic
improvements in the quality of loans to small firms. The positive implication for
small firms is that transactions costs involved in applying for bank loans have
been dramatically reduced and the possibility that the market will accordingly
become more competitive one.
The oft-repeated argument that the reduction of private information would
make it easier for small firms to secure loan finance stands testimony to influence
of the asymmetric information theory of credit rationing. Cowling and Sugden
(1993: 18–19), for example, support ‘a process of decentralisation of decision
making by the larger banks and the provision of more localised funding, taking
into account the merits and prospects of individual firms. This would help reduce
the distance maintained in the relationship and may provide the basis for the pro-
vision of cheaper, longer-term funding. On the part of small firms this would
require greater co-operation with banks and reductions in the level of private
information.’ It is clearly possible that if the banks could re-establish closer
212
CREDITWORTHINESS AND SMALL-FIRM BANK LENDING
relations with their small-firm clients and thereby make greater use of more spe-
cific information about them, this might result in an improved quality of lending.
The trouble with the proposal, however, is that it fails to recognise the substantial
economies in the assessment and processing of loan applications afforded by
class-based assessment procedures. These economies form a significant barrier to
a return to case-based assessment in the small-firm sector.
Notes
1 This is an abridged version of a paper written for an ESRC Centre for Business Research
project on Information, monitoring and the financing of small and medium sized busi-
nesses. I am grateful to Alan Hughes and Jörg Bibow for comments on the longer
version.
2 For example, Chick (1997, 2000) and Chick and Dow (1996).
3 Credit-scoring systems assess applications in terms of financial and non-financial char-
acteristics determined on the basis of the bank’s experience with similar applicants in
the past. Credit scoring is usually conducted using a table that allocates points in respect
of each characteristic depending on the applicant’s responses. The sum total of points
achieved are then compared to a predetermined cutoff point. If the applicant’s score falls
below this threshold, the application is rejected.
4 A simplified version of their model is used here (see Blanchard and Fisher 1989: 480–4;
Hillier and Ibrahimo 1993).
References
Binks, M. R., Ennew, C. T. and Reed, G. V. (1988) The Survey by the Forum of Private
Business on Banks and Small Firms. London: Forum of Private Business.
Binks, M. R., Ennew, C. T. and Reed, G. V. (1990) Small Businesses and their Banks.
London: Forum of Private Business.
Blanchard, O. J. and Fisher, S. (1989) Lectures on Macroeconomics. Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press.
Chick, V. (1997) ‘Some Reflections on Financial Fragility in Banking and Finance’,
Journal of Economic Issues 31: 535–41.
Chick, V. (2000) ‘The Regions and Small Business in Bankers’ Europe’, in Toporowski
(ed.), Political Economy and the New Capitalism: Essays in Memory of Sam
Aaronovitch. London: Routledge.
Chick, V. and Dow, S. C. (1996) ‘Regulation and Differences in Financial Institutions’,
Journal of Economic Issues 30: 517–23.
Cowling, M. and Sugden, R. (1993) ‘Small Firm Lending Contracts: Do Banks
Differentiate Between Firms?’, Occasional Paper in Industrial Strategy, Vol. 15.
Research Centre for Industrial Strategy, Birmingham University.
Daly, M. (1990) ‘The 1980s – A Decade of Growth in Enterprise – Data on VAT
Registrations and Deregistrations’, The Employment Gazette, November.
de Meza, D. and Southey, C. (1996) ‘The Borrower’s Curse: Optimism, Finance and
Entrepreneurship’. The Economic Journal 106: 375–86.
de Meza, D. and Webb, D. C. (1987) ‘Too Much Investment: A Problem of Asymmetric
Information’, Quarterly Journal of Economics 102: 281–92.
213
J. RUNDE
214
21
WOMEN’S WORK OR WORK FOR
WOMEN?
1. Introduction
In the decade between the death of Joan Robinson and the appointment of
Victoria Chick in 1993, there were no female professors of economics in the UK.
Her interest in the position of women in academia was influenced not only by her
own career progression, but also by her own experience, as well as that of other
female students (Chick 1992: 81). We analyse the position of women in academia
with this in mind.
Women and men continue to be concentrated in different occupational cate-
gories (horizontal segregation) and women as compared to men tend to be in lower
status, lower-paid job categories within occupations (vertical segregation). This
persistent segregation is seen as one of the main reasons why gender earnings dif-
ferentials continue to exist (Bergmann 1986: 86; Gunderson 1989: 67). While
descriptive statistics can tell us whether female shares have changed by comparing
two years of workforce data, they can tell us little about any of the processes that
may be contributing to changes in segregation or even the magnitude of segrega-
tion in any given year. Numerous studies of occupational segregation have used
indexes to measure the level of segregation of a workforce. Usually these studies
seek to explain ‘… to what degree is segregation a barrier to gender equality, and
how effective are employment equity policies in dismantling this barrier?’
(Blackburn et al. 1993: 335). However, researchers using different indexes to
measure the level of segregation over similar time periods, in the same country,
find conflicting results for the magnitude of segregation and whether, over time,
segregation has increased or decreased (Charles and Grusky 1995: 946; Karmel
and Maclachlan 1988; OECD 1985). These and other studies concerned about rig-
orous measurement have raised the serious issue of the structure of these indexes
and what constitutes an appropriate measure of segregation.
A further important consideration of this debate is to avoid inappropriate pol-
icy analysis and recommendations from incorrect measurement of occupational
215
P. A. RIACH AND J. RICH
216
WOMEN’S WORK OR WORK FOR WOMEN?
IP ⫽
1
T 兺 兩Mi ⫺ a(Mi ⫹ Fi)兩
1
T 兺 兩(1⫺ a)(Mi ⫺ aFi)兩,
where T, a, Mi, Fi are respectively total employment, the male share of total em-
ployment and the numbers of males and females in occupation i.
This index denotes the proportion of employed people who would have to
change jobs to achieve a sex ratio for each occupation equal to the male/female
ratio for total employment. The occupational structure of employment of the
workforce and the overall gender shares of employment are kept constant. IP
meets the criteria of organisational equivalence, size invariance, gender symme-
try and the weak principle of transfers (Watts 1998).
The total percentage change in the index over time can be decomposed into
Composition and Mix effects, where the latter can be broken up into Occupation,
Gender and Interaction effects (for details of this decomposition procedure see
Karmel and Maclachlan 1988: 190–1). The Composition effect isolates the con-
tribution of the change in the gender composition of occupations to the total
change in segregation. The Composition effect is both composition invariant and
occupations invariant, that is, it is margin free. A reduction of female/male dif-
ferences in the selection, hiring, recruitment and promotion process ultimately
leads to a change in the gender ratio of individual occupations. The Composition
effect can assist in assessing whether various equal employment opportunity and
affirmative action programmes that have been implemented within organisations
have been effective, as it quantifies the effect of changes in the gender shares
of individual occupations. The Occupation effect isolates the impact of the
change in the occupational structure over time. The Gender effect isolates the
contribution of the change in female workforce participation to the total change
in segregation.
217
P. A. RIACH AND J. RICH
218
WOMEN’S WORK OR WORK FOR WOMEN?
Table 21.1 Female share by appointment level in the university sectors of the US (1995),
the UK (1997/8) and Australia (1998), full-time staff (%)
Table 21.2 IP, Composition, Gender and Occupation effects for the UK, the US and
Australia, full-time academic staff
1994–8
UK 0.0701 0.0734 ⫺8.65 6.94 4.00 4.66
Australia 0.1140 0.1094 ⫺12.99 4.75 2.98 ⫺4.16
1988/9–1993/4
Great Britain 0.0719 0.0838 ⫺6.92 15.51 2.56 15.18
1985–93
US 0.1094 0.1100 ⫺13.30 12.50 ⫺0.43 0.54
1989–94
Australia 0.1245 0.1144 ⫺16.52 10.21 ⫺6.44 ⫺8.45
data were available. While not directly comparable, calculations for the three
countries over the mid-1980s to mid-1990s are included in this table.
While the level of vertical segregation by gender decreased in Australia from 1994
to 1998, it increased in the UK. Australia recorded the largest improvement in seg-
regation with a fall of 4.2 per cent over the period. The increase in the UK was due
to the increase in the number of female staff entering the universities. In both coun-
tries however, negative composition effects were recorded indicating that academic
appointment levels have become more integrated. While in both countries fewer staff
would have had to change appointment levels in 1998 as compared to 1994 to
achieve zero segregation, the change in Australia was one and a half times greater
than the change in the UK (⫺12.99 as compared to ⫺8.65). The earlier period
219
P. A. RIACH AND J. RICH
analysed also indicates that in all countries individual academic categories became
less segregated with Great Britain showing the smallest percentage change.
220
WOMEN’S WORK OR WORK FOR WOMEN?
women and minorities hired’. (Holzer and Neumark 2000: 240). In fact, affirmative
action may introduce a refreshing transparency and accountability into the hiring
process, ensuring the more efficient use of an organisation’s labour resource.
Furthermore Holzer and Neumark stated: ‘Overall, the more intensive search, eval-
uation, and training that accompany Affirmative Action appear to offset any
tendencies of the policy to lead to hiring of less-qualified or less-productive women
and minorities’. (Holzer and Neumark 2000: 240).
Empirical studies testing actual market participants and the hiring process
(sending matched pairs of actors or matched pairs of letters to advertised job va-
cancies) indicate that screening for jobs, based on criteria other than merit, occurs
on a depressingly persistent basis in many countries (Riach and Rich 1987, 1991,
1995; Fix and Struyk 1993; Neumark 1996; Jowell and Prescott-Clarke 1970).
Studies of promotion within organisations suggest that unequal treatment is part
of the explanation for the persistence of vertical job segregation (see e.g. Halaby
1979; Hartmann 1987; Paulin and Mellor 1996). Friedman (1981) has argued that
this is in fact the case for women academics in the US higher education sector.
The decline in segregation at each academic level in Australia was found to be
greater than in the US or the UK. The slow change occurring in the UK may be
due, in part, to the lack of effective equal employment opportunity programmes
coupled with the fact that the UK has no affirmative action legislation. Both
Australia and the US have affirmative action legislation but the legislation in the
US is more stringent, with quotas required to be meet as part of compliance,
which is not the case in Australia. The greater change occurring in Australia sug-
gests that management in Australian universities may have a stronger commit-
ment to improving the position of women (and minority groups). Certainly the
goals of the universities and other organisations need to be integrated more
closely with the goals of affirmative action.
221
P. A. RIACH AND J. RICH
222
WOMEN’S WORK OR WORK FOR WOMEN?
References
Allen, F. (1990) ‘Indicators of Academic Excellence: Is There a Link between Merit and
Reward?’, Australian Journal of Education 34(1): 87–98.
Bacchi, C. (1993) ‘The Brick Wall: Why So Few Become Senior Academics’, The
Australian Universities Review 36(1): 36–41.
Bergmann, B. (1986) The Economic Emergence of Women. New York: Basic Books.
Bergmann, B. (1996) In Defence of Affirmative Action. New York: Basic Books.
223
P. A. RIACH AND J. RICH
224
WOMEN’S WORK OR WORK FOR WOMEN?
Jones, J. and Castle, J. (1989) ‘Women in Higher Education – Changes in the “80s?” ’, The
Australian Universities’ Review 32(2): 6–8.
Jowell, R. and Prescott-Clarke, P. (1970) ‘Racial Discrimination and White-Collar Workers
in Britain’, Race 11: 397–417.
Karmel, T. and Maclachlan, M. (1988) ‘Occupational Sex Segregation – Increasing or
Decreasing’, Economic Record 64(186): 187–95.
Kennedy, H. (1995) ‘Prisoners of Gender’, The Times Higher Education Supplement 3,
November: 15–16.
Labour Party (1991) A New Ministry for Women. London: Labour Party.
McIntosh, N. and Smith, D. (1974) The Extent of Racial Discrimination, Political and
Economic Planning Broadsheet No. 547, London: Political and Economic Planning
Institute.
Neumark, D. (1996) ‘Sex Discrimination in Restaurant Hiring: An Audit Study’, Quarterly
Journal of Economics 111: 915–42.
OECD (1985) The Integration of Women into the Economy. Paris.
Paulin, E. and Mellor, J. (1996) ‘Gender, Race, and Promotions within a Private-Sector
Firm’, Industrial Relations 35(2): 276–95.
Riach, P. and Rich, J. (1987) ‘Testing for Sexual Discrimination in the Labour Market’,
Australian Economic Papers 26: 165–78.
Riach, P. and Rich, J. (1991) ‘Testing for Racial Discrimination in the Labour Market’,
Cambridge Journal of Economics 15: 239–56.
Riach, P. and Rich, J. (1995) ‘An Investigation of Gender Discrimination in Labor Hiring’,
Eastern Economic Journal 21: 343–56.
Rosenbaum, J. (1985) ‘Jobs, Job Status, and Women’s Gains From Affirmative Action:
Implications for Comparable Worth’, in H. Hartmann (ed.), Comparable Worth: New
Directions for Research. Washington DC: National Academy Press.
Taeuber, K. and Taeuber, A. (1976) ‘A Practitioner’s Perspective on the Index of
Dissimiliarity’, American Sociological Review 41: 884–9.
US Department of Education (1992, 1996, 1998) Digest of Education Statistics. National
Center for Education Statistics.
University Statistical Record (1988/9, 1993/4, 1994/5, 1997/8) University Statistics,
Vols 1 and 2. London: HMSO.
Watts, M. (1992) ‘How Should Occupational Sex Segregation Be Measured?’, Work,
Employment and Society 6(3): 475–87.
Watts, M. (1995) ‘The Use and Abuse of Measures of Occupational Gender Segregation:
A Critical Review’, Occasional Paper No. 210, Department of Economics, University
of Newcastle.
Watts, M. (1998) ‘Occupational Gender Segregation: Index Measurement and
Econometric Modelling’, Demography 35(4): 489–96.
Webb, J. (1988) ‘The Ivory Tower: Positive Action for Women in Higher Education’, in
A. Coyle and J. Skinner (eds), Women and Work: Positive Action for Change. London:
Macmillan Education.
White, M. (1985) ‘Segregation and Diversity Measures in Population Distribution’,
Population Index 52(2): 198–221.
Wieneke, C. and Durham, M. (1992) ‘Regulating the Equality Agenda: EEO in Higher
Education’, The Australian Universities Review 35(2): 30–5.
Williams, J., Cocking, J. and Davies, L. (1989) Words or Deeds? A Review of Equal
Opportunity Policies in Higher Education. London: Commission for Racial Equality.
225
VICTORIA CHICK’S PUBLICATIONS
1. Books
(1995) (ed., with P. Arestis). Finance, Development and Structural Change. Edward Elgar,
pp. xxiii, 305.
(1992). P. Arestis and S. C. Dow (eds), On Money, Method and Keynes: Selected Essays
by Victoria Chick. Macmillan/St Martin’s Press, pp. xvi, 227. Articles reprinted in this
volume are marked below with *.
(1992) (ed., with P. Arestis). Recent Developments in Post-Keynesian Economics. Edward
Elgar, pp. xxii, 193.
(1983). Macroeconomics after Keynes: A Reconsideration of the General Theory.
Dedington, Oxford: Philip Allan, pp. ix, 373. Published in USA by MIT Press.
Translations:
(1984). La macroeconomia dopo Keynes, Bologna: Il Mulino, pp. 581.
(1990). La macroeconomia según Keynes: Una revision de la teoria general. Madrid:
Alianza Editorial, pp. 412.
(1991). Keinzu to Keinzian no Makaro Keizaigaku (Macroeconomics of Keynes and the
Keynesians). Tokyo: Nihon Keizai Hyoron Sha, pp. ix, 533.
(1993). Macroeconomia após Keynes: Um Reexame da ‘Teoria Geral’. Editora Forense
Universitária, pp. xiii, 416.
(1976). Transnational Corporations and the Evolution of the International Monetary System,
Transnational Corporations Research Project (Sydney University) Research Monograph.
(1979). An updated version appears in G. J. Crough (ed.), Transnational Banking and
the World Economy. Sydney University, pp. 129–177.
(1973). The Theory of Monetary Policy, Gray-Mills.
(1977). Revised edition, Basil Blackwell, pp. v, 161.
(1982). Translation: La Teoria della Politica Monetaria, with an additional essay, Milan,
Feltrinelli, pp. x, 247.
2. Chapters in books
(2001). ‘Cassandra as Optimist’, in R. Bellofiore and D. Papadimitriou (eds), Financial
Keynesianism and Market Instability: The Legacy of Hyman Minsky. Edward Elgar,
Vol. 1, pp. 35–46.
(2000). ‘The Regions and Small Businesses in Bankers’ Europe’, in J. Toporowski (ed.),
Political Economy and the New Capitalism: Essays in Memory of Sam Aaronovitch.
Routledge, pp. 167–78.
(2000). ‘Money and Effective Demand’, in J. Smithin (ed.), What is Money? Routledge,
pp. 124–38.
226
VICTORIA CHICK’S PUBLICATIONS
(2000) (with M. dos Anjos). ‘Liquidity and Potential Surprise’, in P. Earl and S. F. Frowen
(eds), Economics as an Art of Thought: Essays in Memory of G. L. S. Shackle.
Routledge, pp. 242–68.
(1999). ‘Deflation and Redistribution: Austerity Policies in Britain in the 1920s’, in
J. T. J. M. van der Linden and A. J. C. Manders (eds), The Economics of Income
Distribution: Heterodox Approaches. Kluwer, pp. 77–126.
(1998). ‘Finance and Investment in the Context of Development’, in J. Halevi and
J.-M. Fontaine (eds), Restoring Demand in the World Economy: Trade, Finance and
Technology. Edward Elgar, pp. 95–106.
(1998). ‘Dissent and Continuity: John Maynard Keynes’, in R. P. F. Holt and S. Pressman
(eds), Economics and its Discontents: Twentieth Century Dissenting Economists.
Edward Elgar, pp. 135–54.
(1998). ‘A Struggle to Escape: Equilibrium in The General Theory’, in S. Sharma (ed.), John
Maynard Keynes: Keynesianism into the Twenty-First Century. Edward Elgar, pp. 40–50.
(1997). ‘Comment on G.R. Steele’s Paper’, in S. F. Frowen (ed.), Hayek: Economist and
Social Philosopher – A Critical Retrospect. Macmillan, pp. 256–7.
(1997) (with S. C. Dow). ‘Competition and the Future of the European Banking and
Financial System’, in J. Smithin, H. Hagemann and A. Cohen (eds), Money, Financial
Institutions and Macroeconomics. Boston: Kluwer, pp. 253–70.
(1997). ‘Comment on Silke Tober’s Paper’, in S. F. Frowen and J. Hölscher (eds), The
German Currency Union of 1990: A Critical Assessment. London: Macmillan.
(1997) (with M. Caserta). ‘Provisional Equilibrium and Macroeconomic Theory’, in
P. Arestis, G. Palma and M. C. Sawyer (eds), Markets, Employment and Economic
Policy: Essays in Honour of G. C. Harcourt, Vol. 2. Routledge, pp. 223–37.
(1997). ‘The Multiplier and Finance’, chapter 11 in G. C. Harcourt and P. A. Riach (eds),
A ‘Second Edition’ of the General Theory. Routledge, pp. 154–72.
(1995). ‘Order out of Chaos in Economics? Some Lessons from the Philosophy of
Science’, in S. C. Dow and J. Hillard (eds), Keynes, Knowledge and Uncertainty.
Edward Elgar, pp. 25–42.
(1995) (with S. C. Dow). ‘Wettbewerb und die Zukunft des europäischen Banken- und
Finanzsystems (Competition and the Future of the European Banking and Financial
System)’, in C. Thomasberger (ed.), Europäische Geldpolitik zwischen Marktzwängen
und neuen institutionellen Regelungen (New Institutions for European Monetary
Integration). Marburg: Metropolis-Verlag, pp. 293–321.
(1993). ‘Sources of Finance, Recent Changes in Bank Behaviour and the Theory of
Investment and Interest’ (revised), in P. Arestis (ed.), Money and Banking: Issues for the
21st Century. Macmillan, pp. 55–74.
(1993). ‘The Evolution of the Banking System and the Theory of Monetary Policy’, in
S. F. Frowen (ed.), Monetary Theory and Monetary Policy: New Tracks for the 1990s.
Macmillan, pp. 79–92.
(1993). ‘Some Scenarios for Money and Banking in the EC and their Regional
Implications’, in I. H. Rima (ed.), The Political Economy of Global Restructuring,
Volume II: Trade and Finance. Edward Elgar, pp. 190–200.
(1992). ‘The Small Firm under Uncertainty: A Puzzle of The General Theory’, in
B. Gerrard and J. Hillard (eds), The Philosophy and Economics of J. M. Keynes. Edward
Elgar, pp. 149–64.
(1991). ‘Keynes’s Monetary Theory: A Partial Survey’, in J. Jespersen, (ed.), Nye
Keynestolkninger: Metode, Politik og Etik, Proceedings of the conference ‘New
227
VICTORIA CHICK’S PUBLICATIONS
Developments in the Interpretation of the Work of John Maynard Keynes’ (5–6 October
1990), Institut for Samfundsøkonomi og Planlægning, Roskilde University, 89–101.
(1993). Reprinted (in English) in Revista de Economia Politica (São Paolo), 13(4), 125–34.
*(1990). ‘Some Methodological Considerations in the Theory of Speculation’, in
D. E. Moggridge (ed.), Perspectives on the History of Economic Thought, Volume IV:
Keynes, Macroeconomics and Method. Aldershot: Edward Elgar, pp. 113–124.
(1990). ‘Comment on Professor Hartog’s Paper’, in K. Groenveld, J. A. H. Maks and
J. Muysken (eds), Economic Policy and the Market Process. Amsterdam: North Holland,
pp. 195–8.
(1989). ‘Discussion (of Tim Congdon’s Paper)’, in R. Hill (ed.), Keynes, Money and
Monetarism, Proceedings of the Eighth Keynes Seminar, Keynes College, University of
Kent at Canterbury. Macmillan, pp. 73–81.
(1989). ‘Comment on the Minford-Davis and Peterson Papers’, in J. Muyskens and
C. de Neubourg (eds), Unemployment in Europe. Macmillan for the European
Production Study Group, pp. 357–60.
(1989). ‘A Teoria Geral de Keynes 50 Anos Depois: O Que Resta’ (‘Keynes’s General
Theory after 50 Years: What Remains?’), In E. J. Amadeo Swaelen (ed.), John M.
Keynes: Cinqüenta Anos da Teoria Geral. Instituto de Planejamento Econômico e
Social, Serie PNPE, Rio de Janeiro, pp. 33–43.
(1988). ‘Sources of Finance, Recent Changes in Bank Behaviour and the Theory of
Investment and Interest’, in P. Arestis (ed.), Contemporary Issues in Money and
Banking. Macmillan, pp. 30–48.
(1985). ‘Time and the Wage-Unit in Keynes’s Method’, in T. Lawson and H. Pesaran (eds),
Keynes’ Economics: Methodological Issues. Croom Helm, pp. 195–208.
*(1984). ‘Monetary Increases and their Consequences: Streams, Backwaters and Floods’,
in A. Ingham and A. M. Ulph (eds), Demand, Equilibrium and Trade: Essays in Honour
of Ivor F. Pearce. Macmillan, pp. 237–50.
*(1981). ‘On the Structure of the Theory of Monetary Policy’, in D. Currie, R. Nobay and
D. Peel (eds), Macroeconomic Analysis: Essays in Macroeconomics and Econometrics.
London: Croom Helm, pp. 178–208.
(1979). ‘Monetarist Views of Inflation’ in D. Heathfield. (ed.), Perspectives on Inflation:
Models and Policy. Longmans, pp. 37–69. Translation in Japanese published by Nihon
Keizai Hysron Sha.
(1982). Included in Italian translation of The Theory of Monetary Policy as an Appendix.
3. Journal articles
(2001) ‘Über Geld und Geldtheorien’, Zeitschrift für kritische Sozialwissenschaft, 123(2),
227–44.
(2000) (with S. C. Dow). ‘Financial Integration in Europe: A Post Keynesian Perspective’,
Archives of Economic History, 11(1–2), 21–40.
(1998). ‘On Knowing One’s Place: The Role of Formalism in Economics’, Economic
Journal, 108, 1859–69.
(1997). ‘Some Reflections on Financial Fragility in Banking and Finance’, Journal of
Economic Issues, 31(2), 535–41.
(1996). ‘Equilibrium and Determination in Open Systems’, History of Economics Review,
No. 25, 172–83.
(1996). ‘A Struggle to Escape: Equilibrium in The General Theory’, Ekonomska Misao i
Praksa (Dubrovnic), 5, 345–62; (1998).
228
VICTORIA CHICK’S PUBLICATIONS
(1998). Reprinted in S. Sharma, John Maynard Keynes: Keynesianism into the Twenty-
first Century. Edward Elgar, pp. 40–50.
(1996) (with S. C. Dow). ‘Regulation and Differences in Financial Institutions’, Journal of
Economic Issues, 30(2), 517–23.
(1995). ‘Comment on “Government Debt and Sustainable Fiscal Policy” ’, Economic
Notes (Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena), 24(3), 581–4.
(1995). ‘Is there a Case for Post Keynesian Economics?’, Scottish Journal of Political
Economy, 42(1), 20–36.
(1991). ‘Hicks and Keynes on Liquidity Preference: A Methodological Approach’, Review
of Political Economy, 3(3), 309–19.
(1990). ‘On the Place of Value and Capital in Monetary Theory’, Greek Economic Review,
Vol. 12, Supplement: The Monetary Economics of Sir John Hicks, Autumn, pp. 53–71;
(1992). In Portugese (‘Sobre o lugar de Valor e capital na teoria monetaria’) in Revista
Brasiliera de Economia, 46(1), 97–116.
(1988) (with S.C. Dow). ‘A Post Keynesian Perspective on the Relation between Banking
and Regional Development’, Thames Papers in Political Economy, 1–22.
(1988). Reprinted in P. Arestis (ed.), Post Keynesian Monetary Economics: New
Approaches to Financial Modelling. Edward Elgar, pp. 219–50.
(1987). ‘Are the General Theory’s Central Contributions still Valid?’, Journal of Economic
Studies, special issue, J. Pheby (ed.): The General Theory and After: Essays in Post
Keynesianism, 14(4), pp. 5–12.
(1991). Reprinted in M. Blaug (ed.), John Maynard Keynes, Vol. II, pp. 353–60. Pioneers
in Economics series, Edward Elgar.
(1987). ‘Speculation, the Rate of Interest and the Rate of Profit’, Journal of Post
Keynesian Economics, Fall, 124–32.
*(1986). ‘The Evolution of the Banking System and the Theory of Saving, Investment and
Interest’, Économies et sociétés, Cahiers de l’ISMEA, Serie ‘Monnaie et Production’,
No. 3, pp. 111–26.
(1994). Published in Portugese as ‘A Evolução do Sistema Bancario e a teoria da
Poupança, do Investimento e dos Juros”, Ensaios FEE (Fundação de Economia e
Estatistica, Porto Allegre, Brazil), 15(1), 9–23.
(1996). Reprinted in M. Musella and C. Panico (eds), The Money Supply in the
Economic Process: A Post Keynesian Perspective, in the series The International
Library of Critical Writings in Economics, Series Editor M. Blaug. Edward Elgar.
*(1983). ‘A Question of Relevance: The General Theory in Keynes’s Time and Ours’,
South African Journal of Economics, 5, 388–406. (Invited article for a Keynes
Centenary issue, revised and extended from the French version.)
(1983). ‘La “Teoria generale” ai tempi di Keynes e oggi’, Politica ed Economia, 14
maggio, 55–64.
*(1982). ‘Comment on “ISLM – An Explanation” ’ (by Sir John Hicks), Journal of Post
Keynesian Economics, 4, 439–44.
(1989). Reprinted in J. C. Wood and R. N. Woods (eds), Sir John Hicks: Critical
Assessments. Routledge. Vol. III, pp. 302–6.
(1982). ‘Une question de pertinence: La Theorie Generale du temps de Keynes et aujour-
d’hui’, L’Actualité économique, 58, 61–8.
(1981). ‘Reply to Professor Harrison’ (on ‘The Nature of the Keynesian Revolution’)
Australian Economic Papers, 20, 405–8.
*(1978). ‘The Nature of the Keynesian Revolution: A Reassessment’, Australian
Economic Papers, 17, 1–20.
229
VICTORIA CHICK’S PUBLICATIONS
(ii) Interviews
(1999). in C. Usabiaga Ibáñez, The Current State of Macroeconomics: Leading Thinkers
in Conversation. Macmillan, pp. 52–74.
(1995). in J. E. King, Conversations with Post Keynesians. Macmillan, pp. 93–112.
230
VICTORIA CHICK’S PUBLICATIONS
5. Forthcoming publications
(2002). ‘Keynes’s Theory of Investment and Necessary Compromise’, in S. C. Dow and
J. Hillard (eds), Keynes, Uncertainty and the Global Economy; Beyond Keynes, Vol. II.
Edward Elgar.
(2001)(with Sheila Dow) ‘Formalism, Logic and Reality: A Keynesian Analysis’,
Cambridge Journal of Economics 25(6).
‘An Equilibrium of Action’. Cambridge Journal of Economics.
‘Caravale’s Contributions to the Theory of Equilibrium and their Relevance to
Understanding Keynes’, in S. Nisticò and D. Tosato (eds), Competing Economic
Theories. Routledge.
6. Work in progress
(i) Books
(ed.), Keynes and the Post-Keynesians. Macmillan.
(ed.), The Challenge of Endogenous Money: Proceedings of a Conference held in Berlin,
March 2001.
(ed.), Monetary Macroeconomies: Essays in Theory and Method, Edward Elgar.
Macroeconomics After Keynes, Second edition. Edward Elgar.
(ii) Articles and Contributions to books
‘Keynes and the Post-Keynesians: A Survey and Evaluation’, for the Kent Keynes
Conference. To be published in Keynes and the Post-Keynesians, Macmillan.
‘Money in Keynes, the Bastard Keynesians and the Post Keynesians’.
‘Liquidity Preference and the Monetary Circuit: Methodological Issues’.
‘How Best to Study Money’.
‘Why Does the Euro Split both Labour and Conservatives?’.
‘Theory, Method and Mode of Thought in the General Theory’.
‘The Methodology of Karl Niebyl’.
231
INDEX
232
INDEX
233
INDEX
234
INDEX
235
INDEX
236
INDEX
237
INDEX
238
INDEX
239