Classical vs. Keynesian
Ø Classical Vs. Keynesian
v Modern followers
-
Adam Smith, J.B Say, David Ricardo,
Alfred Marshall
-
J.M.
Keynes
v Say’s Law
-
Supply creates its own demand.
-
Production = income = spending
-
Under spending is unlikely
-
Whatever output is produced, it will
be demanded.
-
Demand
creates its own supply.
-
Depressions
refute Say’s law.
-
Underspending
persists.
v Savings and Investments
-
Savings = Investment income
-
Savings (leakage) = Investment
(injection)
-
Spending > Business >
Households > Spending
-
Savings
does not equal Investment
-
Savings:
Future needs, precaution, habit, income level, interest rate.
-
Investment:
Interest rate, rate of profit, expectations
v Loanable Funds Market: Ig = gross investment , r = interest
rate, Sm = supply of money, SLF=Savings (Supply of money), DLF=Investment
(Demand of money)
-
Investment
from savings, cash, checking accounts.
-
Lending
creates money.
-
Sm
increases.
-
Inflation/unemployment
are unstable.
v Wage/price flexibility
-
Prices/Wages are flexible downwards.
-
Prices/Wages
are inflexible downwards (Ratchet Effect).
v Supply Curve
-
Vertical
-
Horizontal
v Output and Employment
-
AS determines output and employment.
-
AD
determines output and employment.
v Unemployment: S = Savings, I = Investments
-
Rarely exists due to wage/prices
inflexibility.
-
The cause is external and war.
-
Usually
exists.
-
External:
War
-
Internal:
S does not equal I
v Aggregate Demand (AD)
-
AD determines price level.
-
Reasonably stable if money supply is
stable.
-
AD
changes due to its determinants.
-
AD
is unstable even if money level is stable due to fluctuations in investment
standing.
v Basic Equation
-
MV = PQ
-
C
+ Ig + G + Xn = GDP
v Role of Government
-
Monetary Rule
-
Maintain a steady money supply.
-
Laissez faire is best and economy is
self-regulating.
-
Believe
in fiscal policy.
-
Tax
and spend
-
Active
government
-
Economy
is “not self-regulating”.
v Inflation (% change Price level Increases)
-
Caused by too much money.
-Caused by too much
demand.
v How long the short run
-
Short time
-
Long
time
v is Emphasis Today
-
Microeconomics
-
Macroeconomics
v More Information
-
-Believe competition is good
-
Invisible hand (government will
regulate itself).
-
In long run, economy will balance at
full employment.
-
Trickle down effect- help rich first then others.
-
AD
is key, not AS.
-
Leaks
and savings cause recessions.
-
In
the long run, we are all dead.

For keynesian, competition is flaud, AD is key, not AS, and in long run, we're all dead. For the classical side, competition is good, in the long run economy will balance at full employment, and believe in the trickle down effect.
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