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Macroeconomic Problems, Microeconomic Solutions Peter J. Boettke Econ 881/Spring 2005 February 28.

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Presentation on theme: "Macroeconomic Problems, Microeconomic Solutions Peter J. Boettke Econ 881/Spring 2005 February 28."— Presentation transcript:

1 Macroeconomic Problems, Microeconomic Solutions Peter J. Boettke Econ 881/Spring 2005 February 28

2 Main Points to Stress Macroeconomic problems are coordination problems  Production plans must mesh with consumption demands Capital and Labor Incentives must be aligned and capabilities must be exploited  Incentive problems are knowledge problems and knowledge problems are incentive problems Changing circumstances result in disturbances, but the crucial question is one of adjustment  Feedback and learning through time

3 Macroeconomic Problems Errors of Over optimism  Produce products which nobody wants Errors of Over pessimism  Don’t product products which people want  Capital goods are allocated incorrectly; capital investments are inappropriate; labor is misallocated; and as a result the economy underperformed from the point of view of realizing the mutual gains from exchange, employing resources efficiently, and satisfying the demands of consumer sovereignty.

4 What is the solution to these problems? Classical  Market discipline Keynesian  Government correctives Fiscal policy Mix of fiscal and monetary policy After Keynes  Market equilibrium

5 Fiscal Policy Versus Monetary Policy as a Corrective Keynesian World ViewMonetarist World View LM IS LM YY r r Liquidity trap makes monetary policy ineffective Crowding out makes fiscal policy ineffective

6 Neo-Keynesian Synthesis r Y IS LM r Y Goods Market equilibrium; Money Market equilibrium

7 What is Wrong With this Picture? Unconnected to the Choices of Individuals  Labor Market Money Illusion  Capital Market Fiscal Illusion Autonomous Investment  Capital Goods Market Time and the Process of Production Complementarity and Substitutability in the chain of production

8 Labor Market Response Workers do not persistently suffer from money illusion N W/P W/P 0 W/P 1 N0N0 N1N1

9 Short Run Phillips Curve U I Long Run at Natural Rate Short Run Trade Off as Workers Suffer Money Illusion

10 Lucas Critique of Keynesian System Adaptive Expectations → Rational Expectations  Bayesian Learning Expectations on underlying distribution  Methodological Rule --- economist cannot assume a level of knowledge greater than the participants in the economy Equilibrium Theory of the Business Cycle  Monetary Neutrality and Market clearing Noise and disturbances to the system (signal extraction)  Invariance proposition

11 Upshot of Lucas Critique Short Run and Long Run Phillips Curve are the same Microfoundations of Macroeconomics provides coherence to the discipline General Competitive Equilibrium  Optimizing behavior  Continuous Market Clearing

12 Is New Classical Economics Austrian Economics? Microfoundations  Aggregate economics unconnected to choice Compositive Method, 233-234 Rationality  Hypothesis or axiom Choice under uncertainty Expectations and the Equilibrium Construct  Logical coherence Process theory and adjustment, 236, fn. 25

13 The Classic Austrian Theory of the Cycle r Q D SoSo S1S1 r QS/C Higher Order Goods Lower Order Goods

14 Main Tenets of the ABTC Non-neutrality of Money  Injection effects through Relative price adjustments Capital Structure  Heterogeneous and multi-specific goods Capital maintenance and entrepreneurial decision making Intertemporal Coordination and Monetary mechanism  Interest rates as signals between present and future Complimentarity of Capital and Labor  Employment of scarce resources

15 Critique of ABCT Theory  Bias error and bias toward particularly costly errors  Incoherence of grafting a disequilibrium story on an equilibrium theory Empirical  Co-movement of investment and consumption  Limited applicability of interest rate mechanism as trigger


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