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Two Macroeconomic Traditions of the 1930s – 1

History of Modern Macroeconomics Lecture 3.4. The Empirical Microfoundations of Macroeconomics (1945-1970) Kevin D. Hoover Department of Economics Department of Philosophy Center for the History of Political Economy Duke University. Two Macroeconomic Traditions of the 1930s – 1 .

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Two Macroeconomic Traditions of the 1930s – 1

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  1. History of Modern MacroeconomicsLecture 3.4. The Empirical Microfoundations of Macroeconomics (1945-1970)Kevin D. HooverDepartment of EconomicsDepartment of PhilosophyCenter for the History of Political EconomyDuke University Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  2. Two Macroeconomic Traditions of the 1930s – 1 • Frisch/Tinbergen: • micro/macro distinction • macro dominates micro • problem of aggregation ignored • supported econometrics • engineering attitude • socialist/central planner Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  3. Two Macroeconomic Traditions of the 1930s – 2 • Keynes: • micro/macro distinction (not in those words) • micro at root; macro emergent • problem of aggregation does not arise • hostile to econometrics • medical attitude • Aside:“If economists could manage to get themselves thought of as humble, competent people on a level with dentists, that would be splendid.” John Maynard Keynes (1931) • liberal/saving markets from their own fallabilities Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  4. Wartime Planning and Controls Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  5. Wartime Planners John Kenneth Galbraith (1908-2006) Milton Friedman (1912-2006) Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  6. Economists and the War “The other thing that was so important in the ’fifties and ’sixties was operations research. The World War II generation brought a whole bunch of smart guys, like Abraham Wald and Friedman,. . . I mean everybody into Washington to work on the war effort, and economists thought of all kinds of great stuff . . . I guess that’s what we always claim. We invented the convoy system . . . we basically won the war singlehandedly. “ Robert E. Lucas, Jr. Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  7. Keynes Mostly Lost. What Survived • Consilience of Keynes’s ontology with the national income and product accounts • Interventionist attitude • Neoclassical synthesis: • Already in Keynes: classical is special case of the general theory • Picked up by Klein (The Keynesian Revolution) • Samuelson: implicit in 1st edition of Economics (1948); term coined in 3rd edition (1955) Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  8. The New Empirical Macroeconomics • Walrasian: • general equilibrium • individual optimization (microfoundations) • IS-LM Keynesian • Aggregation • practice demands • must be eliminable in theory • work towards maximum disaggregation Lawrence Klein (1920- ) Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  9. IS-LM-AS Sets the Agenda for Macroeconmetric Models Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  10. Hydraulic Keynesianism: The Phillips Machine or Moniac Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  11. Phillips Machine: Schematic Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  12. Phillips Machine: Details Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  13. Phillips Machine in Punch Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  14. IS-LM-AS Sets the Agenda for Macroeconmetric Models Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  15. Microfoundations : Transactions Demand for Money (Baumol) – 1 Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  16. Microfoundations : Transactions Demand for Money (Baumol) – 2 Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  17. Microfoundations : Transactions Demand for Money (Baumol) – 3 • Implications: • Income-elasticity of money demand = ½ • Interest-elasticity of money demand = –½ • Compare to the Traditional Quantity Equation: • Income-elasticity of money demand = 1 • Interest-elasticity of money demand = undetermined (possibly zero) Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  18. Microfoundations of the Various “Keynesian” Functions • Transaction Demand for Money: Baumol (1952) • Speculative Demand for Money: Tobin (1958) • Consumption Function: Duesenberry (1949); Modigliani and Brumberg (1952); Friedman (1945; 1955) • Investment: Jorgensen (1966) • Production Function: (Franklin Fisher 1969) • Labor Supply: Lucas and Rapping (1969) Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  19. Klein’s Modeling Agenda In contrast with the parsimonious view of natural simplicity, I believe that economic life is enormously complicated and that the successful model will try to build in as much of the complicated interrelationships as possible. That is why I want to work with large econometric models and a great deal of computer power. Instead of the rule of parsimony, I prefer the following rule: the largest possible system that can be managed and that can explain the main economic magnitudes as well as the parsimonious system is the better system to develop and use. [Klein 1992] Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  20. An Opposing Current the focus should be on the analysis of parts of the economy in the hope that we can find bits of order here and there and gradually combine these bits into a systematic picture of the whole [1951] A hypothesis is important if it ‘explains” much by little, that is, if it abstracts the common and crucial elements from the mass of complex and detailed circumstances surrounding the phenomena to be explained and permits valid predictions on the basis of them alone. [Friedman 1953, p. 14] We curtsy to Marshall, but we walk with Walras [1949] Milton Friedman (1912-2006) Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  21. Genealogy of Klein’s Macroeconometric Models Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  22. Complexity of Klein’s Models Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  23. Brookings Model (1965) Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  24. Phillips Machine: Schematic Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  25. The IS-LM Core of a Large-scale Macroeconometric Model Source: Green et al. “The IS-LM Cores of Three Econometric Models,” in Lawrence Klein (editor) Comparative Performance of U.S. Econometric Models, p. 104. Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  26. Computing Power as a Limitation on Economic Modeling Before World War II After World War II Burroughs Adding Machines in Veterans Bureau Computing Section Eniac: The First American Digital Computer Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

  27. Thanks  The End Economics 882 History of Modern Macroeconomics (Spring 2013, Module 2)

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