The New Classical New Classical Revolt Against Activist Economic Policy
Kamran Dadkhah ()
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Kamran Dadkhah: Northeastern University
Chapter Chapter 7 in The Evolution of Macroeconomic Theory and Policy, 2009, pp 131-151 from Springer
Abstract:
In the 1970s macroeconomics witnessed a counterrevolution, or perhaps more aptly an insurgency, against Keynesian orthodoxy. The insurgency targeted the entire Keynesian economics: theory, empirical validity, and policy. The New Classicals argued that the Keynesian model lacked microfoundations microfoundations , that is, the posited macro relations had no grounding in microeconomics of optimizing individuals and firms. They also argued that econometric analysis does not validate Keynesian macro relationships; at best it shows that the reduced form reduced form of the Keynesian model corresponds to the data. Worse, the New Classicals argued, Keynesian models do not perform well against simple time series forecasting models such as Box-Jenkins method (see below). A consequence of ad hoc modeling is that the estimated relationships are not stable over time. Lucas criticized activist economic policy on the ground that it is based on a misperception. The policy is based on an estimated econometric model, which according to Lucas, would not be stable and whose estimated coefficients would change once the policy goes into effect. As a result what would have been an optimal policy would not be so anymore. We already saw in Chap. 5 how the Phillips curve on which macroeconomic policy during the 1960s was based shifted over time. The upshot was that well-intentioned policies resulted in simultaneous rise of unemployment and inflation. But the Lucas critique Lucas critique went beyond this and extended the instability to all reduced forms.
Keywords: Monetary Policy; Time Series Analysis; Money Supply; Rational Expectation; Purchase Power Parity (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2009
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-540-77008-4_7
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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-540-77008-4_7
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