El viejo Almacén. BsAs

Surplus Approach

“Es necesario volver a la economía política de los Fisiócratas, Smith, Ricardo y Marx. Y uno debe proceder en dos direcciones: i) purgar la teoría de todas las dificultades e incongruencias que los economistas clásicos (y Marx) no fueron capaces de superar, y, ii) seguir y desarrollar la relevante y verdadera teoría económica como se vino desarrollando desde “Petty, Cantillón, los Fisiócratas, Smith, Ricardo, Marx”. Este natural y consistente flujo de ideas ha sido repentinamente interrumpido y enterrado debajo de todo, invadido, sumergido y arrasado con la fuerza de una ola marina de economía marginal. Debe ser rescatada."
Luigi Pasinetti


ISSN 1853-0419

Entrada destacada

Teorías del valor y la distribución una comparacion entre clásicos y neoclásicos

Fabio PETRI   Esta obra, traducida por UNM Editora, ha sido originalmente editada en Italia con el título: “Teorie del valore e del...

Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Aspromourgos. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Aspromourgos. Mostrar todas las entradas

23 jun 2016

Keynes, Public Debt and the Complex of Interest Rates




Tony Aspromourgos (University of Sydney)


  ‘Keynes on the rate of interest showed himself in a typical mood: revolutionary in thought and very cautious in policy.’
James Meade, 26 February 1945 (Howson and Moggridge 1990: 46)


‘Words ought to be a little wild, for they are the assault of thoughts upon the unthinking. But when the seats of power and authority have been attained there should be no more poetic licence.’
John Maynard Keynes, 19 April 1933 (Moggridge et al. 1971–1989, vol. XXI: 244)


1. INTRODUCTION
The role of public debt in Keynes’s economic policy thinking is a question of considerable interest – most obviously, because deficits and debt have always been a prominent and important motif of debates around Keynesian economics. In a pair of companion articles I have sought to reconstruct Keynes’s views on public debt, in the first instance, via a comprehensive examination of his responses to the position of Abba Lerner (Aspromourgos 2014b).


 The conclusion of that investigation is that Keynes consistently offered qualified endorsement of Lerner’s ‘functional finance’ doctrine (Lerner 1943; 1944, esp. chapter 24) – the qualifications particularly turning on Keynes’s more nuanced view of the relationship between theory and policy and his consequent attentiveness to policy management of the psychology of the debt market. Thereby, Keynes rejected simple, mechanical application of Lerner’s doctrine to public finance practice. The second article considers, more generally, the policy levers and policy options available for reconciling full-employment demand growth with public debt management, when the debt trajectory is itself also an objective of policy, rather than being treated as a mere consequence of the pursuit of other policy objectives, of no policy interest in itself, as is the case for Lerner (Aspromourgos 2014a).

Keynes’s explicitly stated reasons for qualifying his endorsement of functional finance were: ‘false consciousness’ (my term) concerning public debt, that could generate interest rate and profitability expectations adverse to the pursuit of full employment; widening public sector deficits; ill consequences for distribution; and debt stabilizing at undesirably high levels. But I further suggested that these were unlikely to be Keynes’s only reasons, and so inferred from his wider commentaries on public debt – commentaries that do not actually refer to Lerner or functional finance – some additional probable reasons: the possibility of debt growth placing upward pressure on interest rates, in particular steepening the yield curve, for reasons other than false consciousness; excess-demand inflation simultaneous with involuntary unemployment, due to structural imbalances; and foreign-owned, especially foreign-currency-denominated, public debt (Aspromourgos 2014b: 427–9; also, on the interest rates issue, 2014a: 583–5). It is the first of the latter three issues that is not at all addressed by Lerner. In those earlier articles this possibility of public debt trajectories placing upward pressure on the level of interest rates, or steepening the term structure of rates, was not argued in detail, particularly with respect to the latter yield curve aspect (although extensive supporting citations were provided, in particular, from Moggridge et al. 1971–1989, vol. XXI; hereafter cited as CW, with relevant volume number).


The purpose of this article is to examine more fully Keynes’s understanding of the possible influence of publicdebt on interest rates, and on the term structure in particular. The focus is on his writings from the 1930s forward, thereby largely leaving aside what may be called ‘the pre-Keynesian Keynes’. Nevertheless we begin in section 2 with the Treatise on Money (1930; hereafter, TM). Its fundamentally orthodox, pre-Keynesian character does not necessarily mean that every element of it is rendered obsolete, in Keynes’s mind, by the new theory of 1936 – and unsurprisingly, some pertinent aspects of Keynes’s thinking from 1930 forward are evident also earlier (Moggridge and Howson 1974: 226–36). Section 3 then shows how the multiplier becomes a mechanism in which debt-financed public investment generates matching private saving plus tax revenues, via variations in aggregate activity levels and prices. As a consequence, it becomes possible for Keynes to conclude that increasing public debt need not place upward pressure on the level of interest rates, so long as policy can successfully manage the psychology of the debt market (section 4). This particularly concerns long interest rates, and hence, the term structure and market expectations of the future course of interest rates, leading to consideration of Keynes’s theory of the term structure – a theory which enables his conviction that policy can manage and shape long rates (section 5). The conclusion addresses also the question of whether Keynes’s caution concerning public debt and interest rates remains relevant today (section 6)

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4 oct 2014

Thomas Piketty, the Future of Capitalism and the theory of Distribution: a Review Essay

Centro di Ricerche e Documentazione Piero Sraffa 


CSWP 7 (October 2014)

Author Tony Aspromourgos

Keywords classical economics, functional distribution, Keynesian economics, Piero Sraffa

JEL B51, D31, D33, E12

This essay reviews Thomas Piketty’s Capital in the Twenty-First Century (2014). The focus is upon the conceptual framework and theoretical interpretation of the empirical findings assembled in the book, rather than those empirical findings themselves (which are, in any case, broadly incontestable). The core theoretical logic of the distributional dynamics is explained and subjected to scrutiny with respect to the theory of distribution in particular, but also the theory of growth.

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28 oct 2013

Sraffa and the Reconstruction of Economic Theory



Theories of Value and Distribution

Edited By Enrico Sergio Levrero, Antonella Palumbo and Antonella Stirati

 
Written on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the publication of Piero Sraffa's Production of Commodities by Means of Commodities, the papers selected and contained in this book account for the work completed around the two central aspects of his contribution to economic analysis, namely the criticism of the neoclassical (or 'marginalist') theory of value and distribution, and the reconstruction of economic theory along the lines of the Classical approach. Divided into three volumes, the book debates the most fruitful routes for advancements in this field and their implications for applied and policy analysis.

This first volume focuses on the critique of general equilibrium theory and the determinants of income distribution, together with the related issue of the different methods of analysis which characterise the Classical theory and the marginalist approach.


Enrico Sergio Levrero is Associate Professor at Roma Tre University, Italy. His main research interests are in the theories of value and distribution, wages and the labour market, issues of monetary economics and Sraffa's works. His previous works include Four Lectures on Wages and the Labour Market (2012) and he has published several articles in academic journals and collective volumes. 
 
Antonella Palumbo is Associate Professor of economics at Roma Tre University, Italy. Her main research interests and activities are in the modern revival of Classical economics and in the theories of demand-led growth. She has published several articles in academic journals and collective volumes.


Antonella Stirati is currently a Professor at Roma Tre University, Italy. Her main scientific interest is in the revival of the surplus approach, particularly in the areas of income distribution and employment theory. She has published the Theory of Wages in Classical Economics (Elgar, 1994) and several articles in academic journals and collective volumes.

Table of Contents Book I


PART I: THE CAPITAL CONTROVERSY AND GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS
1. On the Present State of the Capital Controversy; Pierangelo Garegnani
2. Two Strands of Thought in Pierangelo Garegnani's Capital Theory Critique; Harvey Gram
3. Only a Few Techniques Matter! On the Number of Curves on the Wage Frontier; Bertram Schefold
4. On the Stability of the Ramsey Accumulation Path; Enrico Bellino
5. Malinvaud on Wicksell's Legacy to Capital Theory: Some Critical Remarks; Saverio M. Fratini
6. Capital and Stationary States; Paolo Trabucchi

PART II: THE REVIVAL AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE CLASSICAL THEORY OF DISTRIBUTION
7.Marx's theory of wages and the revival of the Surplus Approach; Enrico Sergio Levrero
8. On Advanced Capitalism and the Determinants of the Change in Income Distribution: A Classical Interpretation; Massimo Pivetti
9. Alternative 'Closures' to Sraffa's System: Some Reflections in the Light of the Changes in Income Distribution in the Last Decades; Antonella Stirati 
10. Sraffa and Keynes: Two Ways of Making a 'Revolution' in Economic Theory; Guglielmo Chiodi and Leonardo Ditta
11. Causality and Structure in Piecemeal Macroeconomic Modelling; Sergio Parrinello
12. On the Link Between Functional and Personal Distribution in Italy; Aldo Barba
13. Exchange Rate Policy, Distributive Conflict and Structural Heterogeneity. The Argentinian and Brazilian Cases; Alejandro Fiorito and Fabian Amico

Table of Contents Book II



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table of Contents Book III

By Enrico Sergio Levrero, Antonella Palumbo and Antonella Stirati

PART I
1. Piero Sraffa and the Future of Economics – A Personal Evaluation; Luigi Pasinetti
2. Disequilibrium and Reproduction Prices: Some Extensions of Sraffa's Model; Carlo Benetti, Christian Bidard and Edith Klimovsky
3. Sraffa's System in Relation to Some Main Currents in Unorthodox Economics; Tony Aspromourgos
4. Sraffians, Other Post-Keynesians, and the Controversy Over Centres of Gravitation; Marc Lavoie
5. Sraffa, Sen and Non-causal Representations in Social Analysis; Andrea Ginzburg
6. Piero Sraffa and Shackle's Years of High Theory – Sraffa's Significance in the History of Economic Theories; Heinrich Bortis

PART II: THE EVOLUTION OF SRAFFA'S IDEAS AND THE MANUSCRIPTS
7. On Sraffa's and Wittgenstein Methodological Similarities: from the Rejection of Inadequate Types of Causality to the Comparison of Different 'forms of life'; Richard Arena
8. Sraffa's Lectures on Continental Banking; Marcello de Cecco
9. The Construction of Long Period Supply Curves: Notes on Sraffa's Criticism to the Analyses of Partial Equilibrium; Giuseppe Freni and Neri Salvadori
10. A Pictorial Approach to the Standard Commodity with a Digression; Giorgio Gilibert
11. On Sraffa's Corrected Organic Composition of Capital; Scott Carter

PART III: SRAFFA'S LEGACY AND THE INTERPRETATION OF RICARDO
12. Rent, as a Share of Produce, Not Governed by Proportions; Christian Gherke
13. Ricardo's Writings in Russia: Influence and Interpretations; Gennady Borgomazov and Denis Melnik


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14 dic 2010

Tony Aspromourgos: Sraffa's System in relation to some main currents in unorthodox economics

International Conference
Sraffa's Production of Commodities by Means of Commodities 1960-2010.
2nd-4th December 2010, Roma Tre University, Faculty of Economics








2


Comments, Ciccone


Paper

Abstract

Si uno hace la pregunta - ¿cómo es el sistema teórico en la producción de Sraffa de Producción de Mercancías por medio de Mercancías en relación con el alcance y contenido de la economía en su conjunto? - la respuesta, en un nivel, parece clara medio siglo después. El libro reconstruye con una nueva coherencia por lo menos un elemento fundamental de la economía clásica, y ese mismo sistema de la teoría implica una crítica del enfoque marginalista a la teoría de la distribución funcional del ingreso, y por consiguiente también del enfoque de la oferta y la demanda de productos básicos precios y cantidades.
Si bien no parece que haya problemas insolubles para captar la relación del libro de Sraffa con la ortodoxia, cual es su relación con otras corrientes de la economía heterodoxa? Las dos más importantes corrientes de pensamiento son la economía marxista y la economía post-keynesiana.
La importancia del libro de Sraffa para la primera fue debatido considerablemente en las décadas inmediatamente después de su publicación. El centro aquí es por lo tanto, con la economía post-keynesiana, en un aspecto fundamental referida a la teoría de la distribución funcional del ingreso, la relación entre el sistema de Sraffa y el marxismo también serán considerados.
Por lo tanto, el propósito del trabajo es considerar la relación entre el enfoque en base a ciertos elementos de la teoría económica implicada o implícita en el libro de Sraffa y la de la corriente post-keynesiana de la economía heterodoxa en particular. Las tres secciones del documento de forma sucesiva en cuentan la teoría de precios, la distribución del ingreso y los niveles de actividad y el crecimiento.