Thursday, December 31, 2009

Welcome

I study economics as a hobby. My interests lie in Post Keynesianism, (Old) Institutionalism, and related paradigms. These seem to me to be approaches for understanding actually existing economies.

The emphasis on this blog, however, is mainly critical of neoclassical and mainstream economics. I have been alternating numerical counter-examples with less mathematical posts. In any case, I have been documenting demonstrations of errors in mainstream economics. My chief inspiration here is the Cambridge-Italian economist Piero Sraffa.

In general, this blog is abstract, and I think I steer clear of commenting on practical politics of the day.

Saturday, July 04, 2009

Four Papers On Henry George

I have never been enamored of Henry George. But for those who like him, the recent History of Economics Society Annual Conference (Denver, CO, 26-29 June 2009) had a session on "Henry George and the Concept of the Commons", with four papers:I guess one can get the following from George: Many do not legitimately contribute to production, but merely charge those who do work a toll for access to the property with which they work. I can get the same idea, however, from P. J. Proudhon's What is Property?; Karl Marx's idea of the worker's "double freedom" (in chapter VI of Capital, Volume 1) to sell his labor power and of ownership of other commodities for sale; and of Thorstein Veblen's concept of business as sabotage, in contrast to industry. What do I need Henry George for, at least with respect to this idea?

Monday, June 29, 2009

Elsewhere

I have added the blog of some economists at the University of Missouri-Kansas City to my blogroll. That blog is more policy-oriented than this. Bill Mitchell blogs from Australia, also more about policy than I do. Grupo Lujan-Circus seems like a blog of interest to me, but I can read only the names. The same remark applies to the blog of the Italian Association for the History of Political Economy.

Occasionally I stumble across curious articles in Wikipedia. The one on Surplus economics references Paul Baron and Paul Sweezy. It doesn't describe their ideas very well, and could do with some reference to Sraffa too. The entry on Newtonian time in economics seems to have been written by Austrian fanboys who, typically, know about neither Joan Robinson's distinction between logical and historical time nor Paul Davidson's attack on the Austrian school.

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Current Events Foreseen

First Instance
"[Condolences]
G.O.P.Y.T.

A letter from Ronald Reagan to Michael Jackson, dated 1 February, 1984, five days after the singer's hair was set afire by pyrotechnics during the filming of a Pepsi commercial...

Dear Michael,

I was pleased to learn that you were not seriously hurt in your recent accident. I know from experience that these things can happen on the set - no matter how much caution is exercised. All over America, millions of people look up to you as an example. Your deep faith in God and adherence to traditional values are an inspiration to all of us, especially young people searching fro something real to believe in. You've gained quite a number of fans along the road since "I Want You Back", and Nancy and I are among them. Keep up the good work, Michael. We're very happy for you.

Sincerely,
Ronald Reagan" -- Harper's Magazine (June 2009)

Second Instance
This was almost certainly not written last week:
"[James Hansen] said that he was thinking of attending another deomonstration soon, in West Virginia coal country." -- Elizabeth Kolbert, "The Catastrophist", The New Yorker (June 29, 2009): 39-45
And here we have some news:
"SUNDIAL -- Coal miners confronted environmental protesters June 23 during a sometimes tense standoff at a focal point in the battle over mountaintop mining -- a protest that attracted one of the nation's foremost experts on global warming.

NASA climate scientist James Hansen was among the protesters, and West Virginia State Police arrested him during a planned act of civil disobedience. While upstaged in the media spotlight by actress Daryl Hannah, who also was arrested, it was Hansen's presence at the rally that drew widespread interest in the event from the environmental community..." -- Walt Williams

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Suppressed Empirical Results

"An overwhelming majority of the entrepreneurs thought that a price based on full average cost (including a conventional allowance for profit) was the 'right' price, the one which 'ought' to be charged...

...the procedure can be not unfairly generalized as follows: prime (or 'direct') cost per unit is taken as the base, a percentage addition is made to cover overheads (or 'oncost' or 'indirect' cost), and a further conventional addition (frequently 10 per cent.) is made for profit. Selling costs commonly and interest on capital rarely are included in overheads; when not so included they are allowed for in addition for profits." -- R. L. Hall and C. J. Hitch, "Price Theory and Business Behavior", Oxford Economic Papers, (May 1939): 12-45
These findings motivated Milton Friedman in his badly-argued work on methodology.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Not Nostradamus

Brad DeLong still wants the attempted extrapolation of trends to be equivalent to prophecy. So I thought I'd point out another nineteenth century writer:
"There are at the present time two great nations in the world, which started from different points, but seem to tend towards the same end. I allude to the Russians and the Americans. Both of them have grown up unnoticed; and while the attention of mankind was directed elsewhere, they have suddenly placed themselves in the front rank among the nations, and the world learned their existence and their greatness at almost the same time.

All other nations seem to have nearly reached their natural limits, and they have only to maintain their power; but these are still in the act of growth. All others have stopped, or continue to advance with extreme difficulty; these alone are proceeding with ease and celerity along a path to which no limit can be perceived. The American struggles against the obstacles that nature opposes to him; the adversaries of the Russian are men. The former combats the wilderness and savage life; the latter, civilization with all its arms. The conquests of the American are therefore gained by the plowshare; those of the Russian by the sword. The Anglo-American relies upon personal interest to accomplish his ends and gives free scope to the unguided strength and common sense of the people; the Russian centers all the authority of society in a single arm. The principal instrument of the former is freedom; of the latter, servitude. Their starting point is different and their courses are not the same; yet each seems marked out by the will of Heaven to sway the destinities of half the globe." -- Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, V. 1, last page

Sunday, June 14, 2009

By His Bootstraps

1.0 Introduction
One can hold savings in various forms of assets. In effect, savings is a time machine for transferring purchasing power into the future. A debt, when purchased - that is, a bond - is one such asset in which one can store savings. The relationships between bonds of various maturities and the existence of well-developed markets in which to trade bonds allows the determination of interest rates without relying on the theory of time preference, a theory which is a lot of utter hogwash anyhow.

The point of this post is to explain how, under certain institutions for selling second-hand debt, a relatively stable long-term interest rate can be maintained by beliefs in its stability. No need arises to call on the forces of thrift and productivity. This post might even be relevant to current events in the USA.

2.0 Institutions Providing a Setting in Which a Second Decision Must be Made
The model I outline here is based on Keynes' account of the two decisions a saver must make:
"The psychological time-preferences of an individual require two distinct sets of decisions to carry them out completely. The first ... determines for each individual how much of his income he will consume and how much he will reserve in some form of command over future consumption. But this decision having been made, there is a further decision which awaits him, namely, in what form he will hold the command over future consumption which he has reserved, whether out of his current income or from previous savings." -- J. M. Keynes, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936): p. 166
Assume that the debts of the best quality available for purchase consist of Treasury bills (T-bills) that mature in three months, T-bills that mature in a year, and Treasury notes (T-notes) that mature in 10 years. These are all available in the U.S.A., along with T-bills, T-notes, and T-bonds of other maturities. In this exposition, I abstract from the existence of these other maturities. By including debts of these three maturities, the model incorporates the decision to hold money, assets that pay the short-term interest rate, or assets that pay the long-term interest rate.

In describing three-month T-bills as money, I again follow Keynes:
"...we can draw the line between 'money' and 'debts' at whatever point is most convenient for handling a particular problem. For example, we can treat as money any command over general purchasing power which the owner has not parted with for a period in excess of three months, and as debt what cannot be recovered for a longer period than this; or we can substitute for 'three months' one month or three days or three hours or any other period; or we can exclude from money whatever is not legal tender on the spot. It is often convenient to include in money time-deposits with banks and, occasionally, even such instruments as (e.g.) treasury bills." -- J. M. Keynes, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936): p. 167
Suppose, contrary to fact, that the short term interest rate, r, was known to be constant for the next ten years, where 100 r is stated as an annual percentage. Then the long term interest rate would be established in the market at the start of the year as 100 [(1 + r)10 - 1] percent for 10 years, and the interest rate on money would be 100 [(1 + r)1/4 - 1] percent for three months. A higher price on a bond corresponds to a lower interest rate. For example, the price of a T-bill with a face value of $1000 to be paid in a year is 1000/(1 + r) dollars.

3.0 The Individual
In this model, federal authorities set the interest rate on money. The short term interest rate provides a market consensus on monetary policy is likely to be over the next year. If the annual interest rate embodied in the price of one-year T-bills is higher than the annualized interest rate on money, the market price of T-bills is predicting a tightening of monetary policy. The individual allocates his savings partly on his opinion of this consensus. If he thinks, for example, that the monetary authority is not going to tighten that much, he would sell three-month T-bills and buy one-year T-bills, so as to make a profit from speculation when the price of the latter rises.

The individual, one assumes, has some idea of what is a normal long-term interest rate. He expects that over a long enough period, the federal authority's monetary policy will average out, thereby achieving this normal rate. The individual expects the price of T-notes to eventually rise when the current long-term interest rate is above that normal long-term rate and to fall when the current long-term rate is below that normal rate. Here, too, the possibility for speculative gains influences the individual in his allocation of his savings between T-notes and T-bills.

3.0 Markets
Consider a range of the price of T-notes. For a high enough price, those who are bears on this market (who expect the long term interest rate to rise) would dominate the bulls (who expect the long term interest rate to fall). More would be selling than buying, and the price would fall. The opposite is true for a low enough price. The equilibrium price at an instant of time balances bulls and bears:
"In the Treatise [Keynes] pictures the Bulls and Bears of the gilt-edged market going into and out of bonds as they individually come to think that the next price movement will be up or down. In this speculative market the price of bonds and thus their yield, the interest rate, can only settle if opinion is divided, so that those who wish to sell for fear of a fall find their offers matched by the bids of those who wish to buy in hope of a rise. It is thus, as Keynes says, a variety of opinion in the gilt-edged market which gives stability to the interest rate and some control over it to the monetary authorities." -- G. L. S. Shackle, "Simplicity in Keynes's Theory of Money and Employment", The South African Journal of Economics, v. 51, n. 3 (1983): 357-367
Elsewhere Shackle talks about equilibrium in such a speculative market as inherently restless.

4.0 Conclusions and a Policy Implication
I suppose one could express the above model in mathematics, if one were so inclined. One might start with some distribution of agents' beliefs about the conventional long term interest rate, and allow each agent to slowly update their view, maybe with the addition of random noise. (One might draw on Shackle's "The Bounds of Unknowledge" (in Beyond Positive Economics (ed. by J. Wiseman) Macmillan, 1983) in specifying this updating.) And the agents would decide on the distribution of their savings based on their views. Maybe the model should have more types of assets. One would want a model in which a diversity of opinion is maintained among agents, and in which time series for stock equilibria exhibit hysteresis and non-ergodicity. It wouldn't surprise me if somebody has already published such a model.

Keynes had something to say about policy based on this sort of analysis:
"Thus a monetary policy which strikes public opinion as being experimental in character or easily liable to change may fail in its objective of greatly reducing the long-term rate of interest... The same policy, on the other hand, may prove easily successful if it appeals to public opinion as being reasonable and practicable and in the public interest, rooted in strong conviction, and promoted by an authority unlikely to be superseded." -- J. M. Keynes, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936): p. 203