Abstract:This paper moves in a theoretical context in which the level of economic activity is dependent on aggregate demand in both the long and the short period. It shows that given two simple hypotheses, the economy will exhibit a tendency to grow independently of any increase in the average level of ongoing investment (or any other type of ‘autonomous’ demand) over time. The two hypotheses are (a) that investment oscillates over time and (b) that the community’s marginal propensity to consume is lower when income co… Show more
“…A different approach to the analysis of long-run tendencies has been developed more recently in Garegnani and Trezzini (2010), Trezzini (2011a), and Palumbo (2013), and explicit reflections on the methodological issue have been put forward recently in Smith (2013) and Trezzini (2013). In these investigations, the growth path is not conceived as a theoretical entity that exists independently of the fluctuations of the economy but as a trend determined by the fluctuations themselves and, as such, not independent of them.…”
Section: The Extension To Long-run Analysis: a Methodological Premisementioning
confidence: 98%
“…This component of aggregate consumption cannot therefore be considered autonomous with respect to income in a very general sense. An analysis in this direction is developed in Garegnani and Trezzini (2010) where the evolution of the 'structural' part of consumption is assumed to take place through the asymmetry of the propensities to consume in the different phases of the cycle. In the model developed here, we dramatically simplify by assuming a constant rate of growth of structural consumption in the expansions, a different constant rate in the recessions and a constant marginal propensity to consume over the whole business cycle.…”
Section: Changes In the Saving Ratio Over The Business Cyclementioning
The ratio of saving to income over a long period is analyzed here in a theoretical context that takes account of the role of aggregate demand in the growth process, and in which it is not assumed that the economy must operate at a normal rate of capacity utilization in the long run. The very notion of the long-run saving rate is therefore redefined with respect to the one found in the literature where normal utilization is assumed. We argue that the long-run saving ratio must be conceived as the result of the interaction of many different influences and can therefore be similar in radically different circumstances and different in similar circumstances with respect both to the incentive to accumulate and to the pattern of saving decisions
“…A different approach to the analysis of long-run tendencies has been developed more recently in Garegnani and Trezzini (2010), Trezzini (2011a), and Palumbo (2013), and explicit reflections on the methodological issue have been put forward recently in Smith (2013) and Trezzini (2013). In these investigations, the growth path is not conceived as a theoretical entity that exists independently of the fluctuations of the economy but as a trend determined by the fluctuations themselves and, as such, not independent of them.…”
Section: The Extension To Long-run Analysis: a Methodological Premisementioning
confidence: 98%
“…This component of aggregate consumption cannot therefore be considered autonomous with respect to income in a very general sense. An analysis in this direction is developed in Garegnani and Trezzini (2010) where the evolution of the 'structural' part of consumption is assumed to take place through the asymmetry of the propensities to consume in the different phases of the cycle. In the model developed here, we dramatically simplify by assuming a constant rate of growth of structural consumption in the expansions, a different constant rate in the recessions and a constant marginal propensity to consume over the whole business cycle.…”
Section: Changes In the Saving Ratio Over The Business Cyclementioning
The ratio of saving to income over a long period is analyzed here in a theoretical context that takes account of the role of aggregate demand in the growth process, and in which it is not assumed that the economy must operate at a normal rate of capacity utilization in the long run. The very notion of the long-run saving rate is therefore redefined with respect to the one found in the literature where normal utilization is assumed. We argue that the long-run saving ratio must be conceived as the result of the interaction of many different influences and can therefore be similar in radically different circumstances and different in similar circumstances with respect both to the incentive to accumulate and to the pattern of saving decisions
“…The approach was essentially abandoned by the Keynesian tradition, unfortunately, and its revival is proving hard to achieve. It has been used more recently in some contributions based on the classical and Keynesian approach (see Garegnani and Trezzini, 2010).…”
Section: Conclusion: the Outline Of A Possible Alternative Methods Ofmentioning
“…There is here a point of convergence with the work of Hyman Minsky (1986) and his followers on the financial fragility of capitalism. I therefore close by acknowledging once again the limitations of the investigation of formally stable growth paths and the necessity, emphasised by Garegnani and Trezzini (2010) among others, of integrating the analysis of long-run growth with that of the cycle and crises.…”
Section: Conclusion: Formal Stability and 'Destabilising Stability'mentioning
Non-orthodox economists generally share the Keynesian Hypothesis of the\ud
independence of investment from capacity savings, in the long run no less than in the\ud
short run. This hypothesis marks an essential point of difference from neoclassical\ud
theory. Keynes showed that within the limits of the existing capacity utilisation,\ud
investment determines savings rather than the other way around. How best to extend\ud
this conclusion to the long run is the object of the current paper. The paper assesses\ud
the controversy on demand-led growth that has taken place since the mid-1980s\ud
between neo-Kaleckian and Sraffian authors. The Sraffian front may be divided into a\ud
first and a second Sraffian position, the latter being the Sraffian supermultiplier\ud
approach. I shall argue that this second approach is the most promising framework for\ud
analysing economic growth
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