Thursday, November 14, 2013

academic economics, old and new Keynesian theory

 Keynesian Economics and the Journals by Krugman
So consider two hypotheses. One — which Cochrane appears to believe — is that being inside the Beltway has rotted Janet’s and Olivier’s brains, not to mention that of all their researchers, causing them to revert to primitive concepts that “everyone” knows are false. The other — which is what I hear from young economists — is that there is an equilibrium business cycle claque in academic macroeconomics that has in effect blockaded the journals to anyone trying to publish models and evidence that stress the demand side.

Obviously you know which story I believe. The main point, though, is that trying to argue from authority is even sillier here than in most situations. There’s a huge difference between “nobody believes that” and “none of my friends will let that get published in the journals they control”.

Oh Dear: Megan McArdle Relies on John Cochrane, and so Goes Badly Astray… by DeLong

How to be a New Keynesian and an Old Keynesian at the same time by Simon Wren-Lewis


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