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An Artificial Wicksell—Keynes Macroeconomy

Integrating Business Cycle and Cumulative Process

  • Book
  • © 2021

Overview

  • Proposes a vital role of the demand constraints on firms in establishing a resilient monetary economy
  • Successfully reproduces an integrated macroeconomic dynamics of business cycles and recurring cumulative processes
  • Explains how the rigidity of prices and wages induces complex interactions among real wages, employment, production
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Table of contents (9 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

This book presents an agent-based macroeconomic model developed on the Keynesian principle of effective demand and the Wicksellian theory of cumulative process. The main purpose of the book is to demystify inherent forces that revive an economy from a long-run downturn. The model has three types of bounded-rational agents: firm, household, and bank. To highlight the autonomous revival mechanisms, the model is assumed to be completely closed and free from any external influences such as changes  in management of aggregate demand  or supply/demand shocks. The key finding of the book is that diversity of firms is a crucial element in reviving investment activities. While a production sector is represented by a single firm in a conventional model, this model has introduced a large number of heterogeneous firms that confront diverse constraints both at the firm and aggregate levels.  The behaviours of these firms may vary despite being exposed to the same aggregate environment. For example, economic downturns usually precipitate a fall in real wages as a response to decreased aggregate demand. Most firms reduce their employment focusing on the reduction in aggregate demand. However, some firms identify a reduction in real wage as a sign of improving profitability hence they may expand employment. This could result in an increased aggregate demand and benefit other firms with further employment. It could even reverse the trend to an upslope, thereby ultimately achieving full  of near full employment. This book details further on: (1) the rigidity of prices and wages in a stable economy  (2) the fundamental factors to establish a robust and high-performing economy, with the focus on the importance of a stable and equitable macroeconomic environment.

Authors and Affiliations

  • Faculty of Global Management, Chuo University, Tokyo, Japan

    Ichiro Takahashi

About the author

Dr. Ichiro Takahashi, Ph.D., is a Japanese economist, who studied microfoundations of Keynesian economics, under late Prof. Walter P. Heller. He taught economics across the U.S. and Japan at Carnegie Mellon University, Soka University and Chuo University. Previous Dean of the Faculty of International Liberal Arts at Soka University, current Professor in Economics at Chuo University.

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