51 research outputs found
Axiomatic Choice Theory Traveling between Mathematical Formalism, Normative Choice Rules and Psychological Measurement, 1944-1956
An Analysis of Mistakes Made by Economists in their Study of Keynes's Diagram on Page 180 in the General Theory
On J. M. Keynes's Initial IS-LM Approach in 1933 and 1934: Its Connection to Liquidity Preference, the Weight of Evidence, the A Treatise on Probability, and Keynes's Aggregate Supply Curve from Chapter 20 of the General Theory
Hicks Never Generalized Keynes's General Theory with IS-LM Because Keynes had Already Done so in Chapter 21 of the General Theory
Keynesss IS-LM Model Was Not Meant to Be a Toy for Academic Economists to Play With or Perform Their Accustomed Trickss (Hicks)
On Hicks’s Failure to Grasp the Importance and Significance of the Keynes – Viner Exchanges Over the Extreme Elasticity - Instability of the LM(LP) Curve in Keynes’s February, 1937 Quarterly Journal of Economics
Confusing Keynes's Theory of the Rate of Interest in the General Theory with Keynes's IS-LM(LP) Model: There Is No IS-LM (LP) Model in Chapter 18 of the General Theory Because Keynes Put His IS-LM(LP) Model in Chapters 15 and 21 of the General Theory
On the Many and Great Contradictions Present in Hicksss June, 1936 Economic Journal Review of the General Theory When Compared to His April, 1937 Econometrica Article: Hicks Did Not Correctly Cite the 1936 Champernowne and Reddaway Reviews of the General Theory or the General Theory
Keynes's March 31 ,1937 Message to Hicks About the IS-LM Model: 'At One Time I Tried the Equations, as You Have Done, with I in All of Them'
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