16,607 research outputs found

    The Chicago Counter-Revolution and the Sociology of Economic Knowledge

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    This chapter is concerned with the internal phenomenon. One model that can be invoked to explain this internal phenomenon is the classical process whereby evidence is patiently accumulated until the weight of the argument favours one side or another. Alternatively, Stigler\u27s \u27model\u27 of the sociology of economic knowledge construction and destruction can be used to examine the internal opinion-changing process in the transition from the overwhelming defeat of Barry Goldwater in 1964 to the overwhelming victory of Ronald Reagan in 1980 - two men with essentially the same programme and the same message (Friedman and Friedman 1982, viii). ISBN: 033373045

    The Initial Controversy - Introduction

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    During the middle third of the twentieth century, the ideas of John Maynard Keynes and those who described themselves as “Keynesians” acquired a profound influence over both the economics profession and the macroeconomic policy process. After the publication of Milton Friedman’s (1956) Studies in the Quantity Theory of Money, Keynesians were obliged to compete with “monetarists” for policy and intellectual influence. These two volumes examine aspects of this counter-revolution by focusing on Friedman’s claim that he was merely formalising the macroeconomic ideas of the first generation Chicago School, at whose “feet” he “sat” in 1932-3 and 1934-5 (Friedman chapter 7 [1972/1974], 163). ISBN: 185196767

    Devil in a New Dress: Reframing as an Alternative Method of Motivated Reasoning

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    Much research has been conducted in the field of motivated reasoning, with most of this work focused on the tendency of motivated reasoners to reject counterarguments out of hand, the so-called disconfirmation bias. The objective of this work is markedly different. Borrowing from the prodigious body of work on framing, this investigation suggests an alternative route of motivated reasoning: when presented with a counterargument, subjects engage in motivated reasoning not by wholly rejecting the counter, but by reframing their attitudes so as to reduce the importance of the challenged belief. To this end, we conducted a series of experiments centered around challenging popular political beliefs and measuring the impact of the challenge on the receiver. This was accomplished first by conducting surveys to uncover prevailing political beliefs around several topics ranging from gun control to the legalization of prostitution. With the most common beliefs clearly established, we then conducted an experiment in which these beliefs were challenged through the creation of specifically tailored and previously evaluated counterarguments. Experimental subjects were asked to provide their (positive or negative) attitude toward a given political topic, and then asked to rank and rate the four most common beliefs surrounding that topic – with the first ranked belief representing the one the subject felt was most important. This belief was then challenged, and after a period – a week in the first trial, and ten minutes in the second trial – the subjects were asked to repeat their rankings and ratings of the offered beliefs. The results showed virtually no attitude change resulting from these challenges, but a significant number of subjects lowered their first-ranked belief after having been challenged. We interpret this behavior as engaging in motivated reasoning via reframing. Further research to determine when individuals engage in motivated reasoning via disconfirmation vs. reframing is needed, but these early results suggest that reframing is a legitimate alternative route through which individuals maintain their attitudes in the face of challenges.No embargoAcademic Major: Political Scienc

    From Keynes to Friedman via Mints: Resolving the Dispute over the Quantity Theory Oral Tradition

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    The Keynes Before Keynes Milton Friedman (chapter 2 [1956], 3-4) asserted that “Chicago was one of the few academic centres at which the quantity theory continued to be a central and vigorous part of the oral tradition throughout the 1930’s and 1940’s”. Friedman sought to “nurture” the revival of the quantity theory by linking it to this Chicago “oral tradition”. According to Friedman the “flavor” of this oral tradition was captured in a model in which the quantity theory was “in the first instance a theory of the demand for money”. Friedman added that to “the best of my knowledge no systematic statement of this theory as developed at Chicago exists, though much of it can be read between the lines of [Henry] Simons’ and [Lloyd] Mints’s writings”. He also enlisted the names of Frank Knight and Jacob Viner in support of his assertion. ISBN: 185196767

    How Unique Was The Chicago Tradition? - Introduction

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    The first part of this chapter describes and elaborates upon the contributions made to this expanding literature by Tom Cate, J. Ronnie Davis, David Laidler, Joseph Aschheim and George Tavlas regarding the claim that inter-war Chicago exhibited unique quantity theory characteristics. The second part examines the so-called “‘Chicago Plan’ of Banking Reform”, described by Albert Hart (1935), a Chicago graduate student of the 1930s. The Chicago Plan was a response to the Great Depression which required all banks to hold 100% reserves against their deposits, thus eliminating the instability caused by fractional reserves. ISBN: 185196767

    Fisher and Phillips

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    Just before the start of the Monetarist decade, the Journal of Political Economy (1973, 496-502) republished Irving Fisher\u27s 1926 article on A Statistical Relation Between Unemployment and Price Changes , under the title I Discovered the Phillips Curve . Immediately, Milton Friedman (1976 [1974], 215, 232) used this archaeological discovery to assault his somewhat dazed Keynesian opponents: The discussion of the Phillips curve started with truth in 1926, proceeded through error some thirty years later, and by now has returned back to 1926 and to the original truth. That is about fifty years for a complete circuit. You can see how technological development has speeded up the process of both producing and dissipating ignorance ... there is essentially no economist any longer who believes in the naive Phillips curve of the kind originally proposed

    Towards A Resolution Of The Dispute - Introduction

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    The chapters in Part Four fall into four sections. The first three chapters represent Patinkin’s ongoing scholarly interest in explaining the evolution of Keynes’ economics and his relationship to the Chicago economists. In his Sir Dennis Robertson lecture, Patinkin (chapter 44 [1974], 4, 27, 12) explained that he was using the term “Keynesian monetary theory” in contrast to “the quantity theory” to describe “the General Theory and the literature to which it gave rise – though I should note that the aspect of the theory that is my primary concern here (namely, the treatment of money from the viewpoint of the choice of an optimum portfolio) is in some respects more precisely developed in Keynes’ Treatise on Money 
 There is no doubt that Keynes of the General Theory is at one with Keynes of the Tract (1923, pp.78-9) in taking as his point of departure the individual’s demand for money holdings”. ISBN: 185196767

    The Anti-Keynesian Tradition: Introduction

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    The first volume of this trilogy examined the Keynesian Tradition; this second volume examines aspects of the Anti Keynesian Tradition. All the chapters are designed, in part, to justify the assertion that economists neglect at their peril the subterranean world in which our subject is constructed. Archival evidence provides numerous unique insights but can also resolve disputes that may otherwise meander along, endlessly. Equally, archival evidence can expose as hollow some of the creation myths that pervade the account of intellectual revolutions. ISBN: 978140394959

    The Rise of the Natural-Rate of Unemployment Model

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    With respect to political mythology, the Northern spring of 1968 is chiefly remembered (like its forerunner of 1848) as a \u27springtime\u27 of youthful and hirsute left-revolutionary fervour. This revolutionary wave could plausibly include a US President amongst its victims, broken by the weight of office. In contrast to all this tragedy and melodrama, with respect to influence over economic policy and all that flows from that, the most revolutionary call to arms of that time, was Milton Friedman\u27s American Economic Association (AEA) Presidential Address. Neither youthful nor hirsute, he was an advocate of floating exchange rates, monetary targeting, low if not zero inflation, the abandonment of fine tuning, lower taxes and less regulated markets. ISBN: 033373045

    The Keynesian Tradition: Introduction

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    These chapters highlight an important but neglected point: economics often provides profound insights into social interaction, but economists rarely delve into the subterranean world in which their culture, tools and prejudices are forged. Market forces produce results that surprise and confound social moralists; the hands by which economists correspond and argue have, hitherto, remained largely invisible. These chapters use published and archival evidence to illuminate the internal dynamics of the knowledge production (and destruction) processes of the economics industry. ISBN: 978140394960
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