Keynes and a post-Keynesian controversy over the effect of debt on income expansion |
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Authors: | Mathieu J. Carkm |
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Affiliation: | Department of Economics Graduate Faculty , New School for Social Research , New York, NY, NY 10003, USA |
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Abstract: | The paper considers arguments of Robertson (1938) and Asimakopulos (1983) that the Keynesian multiplier expansion of output may be constrained by debt implicitly incurred in the financing of autonomous investment necessary to start the multiplier process. The task of this essay is to show that within the ‘short-period’ and static analytical framework of Keynes, this line of reasoning regarding the adverse effects of debt on multiplier-induced expansions of output is unwarranted. Nevertheless it is concluded that if the Keynesian framework is abandoned in favour of a dynamic framework in the manner of a steady trend rate of growth - a choice dependent on how one conceives of the economy, as inherently static or dynamic - then such arguments have troubling implications. In particular, the dependence of Keynes's approach on credit and hence debt forges links between ‘short-periods' whose distinctness from one another is crucial to Keynes's result. |
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Keywords: | Keynes multiplier liquidity preference debt |
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