Home > Uncategorized > The Keynes/Hicks macro theory — the nonexistence of a New Keynesian unicorn

The Keynes/Hicks macro theory — the nonexistence of a New Keynesian unicorn

from Lars Syll

islmPaul Krugman has on numerous occasions tried to defend “the whole enterprise of Keynes/Hicks macroeconomic theory” and especially his own somewhat idiosyncratic version of IS-LM.

The main problem, however, is that there is no such thing as a Keynes/Hicks macroeconomic theory!

So, let us get some things straight.

There is nothing in the post-General Theory writings of Keynes that suggests him considering Hicks’s IS-LM anywhere near a faithful rendering of his thought. In Keynes’s canonical statement of the essence of his theory in the 1937 QJE-article, there is nothing to even suggest that Keynes would have thought the existence of a Keynes-Hicks-IS-LM-theory anything but pure nonsense. So, of course, there can’t be any “vindication for the whole enterprise of Keynes/Hicks macroeconomic theory” – simply because “Keynes/Hicks” never existed.

And it gets even worse!

John Hicks, the man who invented IS-LM in his 1937 Econometrica review of Keynes’ General Theory — ‘Mr. Keynes and the ‘Classics’. A Suggested Interpretation’ — returned to it in an article in 1980 — ‘IS-LM: an explanation’ — in Journal of Post Keynesian Economics. Self-critically he wrote:

sir_john_hicksI accordingly conclude that the only way in which IS-LM analysis usefully survives — as anything more than a classroom gadget, to be superseded, later on, by something better – is in application to a particular kind of causal analysis, where the use of equilibrium methods, even a drastic use of equilibrium methods, is not inappropriate. I have deliberately interpreted the equilibrium concept, to be used in such analysis, in a very stringent manner (some would say a pedantic manner) not because I want to tell the applied economist, who uses such methods, that he is in fact committing himself to anything which must appear to him to be so ridiculous, but because I want to ask him to try to assure himself that the divergences between reality and the theoretical model, which he is using to explain it, are no more than divergences which he is entitled to overlook. I am quite prepared to believe that there are cases where he is entitled to overlook them. But the issue is one which needs to be faced in each case.

When one turns to questions of policy, looking toward the future instead of the past, the use of equilibrium methods is still more suspect. For one cannot prescribe policy without considering at least the possibility that policy may be changed. There can be no change of policy if everything is to go on as expected-if the economy is to remain in what (however approximately) may be regarded as its existing equilibrium. It may be hoped that, after the change in policy, the economy will somehow, at some time in the future, settle into what may be regarded, in the same sense, as a new equilibrium; but there must necessarily be a stage before that equilibrium is reached …

I have paid no attention, in this article, to another weakness of IS-LM analysis, of which I am fully aware; for it is a weakness which it shares with General Theory itself. It is well known that in later developments of Keynesian theory, the long-term rate of interest (which does figure, excessively, in Keynes’ own presentation and is presumably represented by the r of the diagram) has been taken down a peg from the position it appeared to occupy in Keynes. We now know that it is not enough to think of the rate of interest as the single link between the financial and industrial sectors of the economy; for that really implies that a borrower can borrow as much as he likes at the rate of interest charged, no attention being paid to the security offered. As soon as one attends to questions of security, and to the financial intermediation that arises out of them, it becomes apparent that the dichotomy between the two curves of the IS-LM diagram must not be pressed too hard.

The editor of JPKE, Paul Davidson, gives the background to Hicks’s article:

I originally published an article about Keynes’s finance motive — which in 1937 Keynes added to his other liquidity preference motives (transactions, precautionary, speculative motives) , I showed that adding this finance motive required that Hicks’s IS curve and LM curves to be interdependent — and thus when the IS curve shifted so would the LM curve.
Hicks and I then discussed this when we met several times.
When I first started to think about the ergodic vs. nonergodic dischotomy, I sent to Hicks some preliminary drafts of articles I would be writing about nonergodic processes. Then John and I met several times to discuss this matter further and I finally convinced him to write the article — which I published in the Journal of Post Keynesian Economics– in which he renounces the IS-LM apparatus. Hicks then wrote me a letter in which he thought the word nonergodic was wonderful and said he wanted to lable his approach to macroeconomics as nonergodic!

So — back in 1937 John Hicks said that he was building a model of John Maynard Keynes’ General Theory. In 1980 he openly admits he wasn’t.

What Hicks acknowledges in 1980 is basically that his original review totally ignored the very core of Keynes’ theory – uncertainty. In doing this he actually turned the train of macroeconomics on the wrong tracks for decades. It’s about time that mainstream economists set the record straight and stop promoting something that the creator himself admits was a total failure. Why not study the real thing itself – General Theory – in full and without looking the other way when it comes to non-ergodicity and uncertainty?

Paul Krugman persists in talking about a Keynes/Hicks-IS-LM-model that really never existed. It’s deeply disappointing. You would expect more from a ‘Nobel prize’ winner.

In his 1937 paper Hicks actually elaborates four different models (where Hicks uses I to denote Total Income and Ix to denote Investment):

1) “Classical”: M = kI   Ix = C(i)   Ix = S(i,I)

2) Keynes’ “special” theory: M = L(i)   Ix = C(i)    I = S(I)

3) Keynes’ “general” theory: M = L(I, i)   Ix = C(i)   I = S(I)

4) The “generalized general” theory: M = L(I, i)   Ix =C(I, i)  Ix = S(I, i)

It is obvious from the way Krugman draws his IS-LM curves that he is thinking in terms of model number 4 – and that is not even by Hicks considered a Keynes model (models 2 and 3)! It’s basically a loanable funds model, that belongs in the “classical” camp and which you find reproduced in most mainstream textbooks. Hicksian IS-LM? Maybe. Keynes? No way!

  1. Yoshinori Shiozawa
    March 12, 2020 at 2:24 am

    Krugman gained his Nobel Prize by his contribution to trade theory and economic geography, which are already debatable if they were really a good breakthrough in these fields. Krugman is a famous textbook writer and is active in The Opinion Page in The New York Times, but he is now a columnist and not an economist. His IS-LM argument shows that he has only an old piece of knowledge that he got in his student days (about fifty years ago). No body now in New Keynesians and Post Keynesians economics argue IS-LM as his/her basis of theoretical arguments. Let Krugman the columnist say anything. He is but a member of old “[m]admen in authority, who hear voices in the air, [and] are distilling their frenzy from some academic scribbler of [many] years back.” “[I]n the field of economic and political philosophy there are not many who are influenced by new theories after they are twenty-five or thirty years of age”.

  2. March 12, 2020 at 11:39 am

    Yoshinori, do you not realise that “there are not many who are influenced by new theories after they are twenty-five or thirty years of age” applies to you – and indeed to most of us here? So, in my case, I am still interpreting Keynes in terms of the PID control systems I was working with when I was 23, as I was when at 33 I read Keynes himself (both his probability theory – I was researching reliability theory – and his General Theory). I saw him then – and I still do see him – as anticipating PID theory by advancing from P (coincidentally control via Prices) to PI control (correcting for the Integrated – building up – unemployment side effect of P control). I didn’t come across IS-LM for decades, but when I did I found the mathematics to be the same as that of the Wheatstone Bridge I learned about when I was 16. Cross-multiplying IS/LM one finds that at equilibrium the (resistance) ratios I/L = S/M however large and whichever way the [electro] motive force is connected (prioritising Savings of provisions or profiting from selling money). By the time I was 60 it had clicked that the same circuit diagram applied to PID control too, yet now the control was not by resistance but (as Keynes saw) recognising mistakes and using that information to correct them.

    Thus IS-LM is not as daft as it seems. What is still not being seen by economists (72 years after Shannon’s ‘Mathematical Theory of Communications’ and Wiener’s ‘Cybernetics’) is that its mistake lies in seeking equilibrium by fixing ratios, seeing power rather than information flows. The same seems to go for all us old critics of economics here apart from myself. Given the significance of the revolution in communications practice and the ecological crisis due to economic and political incompetence, is the latter due to over-specialisation, to lack of wisdom in the young, or to education being run by blind old men?

    • Yoshinori Shiozawa
      March 12, 2020 at 2:40 pm

      Dave,
      we are in fact old critics.

      However, my case is a bit different. I encountered a new idea at the age around 50 years old. It was evolutionary economics. This was a story some 20 years ago. On the other hand, I came to discover a new theory of international values at the age of 63 and this is one of the bases of my present theory. So I am a slow maturer and Keynes’s warning does not exactly apply to me.

      Krugman is 10 years younger than I. He was a prodigy and established himself very young. After that, in my impression, he has not grown up very much.

      Your equation I/L=S/M is so unique and I cannot comment on it.

      • March 12, 2020 at 10:00 pm

        Yoshinori, study what a Wheatstone Bridge is used for and how it achieves it. Young Krugman seems to have lacked wisdom. I hope yours matures fruitfully.

        I will admit to struggling to understand what ‘international values’ are, unless like Fullbrook you turn the measures of it upside down to eliminate the aggregation problem, or like Christ direct them to Catholicity (as against Catholics): to serving the needs of any and so every one, rather than our own wants. I suppose I am looking for what is valuable rather than what most people value. What’s your perspective?

      • Meta Capitalism
        March 15, 2020 at 1:51 am

        Having read Yoshinori’s book Microfoundations of Evolutionary Economics and upon his recommendation Kirman’s Complex Economics I am finding Müller-Kademann’s Uncertainty and Economics: A Paradigmatic Perspective the critical key to understanding where Shiozawa’s thinking is both on the right track, but most importantly where it veers into the swamp of determinism and failure to recognize the true nature of uncertainly as a human trait and the power of human creativity. I am still reading Müller-Kademann’s book so will wait until I finish and reflect further upon the different meanings the two views give to the human situation (and they are more different than similar on some very critical ways in my view).

      • March 16, 2020 at 10:22 pm

        Yoshinori, as you have not come back on IS-LM, I looked again at the relationship to see why. I’d clearly mis-remembered the symbolism (for which apologies), but forgotten the connection between Hick’s formula and equilibrium. That is obvious on the curves: IS-LM = 0 where the curves cross, so cross-multiplying, IS = LM and I/L = S/M. One can only invest liquid resources and save spare money. As I said, study the ratios in Wheatstone’s Bridge.

  3. Yoshinori Shiozawa
    March 15, 2020 at 12:18 pm

    I am re-reading Kirman’s book. In the top paragraph of the Preface, this story is told:

    Hugo Sonnenschein, who was my first adviser, told me that young people should do microeconomics since macroeconomics involved more wisdom than mathematics and wisdom only comes with age.

    This is funny, isn’t it? We need more teachers like Sonnenschein who can tell that macroeconomics needs wisdom and there is no automatic criterion by which we can decide which model is better. We are also asked whether we have accumulated sufficient wisdom to talk about macroeconomics, because we are already sufficiently old.

    • Meta Capitalism
      March 16, 2020 at 12:28 am

      Yoshinori, I read that quote about wisdom (Sophia) and found it interesting too. Wisdom, of course, is not a scientific term, but a term used in philosophy and religion. The concept of ‘wisdom’ is found throughout all culture’s philosophical and religious traditions, from Taoism, Confucianism, to Buddhism (including its many schools of thought and practice), from Christianity, Islam to Judaism, etc. (including their many schools of thought and practice).
      .
      While wisdom is generally associated with age, depth and breadth of experience, it is also sometimes associated with the fresh eyes of youth. Out of the mouth of babes so-to-speak. I am reminded of the oft-repeated saying by great scientists who in their old age turn into historians and quip that science advances one funeral at a time, which of course means that when they look back and realize that progress in science can be held up by an old-guard of current pet theories who refuse to see that their ‘theories’ may just be wrong in light of already existing or newly emerging evidence that their ‘critical assumptions’ which they cling to blind them to reality.
      .
      Like Lars you see the limitations of the artificial assumptions embodied in the rational man of homo economicus of mainstream economics. But you build your theory on different philosophical foundations grounded in mechanistic determinism. Lars is more self-aware of his own biases and beliefs in this regard than you seem to be. Perhaps that is because Lars takes history (and philosophy seriously) while from where I am sitting you don’t and seem to be less self-aware of your own philosophical assumptions. We all have them, the only real question being how self-aware are we and can we hold two contradictory ideas/ideals in our minds at one time without out-right-rejecting one or the other in light of sustained critical reflection.
      .
      It is easy to settle on simply stories, just-so stories, that explain everything. Abstractions that make certain assumptions that ignore critical realities of human experience both individual and social, that exclude the ethical context of meanings and values, simply because one holds a certain scientistic faith that their exists some “social mathematics” than can reveal hidden laws of social-economic systems that ‘dilettantes’ cannot see (more a sign of hubris than wisdom). Complexity theory becomes the new cocoon for the Resurrection of the Laplacean Dream of mathesis universalis.
      .
      For example, one such core assumption in some theories of complexity are the belief (it is an assumption, not a proven scientific fact, hence ‘belief’) that human creativity is reducible to deterministic computational algorithm(s). This is the “humans as a kind of Turing machine (Shiozawa et. al. (2019), Kindle Locations 884-887)” that believes in the critical assumption of the computability of human economic behavior.
      .
      That is essentially the core foundation qua critical assumption (unsupported belief) in Kirman’s book and is exemplified in your statement that,”Routine behaviors comprise 99% of our [human] behaviors (Shiozawa et. al. (2019) Kindle Locations 437-445).”
      .
      I note that you cite this number with no reference but merely make an ex cathedra assertion because apparently this is required for the thesis that human creativity is ultimately reducible to an algorithm. This is essentially a pseudo-number based on belief not scientific empirical evidence. Mere story telling.
      .
      My point is there lies behind such assumptions philosophical positions that are taken for any number of reasons. Similar assumptions are being made with regards to population genetics. But without a deep understanding of the history (past and current) of theoretical biology one would never know that that old debates are now being renewed in light of recent scientific discoveries.

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