6533b856fe1ef96bd12b24bb
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Is ex‐ante ex‐post analysis irrelevant to Keynes's theory of employment?
Claude Gnossubject
MicroeconomicsFactor incomeEx-anteDismissalIncome distributionKeynesian economicsPolitical Science and International RelationsEconomics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)EconomicsDiscount pointsPrinciple of effective demandAggregate demandSupply and demanddescription
Ex‐ante ex‐post analysis has become a standard tool in macroeconomics. Yet Keynes dismissed it. We argue that Keynes's dismissal of ex‐ante ex‐post analysis is not an oddity but an indication of the originality of his theory of employment compared to standard macroeconomics. First, the principle of effective demand does not amount to a process that determines employment and income at the point of intersection of the traditionally defined ex ante supply and demand functions. Second, the finance motive allowed Keynes to confirm the identity of aggregate supply and demand already asserted in The General Theory. This latter conclusion is puzzling, however, since the principle of effective demand presupposes the possibility of a discrepancy between supply and demand. We suggest that Keynes's theory of employment is linked to a theory of income distribution whereby profits are a redistributed share of factor income which is transferred to firms when prices exceed factor costs. The identity and the equilibrium c...
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2004-07-01 | Review of Political Economy |