----------------- HES POSTING -----------------
There appear to be some distinctive similarities between Paul Douglas'
(1934) Theory of Wages and Keynes' General Theory (1936).
Among the similarities are:
1. An assault on some of the assumptions of neoclassical marginal
productivity theory.
Keynes' (1936, chapter two) 'Postulates of Classical Economics' is similar
in content and style to Douglas' (1934, chapter III) 'Postulates of the
Marginal Productivity Theory'. Douglas (1934, 70) sought to illuminate
some of the "unconsciously implicit" neoclassical assumptions. So too did
Keynes.
Both Douglas (1934, 94) and Keynes (1936, 6, 17) emphasised that they were
questioning only some of the assumptions of marginal productivity theory.
Douglas (134, 95-6) argued that "the method of the marginal productivity
school, as indeed of the entire school of orthodox economists, has
described
a portion of reality" but "it is dangerous to assume that the neat tidy
world of the syllogism is in fact a picture of the real world. This
caution
is applicable to physical sciences, but it is even more true in economic
and
social life". Keynes (1936, 16) stated that "the classical theorists
resemble Euclidian geometers in a non-Euclidian world … in truth, there is
no remedy except to throw over the axiom of parallels and to work out a
non-Euclidian geometry. Something similar is required today in economics".
2. The Quantitative Alternative
Douglas (1934, 96) specifically recommended quantitative economics as the
antidote to this methodological impasse. Keynes argued (1936, 332) that
the
"excellently complete statistics now available in the United States" were
available to illustrate aspects of the theory of the Trade Cycle . Chapter
6 of the unwritten Footnotes to the General Theory, was entitled
'Statistical notes' (JMK XIV [1936], 134).
3. Unemployment
Douglas (1934, 70) noted that "One of the more remarkable features about
the
theoretical work of both the classical and neo-classical schools has been
their failure to recognise the possibility of unemployment". Keynes (1936,
15) argued that "classical theory does not admit … the possibility of …
'involuntary' unemployment".
Has this been noted in the literature before?
Robert Leeson
Murdoch University
------------ FOOTER TO HES POSTING ------------
For information, send the message "info HES" to [log in to unmask]
|