nep-hpe  New Economics Papers on History and Philosophy of Economics
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Issue of 2018‒11‒26           
fifteen papers chosen by     
Erik Thomson (University of Manitoba)           
 http://ep.repec.org/pth72   


[Selections by Humberto Barreto for SHOE list.]


 1. The Heckscher—Ohlin—Samuelson Trade Theory and the Cambridge 
     Capital Controversies: On the Validity of Factor Price Equalisation 
     Theorem
   Kazuhiro Kurose; Naoki Yoshihara
 3. The Evolution of money debate: functionalism versus chartalism, 
     Schumpeterian dynamics, Gresham's fallacy, and how history constrains 
     public finance
   Thomas Palley
 4. The Economists and Monetary Thought in Interwar New Zealand: The 
     Gradual Emergence of Monetary Policy Activism
   Geoffrey Brooke; Anthony Endres; Alan Rogers
 7. Growth without Expectations:The Original Sin of Neoclassical Growth 
     Models
   Michaël Assous; Muriel Dal Pont Legrand
 9. Classical labour values – properties of economic reproduction
   Zachariah, David; Cockshott, Paul
14. American Radical Economists in Mao’s China: From Hopes to 
     Disillusionment
   Isabella M Weber; Gregor Semieniuk

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 1. The Heckscher—Ohlin—Samuelson Trade Theory and the Cambridge 
     Capital Controversies: On the Validity of Factor Price Equalisation 
     Theorem
   Kazuhiro Kurose (Tohoku University); Naoki Yoshihara (School of 
    Management, Kochi University of Technology)
  This paper examines the validity of the factor price equalisation theorem 
  (FPET) in relation to capital theory. First, it presents a survey of the 
  literature on Heckscher—Ohlin—Samuelson (HOS) models that treat capital 
  as a primary factor, beginning with Samuelson (1953). In addition, by 
  consulting the Cambridge capital controversies, this paper observes that the 
  validity of the FPET relies crucially on this setting. It does no longer 
  hold whenever capital is assumed to be a bundle of reproducible commodities. 
  This paper also refers to the recent literature on the dynamic HOS trade 
  theory and argues that such studies ignore the difficulties posed by the 
  capital controversies. It thereby concludes that the FPET holds even when 
  capital is modelled as a reproducible factor. In conclusion, the paper 
  suggests the necessity of reconstructing basic theories of international 
  trade without relying on the FPET.
   JEL: B51 D33 F11
   Keywords: factor price equalisation, global univalence, capital as a 
    bundle of reproducible commodities, reswitching of techniques, capital 
    reversing
   Date: 2018–11
 URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:kch:wpaper:sdes-2018-17&r=hpe

 3. The Evolution of money debate: functionalism versus chartalism, 
     Schumpeterian dynamics, Gresham's fallacy, and how history constrains 
     public finance
   Thomas Palley
  This paper discusses the evolution of money and the monetary system. The 
  origins of money debate is framed in terms of functionalism versus 
  chartalism. Endogenous Schumpeterian dynamics apply to the evolution of 
  money and monetary systems, and those dynamics are supportive of the 
  functionalist perspective. A functionalist Schumpeterian lens shows 
  "Gresham's law" should be relabeled "Gresham's fallacy" because good money 
  drives out bad. The Gresham dynamic is also supportive of the functionalist 
  perspective. Lastly, the paper shows monetary history over the past 
  millennium does not support chartalist public finance claims as represented 
  by modern money theory (MMT).
   JEL: E4 E44
   Keywords: Money, functionalism, chartalism, Gresham’s law, Schumpeterian 
    dynamics, modern monetary theory
   Date: 2018
 URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:imk:fmmpap:34-2018&r=hpe

 4. The Economists and Monetary Thought in Interwar New Zealand: The 
     Gradual Emergence of Monetary Policy Activism
   Geoffrey Brooke (School of Economics, Auckland University of Technology); 
    Anthony Endres (Department of Economics, University of Auckland); Alan 
    Rogers (Department of Economics, University of Auckland)
  In spite of the existence of several monetary and central bank histories, 
  the emergence of monetary thought in New Zealand after 1914 has not been 
  subject to extensive analysis. This paper remedies this deficit for the 
  interwar period. The focus is upon the propagation of monetary ideas in New 
  Zealand and their intellectual sources. We apply a heuristic in which 
  different monetary doctrines are situated along a continuum between extreme 
  monetary policy ‘activism’ and extreme ‘minimalism’. In the 1920s, New 
  Zealand economists betrayed a minimalist bias across several dimensions: 
  money supply regulation, the role of money and the international monetary 
  transmission process in the business cycle, and the operation of bank-credit 
  allocation mechanisms. Incipient activism in the work of Condliffe and 
  Belshaw was countered by Niemeyer’s case for a minimalist central bank. 
  Fisher adopted an anti-reflationist, forced savings approach to the 1930s 
  crisis; he underscored the deleterious monetary and real consequences of 
  Government exchange rate management after 1933. Copland, Tocker, Belshaw and 
  Hight downplayed these consequences. Extended debate over the original 
  Reserve Bank legislation and perennial amendments thereafter, generated new 
  meanings for the phrase ‘monetary policy independence’; it also turned most 
  economists against extreme activism (or the policy of monetary nationalism) 
  that prevailed from 1938. Throughout the interwar period, New Zealand 
  entertained a vigorous contest of monetary ideas; most of those ideas were 
  inherited from the work of Keynes (as early as 1923), Hawtrey, Cannan, 
  Robbins, and Hayek, though adapted to local conditions.
   Keywords: New Zealand, population policy, migration, history of thought
   Date: 2018–11
 URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:aut:wpaper:201809&r=hpe

 7. Growth without Expectations:The Original Sin of Neoclassical Growth 
     Models
   Michaël Assous (Université Lyon 2, CNRS, Triangle); Muriel Dal Pont 
    Legrand (Université Côte d'Azur, CNRS, GREDEG, France)
  Early developments of growth theory are seen widely as the result of a 
  two-step process – the first represented by Harrod's Essay in Dynaamic 
  Theory, and the second by Solow's 1956 model. Harrod is considered to be the 
  first to highlight the pervasive instability in macrodynamics, which Solow 
  showed disappeared with the inclusion of flexible-coefficient production 
  functions. It has been recognized since that this is a misreading (Besomi 
  1995, 1998, Bruno and Dal-Pont Legrand 2014). Hoover and Halsmayer (2016) 
  examined how this "culture of misunderstanding" guided both Solow's 
  modelling work and his reading of Harrod. Our paper pays attention to the 
  specific issue of the introduction of an (independent) investment function 
  in those early growth models. Using new archival material, we examine this 
  complex issue and show how macroeconomists of that period dealt with 
  problems related to incorporating expectations, an a priori unavoidable step 
  in order to build robust investment functions. Those elements were indeed 
  discussed at length, in the early 1960s, by economists such as Sen, 
  Samuelson and Solow as shown in his correspondence with Hahn. Our paper 
  sheds light on some hidden foundations of growth models and examines the 
  nature of the break Solow’s model introduced in the growth research program 
  as initially defined by Harrod.
   JEL: B2 B22 E1
   Keywords: : growth, expectations, investment function, (in-)stability
   Date: 2018–11
 URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:gre:wpaper:2018-30&r=hpe

 9. Classical labour values – properties of economic reproduction
   Zachariah, David; Cockshott, Paul
  We attempt to clarify the meaning of labour value, a concept that originated 
  in classical political economy. Using a modern formalism, we show that 
  labour values are understood as a field property, or equivalently a 
  characteristic accounting property, of economic reproduction. The 
  applicability of the concept is discussed and its relation to productivity, 
  employment, surplus labour and unproductive activities are demonstrated.
   JEL: B0 C67 P16
   Keywords: classical political economy, labour theory of value
   Date: 2018–09–27
 URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:89832&r=hpe

14. American Radical Economists in Mao’s China: From Hopes to 
     Disillusionment
   Isabella M Weber; Gregor Semieniuk (Institute of Management Studies, 
    Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
  American radical economists in the 1960s perceived China under Maoism as an 
  important experiment in creating a new society, aspects of which they hoped 
  could serve as a model for the developing world. But the knowledge of 
  ‘actually existing Maoism’ was very limited due to the mutual isolation 
  between China and the US. This paper analyses the First Friendship 
  Delegation of American Radical Political Economists (FFDARPE) to the 
  People’s Republic of China in 1972, consisting mainly of Union for Radical 
  Political Economics (URPE) members, which was the first visit of a group of 
  American economists to China since 1949. Based on interviews with trip 
  participants as well as archival and published material, this paper studies 
  what we can learn about the engagement with Maoism by American radical 
  economists from their dialogues with Chinese hosts, from their on-the-ground 
  observations, and their reflection upon return. We show how the visitors’ 
  own ideas conflicted and intersected with their perception of the Maoist 
  practice on gender relations; workers’ management and life in the 
  communes. We also shed light on the diverging conceptions of the role for 
  economic expertise between URPE and late Maoism. As the first in-depth study 
  on the FFDARPE we provide rich empirical insights into an ice-breaking event 
  in the larger process of normalization in the Sino- U.S relations, that 
  ultimately led to the disillusionment of the Left with China.
   JEL: B24 N15 N45 O10 P21 P32
   Keywords: China; socialism and capitalism; transition economics; Maoism
   Date: 2018–10
 URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:soa:wpaper:212&r=hpe


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