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Godley economics (!!). Part II illustrates work conducted by and with Wynne Godley: Monetary Economics: An Integrated Approach to Credit, Money, Income, Production and Wealth. Origins. Two strands of research linking stocks and flows: Godley and Cripps (1982) at Cambridge,
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Godley economics (!!) • Part II illustrates work conducted by and with Wynne Godley: • Monetary Economics: An Integrated Approach to Credit, Money, Income, Production and Wealth.
Origins • Two strands of research linking stocks and flows: • Godley and Cripps (1982) at Cambridge, • Cambridge Economic Policy Group, • New Cambridge school (1970’s). • Tobin (1982) and his associates at Yale, • the ‘pitfalls approach’ (1969) • the New Haven school.
Revival • New impetus with the more recent works of Godley (1996, 1999), which combines elements of the two strands, and adds behavioural equations conducive to simulations. • (see Dos Santos (2002) for a general assessment). • New School University (Lance Taylor, A. Shaikh, W. Semmler).
General features • Tobin (1982, Nobel Lecture) • Models ought to track stocks; • Models should have several assets and rates of return; • Models include financial and monetary operations • Models include the sectoral budget constraints • and the adding-up constraints in portfolio equations
Other key features • There cannot be any black holes. • “The fact that money stocks and flows must satisfy accounting identities in individual budgets and in an economy as a whole provides a fundamental law of macroeconomics analogous to the principle of conservation of energy in physics” (Godley and Cripps 1983). • There are intrinsic dynamics, Turnovsky (1977) • There are lag dynamics, to avoid telescoping time (Hicks, 1965)
Simulations • Because the models easily run up a high number of equations, the simulation method is put to the forefront. • Hopefully, it can resolve some controversies among theorists.
Procedural rationality • Agents react to disequilibria on the basis of partial adjustment functions. • There is no need nor no room for the rational expectations hypothesis. • Still agents in our models are rational: they display a kind of procedural rationality, sometimes misleadingly called weakrationality or bounded rationality, or more appropriately named reasonable rationality. • They react to new information. • They entertain norms • They may revise these norms
Models are Kaleckian or Kaldorian • They are demand-led • Imperfect competition, • Imperfect information, • Markup pricing, • Fixed technical coefficients, • The relevance of income distribution, • The role of capacity utilization and corporate retained profits, • the importance of lags and time, • Long run trends being conceived as “a slowly changing component of a chain of short period situations” (Kalecki, 1971: 165)
Godley models are PK models • Emphasis on monetary economics • The monetary side is integrated to the real side • There is a link with the monetary circuit • Closures are based on the notion of endogenous money • Disequilibria can be studied • There are inflation-accounted measures of the main variable
Three tools for stock-flow consistency • A balance sheet matrix • A transactions flow matrix • A revaluation (or reconciliation) account
The quadruple entry principle • « Because moneyflows transactions involve two transactors, the social accounting approach to moneyflows rests not on a double-entry system but on a quadruple-entry system » (Copeland, 1949)
The first step of government expenditures financed by the central bank
The second step of government expenditures financed by the central bank