The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

WAR AND DEPRESSIONS 161


Classical resurgence
Keynesianism became discredited
in the 1970s as European
economies ran into trouble.
Classical ideas about
unemployment were revived by
the so-called “new classical”
school of economists, who once
again denied the possibility
of persistent involuntary
unemployment. The US economist
Robert Lucas (1937– ) was one
of the leaders of the assault on
Keynesianism. When he was
asked how he would describe
an accountant who was driving
a taxi because he could not find a
job as an accountant, Lucas
replied, “I would describe him as
a taxi driver, if what he is doing is
driving a taxi.” For the modern
classicists the market always
clears, and workers always have
a choice whether to work or not.
Efficiency wage theorists
might agree that all workers who
want jobs in a recession might
be able to get one, but they think
that some workers—like the
accountant—are underutilized
and are not maximizing their
value to the economy. As a taxi


driver, the man is still an
involuntarily unemployed
accountant. When demand in
the economy returns to a normal
level, he will return to his most
productive and efficient
occupation: accountancy.
Fundamental difference in views
about the ability of markets to
adjust lie at the heart of the debate
between Keynesians and the
classical economists.

Classical reality
Keynes would probably have
agreed with the American Nobel
Prize-winning economist Joseph
Stiglitz (p.338), who said that
during the Great Depression in
the US one quarter of the
unemployed workforce of Chicago
might be said to have chosen to
be unemployed because they
could have migrated west to
California to pick fruit on farms,
along with the millions of others
who did so. He said that
nonetheless, this still represents
a massive failure of the market,
and if classical theory suggests
that there is nothing more to be
done than commiserate with the
unemployed on their bad luck, we
would be better off not consulting
the theory at all. ■

Is an accountant driving a taxi an out-
of-work accountant or an in-work taxi
driver? Keynesians might say that he is
involuntarily unemployed. New classical
economists say he has got a job.


John Maynard Keynes


Born in 1883, the year that
Karl Marx died, John Maynard
Keynes was an unlikely savior
of the working class. Raised in
Cambridge, England, by
academic parents, he lived a
life of privilege.
He won a scholarship to
Cambridge University, where
he studied mathematics, then
spent time working for the
British government in India
and published his first book:
Indian Currency and Finance.
Keynes was an advisor
at both the Paris Peace
Conference after World War I
and at the Bretton Woods
Conference after World War II.
He always did several things
at once—while writing The
General Theory, he built a
theater, and he counted
leading writers and artists
among his friends. Keynes
made his fortune on the stock
market and used much of it to
support his artist friends. He
died of heart problems in 1946.

Key works

1919 The Economic
Consequences of the Peace
1930 A Treatise on Money
1936 The General Theory of
Employment, Interest,
and Money

The sooner involuntary
unemployment is disposed
with, the better.
Robert Lucas
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