The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

247


Traders in financial markets form
rational expectations based partly
on the actions of their colleagues at
work. Failure to read the signs will
lead to punishment by the market.

This became known as the “Lucas
critique,” and it was powerful
enough to convince most
economists that attempts to model
the whole economy through its
structural relationships, as
Keynesian models do, are flawed.
Modeling should instead focus
on people’s deeper underlying
preferences, and the resources
and technologies that direct
individual behavior. Lucas
suggested a “new classical”
approach to macroeconomics,
offering a partial return to the
pre-Keynesian world. Later “real
business cycle” models claimed
that changes in employment are
driven by changes in “real” labor
factors, such as productivity
increases or changes in people’s
preferences for leisure over work.
The critical feature of both real
business cycles and new classical
models is that they model the
macroeconomy on the result of
individuals’ rational behavior.
Although people do not have
entirely rational expectations in
reality, the assumption that they do
helps economists to build workable
models that are useful guides to the


functioning of the economy.
Rational expectations have come
under criticism by behavioral
economists who work on more
psychologically realistic models. ■

POST-WAR ECONOMICS


John Muth


US economist John Muth was
born in 1930. He studied
industrial engineering at
Washington University in St.
Louis, then mathematical
economics at Carnegie Mellon
(then called Carnegie Tech) in
Pittsburgh. Carnegie had an
extraordinary faculty in the
1950s, when Muth studied for
his PhD there—it included
future Nobel laureates Franco
Modigliani, John Nash, Herb
Simon, and later Robert Lucas.
Muth’s first paper on
rational expectations was
published in 1961 and was
little noticed at the time. A
shy, modest man, Muth was
unable to find a publisher for a
later article on the subject and
so moved on to work in other
fields, producing seminal work
in the field of operations
management and artificial
intelligence. Other economics
researchers such as Lucas and
Simon furthered Muth’s work
on rational expectations and
won major awards for their
contributions, but Muth
remained unacknowledged by
the wider world. He went on
to teach at Michigan State and
Indiana, both universities that
lacked status but allowed him
to satisfy his broad intellectual
curiosity. He is considered to
be the father of the “rational
expectations revolution.”
Muth died in 2005.

Key works

1960 Optimal Properties
of Exponentially
Weighted Forecasts
1961 Rational Expectations
and the Theory of
Price Movements
1966 Forecasting Models

The benefits of inflation
derive from the use of
expansionary policy to
trick economic agents
into behaving in socially
preferable ways even
though their behavior
is not in their own interest.
Robert Hall
US economist (1943– )
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