nep-pke New Economics Papers
on Post Keynesian Economics
Issue of 2007‒07‒20
five papers chosen by
Karl Petrick
University of the West Indies

  1. "A Simplified 'Benchmark” Stock-flow Consistent (SFC) Post-Keynesian Growth Model" By Claudio H. Dos Santos; Gennaro Zezza
  2. "The Effects of a Declining Housing Market on the U.S. Economy" By Dimitri B. Papadimitriou; Greg Hannsgen; Gennaro Zezza
  3. "Recent Trends in Household Wealth in the United States: Rising Debt and the Middle-Class Squeeze" By Edward N. Wolff
  4. Tawney's Century (1540-1640): the Roots of Modern Capitalist Entrepreneurship in England By John H. Munro
  5. Integrity and Agreement: Economics When Principles Also Matter By Lanse Minkler

  1. By: Claudio H. Dos Santos; Gennaro Zezza
    Abstract: Despite being arguably one of the most active areas of research in heterodox macroeconomics, the study of the dynamic properties of stock-flow consistent (SFC) growth models of financially sophisticated economies is still in its early stages. This paper attempts to offer a contribution to this line of research by presenting a simplified Post-Keynesian SFC growth model with well-defined dynamic properties, and using it to shed light on the merits and limitations of the current heterodox SFC literature.
    Date: 2007–06
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:lev:wrkpap:wp_503&r=pke
  2. By: Dimitri B. Papadimitriou; Greg Hannsgen; Gennaro Zezza
    Abstract: Longstanding speculation about the likelihood of a housing market collapse has given way in the past few months to consideration of just how far the housing market will fall and how much damage the debacle will inflict on the economy. In this paper, we discuss recent developments related to the housing market; econometrically assess the magnitude of the impact of housing price decreases on real private expenditure; assess the importance of new types of mortgages and mortgage-related securities; and briefly analyze possible policy responses.
    Date: 2007–07
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:lev:wrkpap:wp_506&r=pke
  3. By: Edward N. Wolff
    Abstract: I find here that the early 2000s witnessed both exploding debt and the middle-class squeeze. While median wealth grew briskly in the late 1990s, it fell slightly between 2001 and 2004, while the inequality of net worth increased slightly. Indebtedness, which fell substantially during the late 1990s, skyrocketed in the early 2000s. Among the middle class, the debt-to-income ratio reached its highest level in 20 years. The concentration of investment-type assets generally remained as high in 2004 as during the previous two decades. The racial and ethnic disparity in wealth holdings, after stabilizing during most of the 1990s, widened in the years between 1998 and 2001, but then narrowed during the early 2000s. Wealth also shifted in relative terms, away from young households (particularly those under age 35) and toward those in the 55–64 age group.
    Date: 2007–05
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:lev:wrkpap:wp_502&r=pke
  4. By: John H. Munro
    Abstract: Richard Tawney (1880-1962), who taught at the London School of Economics from 1917 to 1949, was unquestionably one of the very most important economic historians that England has ever produced: so much so, indeed, that the era of his major research and publications, 1540 - 1640, has justly come to be known as ‘Tawney’s Century’. Those publications, and the debates that they provoked, concern the origins or roots of modern capitalism and (implicitly) capitalist entrepreneurship that were supposed to have been established in this century. Though the roots of those economic developments, in particular those leading to more modern forms of industrial capitalism, may indeed lie in that century, nevertheless the main thesis of this study is that most of their positive fruits are instead to be found in the ensuing century of 1640 - 1740, the century preceding the advent of the modern Industrial Revolution. Tawney’s seminal scholarship, towards these ends, was concerned with two major issues. The first considered in this study is his 1926 monograph: Religion and the Rise of Capitalism, which in part was designed to promote, in the English-speaking world, Max Weber’s famous thesis (1905) on ‘The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism’. Both works focused on how three elements of one Protestant sect in particular, the Calvinists (from 1536), came to influence so deeply that Protestant Ethic and new ethos of modern capitalism: Predestination, the Calling, and ‘Worldly Asceticism’. The significance of this form of Protestantism in England is that Calvinists and other Non-Conformists or Dissenters, those who refused to conform to the Church of England after the 1660 royalist Restoration, constituted about one half of the known scientists, innovators, and entrepreneurs from the later 17th century and through the Industrial Revolution era (1760-1820), though constituting only 5 percent of the population. The debate concerns the roles of their restricted (legislated) minority status and of schools and superior educational systems that they had to establish, but also the applicability of the Weber-Tawney thesis, in explaining their superior economic performance. Tawney’s second major issue was that of ‘agrarian capitalism’, along with the supposed ‘rise of the gentry’: involving the transfer of vast amounts of land from the old aristocracy, the crown and church together, and finally the free-holding yeomanry into the hands of a non-aristocratic upper class who were far more predisposed and able to engage in profit-maximizing agriculture, especially through enclosures and the technology of the New Husbandry. But if Tawney dates this shift from Henry VIII’s Dissolution of the Monasteries, in 1536, this study contends that the real shift, but certainly a major shift, to ‘agrarian capitalism’, involving enclosures and the New Husbandry, again came only after the 1660s. To provide a contrast to Tawney’s work, this study examines two alternative theses on the origins of modern industrial capitalism within Tawney’s century (1540-1640): (1) Earl Hamilton’s thesis of ‘Profit Inflation’, one fully endorsed by Keynes; and (2) John Nef’s ‘Early Industrial Revolution in Tudor-Stuart England’. The Hamilton thesis is rejected in this study, with the contention that its true importance was to inspire Nef’s counter-thesis: on the decisive shift from wood and charcoal fuels to coal fuels, which in turn required very major technological changes (in furnace designs), which in turn led to major increases in industrial scale, and (for Nef) to true ‘industrial capitalism’. This study, noting the importance of Wrigley’s similar thesis on a shift from an organic (wood-based) to an inorganic (coal-based) industrial economy, supports the essence of the Nef thesis — but only for the period after 1640 (with new data). Finally, this study considers two other related changes so necessary for the development of early-modern capitalism, in this era: the development of the Full Rigged or Atlantic Ship (but from the 1450s) and the overseas joint-stock trading companies. Again, their major impact came after 1660, with the ‘New Colonialism’ (Hobsbawm) or ‘Commercial Revolution’ (Davis). The study also considers the history of the English joint stock companies, from the first joint-stock company, in overseas trade (the Muscovy Company of 1553) to the Bubble Act of 1720, which restricted their formation until 1825. Also included is their role in the so-called ‘Financial Revolution’ from 1694 to 1757 (‘Pelhams’s Conversion’ of the national debt).
    Keywords: entrepreneurship; capitalism; Calvinism; Weber-Tawney thesis; Dissenters; the Gentry; New Husbandry; joint-stock companies; Financial Revolution
    JEL: B11 B52 D23 D74 I20 L20 N43 N54 N64 N83
    Date: 2007–07–11
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:tor:tecipa:tecipa-295&r=pke
  5. By: Lanse Minkler (University of Connecticut)
    Date: 2007–07
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:uct:uconnp:2007-27&r=pke

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