Schools of Thought

Fundamentals of Market Investing by Adam J. McKee

The field of macroeconomics (much like psychology and other social science disciplines) can be organized into several different schools of thought, with differing views on how the markets and their participants operate.

Classical

Classical economists hold that prices, wages, and rates are flexible and markets always clear.  As there is no unemployment, growth depends upon the supply of production factors.

Keynesian

Keynesian economics was largely founded based on the works of John Maynard Keynes.  Keynesians focus on aggregate demand as the principal factor in issues like unemployment and the business cycle.  Keynesian economists believe that the business cycle can be managed by active government intervention through fiscal policy (spending more in recessions to stimulate demand) and monetary policy (stimulating demand with lower rates).  Keynesian economists also believe that there are certain rigidities in the system, particularly “sticky” wages, and prices that prevent the proper clearing of supply and demand.

Monetarist

The Monetarist school is largely credited to the works of Milton Friedman.  Monetarist economists believe that the role of government is to control inflation by controlling the money supply.  Monetarists believe that markets are typically clear and that participants have rational expectations.  Monetarists reject the Keynesian notion that governments can “manage” demand and that attempts to do so are destabilizing and likely to lead to inflation.

New Keynesian

The New Keynesian School attempts to add microeconomic foundations to traditional Keynesian economic theories.  While New Keynesians do accept that households and firms operate based on rational expectations, they still maintain that there are a variety of market failures, including sticky prices and wages.  Because of this “stickiness,” the government can improve macroeconomic conditions through fiscal and monetary policy.

Neoclassical

Neoclassical economics assumes that people have rational expectations and strive to maximize their utility.  This school presumes that people act independently based on all the information they can attain.  The idea of marginalism and maximizing marginal utility is attributed to the neoclassical school, as well as the notion that economic agents act based on rational expectations.  Since neoclassical economists believe the market is always in equilibrium, macroeconomics focuses on the growth of supply factors and the influence of money supply on price levels.

New Classical

The New Classical School is built largely on the Neoclassical School.  The New Classical School emphasizes the importance of microeconomics and models based on that behavior.  New Classical economists assume that all agents try to maximize their utility and have rational expectations.  They also believe that the market clears at all times.  New Classical economists believe that unemployment is largely voluntary and that discretionary fiscal policy is destabilizing, while inflation can be controlled with monetary policy.

Austrian

The Austrian school is an older school of economics that is seeing some resurgence in popularity.  Austrian school economists believe that human behavior is too idiosyncratic to model accurately with mathematics and that minimal government intervention is best.  The Austrian school has contributed useful theories and explanations on the business cycle, implications of capital intensity, and the importance of time and opportunity costs in determining consumption and value.

As we can see, there is plenty of room in the Ivory Tower for disagreement as to what exactly moves the economy, and what governments can do to improve things when they are going badly.

References and Further Reading

Classical Economics.  (nd).  Investopedia.

Available:  https://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/classicaleconomics.asp

Keynesian Economics.  (n.d.).  Investopedia.

Available:  https://www.investopedia.com/terms/k/keynesianeconomics.asp

Radcliffe, B. (nd).  Monetarism: Printing Money To Curb Inflation.  Investopedia.

Available:  https://www.investopedia.com/articles/economics/08/monetarism.asp


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