Keynesian Multiplier

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Capital Goods Industries
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Circuit Velocity
consume
consumption
Consumption Goods
Consumption Goods Sector
demand
Department II
Double Entry Bookkeeping
economic thought history
effective
Effective Demand
effective demand principle
Endogenous Money
endogenous money theory
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fiscal multiplier policy debate
fiscal policy analysis
Fundamental Psychological Law
goods
Income Multiplication Process
Income Velocity
investment
Investment Goods Sector
Investment Multiplier
Kaleckian approach
Keynes's General Theory
Keynesian Multiplier
Keynes’s General Theory
Logical Multiplier
marginal
Marginal Propensity
Monetary Production Economy
Multiplier Analysis
Multiplier Principle
Multiplier Process
Multiplier Result
Multiplier Theory
post-Keynesian economics
process
propensity
Purchasing Consumption Goods
sectors

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415320139
  • Weight: 474g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 25 May 2008
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The multiplier is a central concept in Keynesian and post-Keynesian economics. It is largely what justifies activist full-employment fiscal policy: an increase in fiscal expenditures contributing to multiple rounds of spending, thereby financing itself. Yet, while a copingstone of post-Keynesian theory, it is not universally accepted by all post-Keynesians, for reasons vastly different than the mainstream.
This book explores both the pros and cons of the multiplier from a strictly post-Keynesian – and Kaleckian – approach. Anchored within the tradition of endogenous money, this book offers a lively discussion from a number of well-known post-Keynesians from a variety of perspectives: history of thought, theory and economic policy. The book starts by analysing the historical foundations of the Keynesian Multiplier and it’s treatment throughout the history of economic thought. Moving through a critical debate about the limits of the multiplier, the contributions finish by offering cutting edge new views on this fascinating concept.

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Louis-Philippe Rochon is Associate Professor of Economics at Laurentian University, Ontario, Canada.

Claude Gnos is Associate Professor and Director of the Centre for Monetary and Financial Studies at the University of Burgundy, Dijon, in France.