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Contrary to the strawman “classical” model of the textbooks, the original classical economists did not believe that money-stock changes affect only the price level and not real output and employment. Most classicals saw money as having powerful short-run real effects and perhaps some...
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The year 1982 saw the publication of Nicholas Kaldor’s The Scourge of Monetarism. Kaldor claimed his antimonetarist tract was in the tradition of Keynes’s 1936 General Theory. This article shows that Kaldor’s antimonetarist doctrines as well as their rival monetarist counterpart long...
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From Irving Fisher in 1907 to Jan Tinbergen in 1945 at least eight economists developed the famous diagram used to demonstrate the gains from international trade.
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