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In this chapter we examined the different schools of thought in macro economics and the assumptions on which the economic theories are based. According to the classical approach, prices and wages are flexible and the economy is stable. The economy moves automatically and quickly to full employment equilibrium without any government intervention. |
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But Monetarists feel that a change in demand will change the prices not the real output. The Neo-classical approach is based on two assumptions: prices and wages are flexible and adjust quickly to balance supply and demand; people's expectation are formed on the basis of all available information and government cannot mislead them as they are well informed and have access to all the information about government's monetary and fiscal policies.
The early 1980s saw the emergence of a new school of thought that emphasized the impact of aggregate supply on the economic growth of nations. This new school of thought was called 'supply-side economics'. The supply-side economists believed that incentives and tax-rates influence the economy's aggregate supply to a great extent.
The Classical Tradition
Say's Law of Markets
The Keynesian Revolution
Keynesian Approach Vs Classical Economics
The Monetarist Approach
The History of Monetarism
The Velocity of Money
The Quantity Theory of Prices
Modern Monetarism
Comparison of Monetarist and Keynesian Approaches
New-Classical Macro Economics
Rational Expectations
Supply-Side Economics
Factors Determining Economic Growth in Supply-side Economics
Criticism