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The Two Triangles: What Did Wicksell and Keynes Know About Macroeconomics that Modern Economists Do Not (Consider)?Ronny Mazzocchiaffiliation not provided to SSRN Roberto TamboriniUniversity of Trento - Department of Economics and Management Hans-Michael Trautweinaffiliation not provided to SSRN December 15, 2009 Univ. of Trento Dept. of Economics Discussion Paper No. 6/2009 Abstract: The current consensus in macroeconomics, as represented by the New Neoclassical Synthesis, is to work within frameworks that combine intertemporal optimization, imperfect competition and sticky prices. We contrast this “NNS triangle” with a model in the spirit of Wicksell and Keynes that sets the focus on interest-rate misalignments as problems of intertemporal coordination of consumption and production plans in imperfect capital markets. We show that, with minimal deviations from the standard perfect competition model, a model structure can be derived that looks similar to the NNS triangle, but yields substantially different conclusions with regard to the dynamics of inflation and output gaps and to the design of the appropriate rule for monetary policy.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 31 JEL Classification: E20, E31, E32, E52, D84 working papers seriesDate posted: December 18, 2009Suggested CitationContact Information
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