2015
DOI: 10.4337/roke.2015.03.07
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Growth cycles: a response to Peter Skott

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“… That this is not the consensus view is pointed out to Skott, by von Arnim and Barrales (, p. 387). In addition, Mark Setterfield () has recently called attention to the fact that Harrod (, p. 33) himself had second thoughts about the Harrodian instability principle, as one required ‘a fairly large deviation … to bring the instability into play’, meaning in the present context that a large deviation away from the normal rate of utilization would be required to get the so‐called Harrodian investment function going, thus implying that a range of rates of utilization, and not just a unique normal rate, would be deemed to be acceptable to managers.…”
mentioning
confidence: 96%
“… That this is not the consensus view is pointed out to Skott, by von Arnim and Barrales (, p. 387). In addition, Mark Setterfield () has recently called attention to the fact that Harrod (, p. 33) himself had second thoughts about the Harrodian instability principle, as one required ‘a fairly large deviation … to bring the instability into play’, meaning in the present context that a large deviation away from the normal rate of utilization would be required to get the so‐called Harrodian investment function going, thus implying that a range of rates of utilization, and not just a unique normal rate, would be deemed to be acceptable to managers.…”
mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…A rise in the profit share occurs through a causal process running from some unexplained ‘shock’ that causes ‘excess demand’, leading to an ‘instantaneous’ price inflation (above wage inflation), thus generating an increase in output and a higher profit share ‘ex post’. Besides Skott's weird assumption of flex‐prices with prices clearing markets in the very short run (also criticized by von Arnim and Barrales, ), it is not obvious how workers could create ‘excess demand’ given that their expenditures are limited to, and always exactly equal to, the wage bill. A more realistic proposition would be to suppose that workers have access to credit.…”
Section: Wage‐led Versus Profit‐led Demandmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… In post‐Keynesian literature, von Arnim and Barrales () show that real wages are countercyclical over 2–3 quarter cycles and procyclical in business cycle frequency.…”
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confidence: 99%