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Hydraulic macroeconomics

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Phillips with MONIAC

Hydraulic macroeconomics is an informal characterization of certain types of macroeconomic study assuming aggregate social wealth (demand or supply) as somewhat smooth, constant and homogeneous. The term was first introduced as hydraulic Keynesianism by Alan Coddington in classification of theoretical research methodologies in Keynesian economics.[1][2]

Hydraulics is the science and engineering of the mechanical properties of liquids. Macroeconomics is the study of the performance and structure of an entire economy. Hydraulic macroeconomics is, essentially, a study of the economy that treats money as a form of liquid that circulates through the economic plumbing.

William Phillips, a famous economist and creator of the Phillips curve, invented the MONIAC, a hydraulic computer which simulated the British economy.[3][4][5] This is the inspiration for the term. Even earlier, in 1891, Irving Fisher built a hydraulic machine for calculating equilibrium prices.[6]

Initially, the phrase, "hydraulic macroeconomics", was associated with Keynesian economic models that did not display household or firm optimization.[7]

References

  1. ^ Coddington, Alan (1976). "Keynesian Economics: The Search for First Principles". Journal of Economic Literature. 14 (4): 1258–1273. JSTOR 2722548.
  2. ^ Coddington, Alan (1984). Keynesian Economics: The Search for First Principles. Boston: G. Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-0-04-330341-2.
  3. ^ Phillips, A. W. (1950). "Mechanical Models in Economic Dynamics". Economica. New Series. 17 (67): 283–305. doi:10.2307/2549721. JSTOR 2549721.
  4. ^ Barr, Nicholas. "The Phillips Machine". LSE Quarterly. 2 (4): 305–337.
  5. ^ "University of Manchester, Bulletin of the Computer Conservation Society".
  6. ^ Brainard, W. C.; Scarf, H. E. (2005). "How to Compute Equilibrium Prices in 1891". American Journal of Economics and Sociology. 64 (1): 57–83. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.180.2592. doi:10.1111/j.1536-7150.2005.00349.x.
  7. ^ Foss, Nicolai. "The Phillips Machine". Organization and Market.


This page was last edited on 15 August 2020, at 17:24
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