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Monetarism: god is green
Posted on February 2nd, 2008 at 3:09 pm by wswanson

In the article “the Triumph of Monetarism,” the author Brad Long delineates the differences and similarities between monetarism and Keynesianism, arguing essentially that New Keynesianism is an implicit endorsement of monetarism because they both arise from the same foundations/assumptions.  We can understand New Keynesianism as asserting five major propositions.  1) Frictions within the pricing adjustment mechanisms cause business cycle fluctuations.  2) Monetary policy is generally better at stabilizing that is fiscal policy.  3) There is first a general long run trend, and business cycles are variations around that trend, rather than something completely different. 4) We should use policy rules, rather than being so idiosyncratic about decisions.  5) Stabilization policy will always be limited.  Monetarism, in its simplest form, says that the stock of money is most important determinant of interest rates and prices within the course of the business cycle.  However, the author spends the majority of this article explaining the variants of thought within the monetarist tradition, beginning with Irving Fisher. 

This is not simply Hume’s basic quantity of money theory, but rather the application of that basic model to function as a policy tool.  What was most significant about this “first monetarism” is not so much the theory itself, but rather the critiques and ideas that were born from the debate other “subspecies” monetarists like Keynes and Friedman.  In fact, monetarism of this sort was considered “useless” by Keynes, because it was only oriented to long run equilibrium, and “in the long we’re all dead.”

Chicago Monetarism was more sophisticated because it concentrated on the velocity money and the function of banks as multipliers of the money supply.  About the great depression, the Chicago school blamed the monetary and fiscal policies that “had “permitted banks to fail and the quantity of deposits to decline.”  Therefore, their policy prescription was to expand the money supply and run a big deficit.  There are a couple major cannons of Chicago Monetarism.  1) The velocity of money was not constant.  They believed this because inflation and deflation raised and lowered the demand for money (because the returns to investment go down and up).  During booms and busts people would spend or hoard respectively, causing a further variant on the velocity.  2) The control of the money supply was not straightforward or easy.  With a fractional reserve system and no deposit insurance, banks will be unsure about deposit demand and there will be huge swings in the deposit-currency ratio—these two things determine the money multiplier.  This means that aggregate indicators are important to old Chicago types.

Classical Monetarism is classical in the sense that we “classically” understand the world in terms of this school of thought.  Born from the Chicago tradition, this basically asserted that the government has some influence over spending and business cycle stabilization, as we see evidence for in the Volker Chairmanship during the 1970’s, when he ended inflation and facilitated growth using monetary policy (and some psychology).  The author also talks about “political monetarism,” but it’s boring and kind of silly, so I’ll end my post now. 

The Triumph of Monetarism?” by J. Brad de Long, 1999 from Monetarism Webpage at http://cepa.newschool.edu/het/schools/monetar.htm

Comments so far:

Link Here | February 5, 2008,

It’s Brad DeLong. He’s a very prominent economic historian and macroeconomist from Berkeley.

Comment by sgreenla">sgreenla |


Link Here | February 5, 2008,

Sounds good. I enjoyed his essay very much, dont let the last sentance make you think otherwise. I was talking more about the simplicity of political monetarism, and it was 4 in the morning; Im not trying to put down his article, or credentials, or his name, however its spelled.

Comment by wswanson


Link Here | February 5, 2008,

First and foremost, I want to thank the commentor for saving me from the drone that is “political monetarism”. However, I believe the author made a few key points in that section worth mentioning–just for economic history purposes–even if they were disproven. First, the political monetarism blamed the central bank solely if there were any discrepancies in the money supply for the bank was the primary tool. In addition, political monetarism also suggests that any policy which did not affect the money supply or velocity of money had no real affect on the economy.

For what its worth, the squabble between the Monetarist and Keynesians “gangs” in the 1960s brought about two things major results—First, brought about an interesting, Hollywood-like feud to economic history, and second, caused the necessary (and healthy) evolution of economic theories.

The New Keynesian acknowledgement of the “money matters” idea as well as importance of monetary policy (in the long run) could possibly be renamed New Monetarists. In addition, stabilization policy can have grand effects on unemployment and aggregate output in the short run (hence the horizontal aggregate supply curve).

Although I believe monetarism put in a good “fight” in this squabble, I agree with the author that there was no “triumph of monetarism” (even with the current Federal Reserve Chairman being a “target-inflationer”). The government still provides a level of intervention during extreme troughs of the business cycle utilizing both monetary and fiscal policy. The manipulation of the “multiplier effect” in government expenditure to offset economic downturns is a Keynesian commandment put in process quite frequently by the Federal Government. Although the monetarists won a number of victories, I believe the New Keynesian school of thought emerged triumphant.

P.S. I like your pink background.

Comment by Sarah Montgomery


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