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Expectations, Conjectures and Beliefs. The Legacy of Marshall, Kahn and Keynes

In: Expectations

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  • Maria Cristina Marcuzzo

    (Sapienza, UniversitĂ  di Roma)

Abstract

The purpose of this chapter is to portray a mode of inquiry into expectations by three Cambridge authors in which the expectations are not conceptualized or modelled on the basis of a probability distribution. As to whether this is due to a clearly stated opposition (as in the case of Keynes) or want of the appropriate technique, or indeed a different research approach environment, there may be more than one answer. Within its limited and non-exhaustive scope, this chapter offers an interpretation based on the idea that these economists shared a view of the method appropriate to economic theorizing. I first present a summary of the main points made by Marshall, Kahn and Keynes on the role of expectations, then I address two issues relevant in contemporary discussion, i.e. the role of expectations in generating market instability and the advantages of taking future markets and experiments as evidence of observable expectations. This latter point leads to a brief discussion on the dividing line between two currents of thought in the Cambridge tradition, namely subjective versus observable quantities, associated with the followers of the view of the matter taken by Keynes on the one hand and by Sraffa on the other.

Suggested Citation

  • Maria Cristina Marcuzzo, 2020. "Expectations, Conjectures and Beliefs. The Legacy of Marshall, Kahn and Keynes," Springer Studies in the History of Economic Thought, in: Arie Arnon & Warren Young & Karine van der Beek (ed.), Expectations, pages 53-67, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:spshcp:978-3-030-41357-6_3
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-41357-6_3
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    Cited by:

    1. Rivot, Sylvie, 2021. "Reading Keynes’s policy papers through the prism of his Treatise on Probability: information, expectations and revision of probabilities in economic policy," OSF Preprints s5qp9, Center for Open Science.

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