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Dennis Robertson and the Real Business Cycle

In: Essays on Robertsonian Economics

Author

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  • Charles Goodhart

Abstract

In the course of re-reading DHR’s writings for this chapter, I came to believe that in his first major academic publication, the Study of Industrial Fluctuation (1915), Robertson had developed entirely on his own a clearly recognisable version of a Real Business Cycle theory. In Robertson’s basic model, incorporating single-person entrepreneurial firms, e. g. farmers, technological shocks, notably inventions, shift intertemporal production/consumption opportunity sets, and cause producers (rationally) to vary their intertemporal supply of effort/labour. There are no market failures, no money, no fluctuations in aggregate demand in DHR’s basic, stripped-down model. Of course, he subsequently extends his model to take account of the distinction between employers and employees, with the nominal wage rate of the latter being, in practice, slow to adjust; and he also then introduces, and discusses, monetary disturbances.

Suggested Citation

  • Charles Goodhart, 1992. "Dennis Robertson and the Real Business Cycle," Palgrave Macmillan Books, in: John R. Presley (ed.), Essays on Robertsonian Economics, chapter 2, pages 8-34, Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Handle: RePEc:pal:palchp:978-1-349-12567-8_2
    DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-12567-8_2
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    Cited by:

    1. Gordon Fletcher, 2006. "In Search of Dennis Robertson: Through the Looking Glass and What I Found There," Working Papers 200621, University of Liverpool, Department of Economics.
    2. Robert W. Dimand, 2012. "The Roots of the Present are in the Past: The Relation of Postwar Developments in Macroeconomics to Interwar Business Cycle and Monetary Theory," Chapters, in: Thomas Cate (ed.), Keynes’s General Theory, chapter 5, Edward Elgar Publishing.
    3. Mauro Boianovsky, 2005. "DENNIS ROBERTSON ON UTILITY AND WELFARE IN THE 1950s," Anais do XXXIII Encontro Nacional de Economia [Proceedings of the 33rd Brazilian Economics Meeting] 010, ANPEC - Associação Nacional dos Centros de Pós-Graduação em Economia [Brazilian Association of Graduate Programs in Economics].

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