A dynamic approach to the theory of effective demand
Abstract
This paper attempts to resituate the theory of effective demand within a dynamic
nonequilibrium context. Existing theories of effective demand, which derive from
the works of Keynes and Kalecki, are generally posed in state equilibrium terms. That is to
say, they serve to define a given level of output which corresponds to the equilibrium point
between aggregate demand and supply. We propose to generalize this analysis in three ways.
First, we will extend the analysis to encompass a dynamic (i.e. moving) short-run path of
output, rather than a merely static level. Second, we will show that his dynamic short-run
path need not imply an equilibrium analysis, since it can arise from either stochastically
sustained cycles or deterministic limit cycles. And third, we will prove that the preceding
generalization of the theory of effective demand will allow us to solve a long-standing problem
in growth theory: namely the puzzle surrounding the apparently intractable instability
of warranted growth. We will show that the actual path of growth does indeed gravitate
around the warranted path in a cyclical sense.
JEL Classification: E12; E32.
Keywords: Economic growth effective demand