-
- Founder: Adam Smith (1776, An Inquiry into The Wealth of Nations)
- Belief: The Economy works best when markets are left alone
- Prices allocate resources efficiently (“invisible hand”).
- Advocated: Free trade, Specialization, Division of labor
- Unemployment - Temporary problem, markets will self-correct through price mechanisms.
- Minimal government role in the economy. (laissez-faire)
- Famous Classical Economists: Thomas Malthus, David Ricardo, Jean-Baptiste Say, John Stuart Mill
-
- Karl Marx Friedrich Engels (The Communist Manifesto, 1848).
- Criticism: Capitalism is flawed and will be replaced by socialism, then communism.
- The value of a good derives from the labor required to produce it.
- 1867 (Capital: Critique of Political Economy, Marx) - The capitalist system is built entirely upon the exploitation of labor.
- Ultimate Goal is public ownership of the stages of production, distribution, and exchange.
- Tightly controlled markets or no markets at all
-
- Stanley Jevons
- Emerged around 1870.
- Supply demand determine prices and output.
- Marginal analysis (comparing additional cost and additional benefits)
- Assumes individuals are rational decision-makers maximizing utility.
-
- Founded by Carl Menger, (prominent economists: Ludwig von Mises, Murray Rothbard, Friedrich Hayek)
- Related/subcomponent of the Neoclassical school of thought
- Closely aligned with the Libertarian Party (CO,1970s)
- Believe in free markets/no government involvement
- The Road to Serfdom, Hayek (Nobel Prize in Economics)
-
- John Watson (Psychology as the behaviorist views it)
- Borrows a lot from psychology
- Disagrees with the neoclassical belief that people will behave rationally
- Conducted lab studies that showed results of systemic irrationality
- Contains different subfields (Psychological Economics, Experimental Economics, Behavioral Economics)
-
- Founded by John Maynard Keynes (1930s, The General Theory).
- During the great depression, the classical school failed to explain unemployment.
- Markets do not always self-correct.
- The government must step in during recessions and have an active role in managing the economy.
- Employment demand are more important than the long-run balance.
-
- Milton Friedman (1976 Nobel Prize in Economics), blamed the Federal Reserve for the Great Depression
- Free markets
- Macroeconomy centric
- Believes that the money supply determines GDP believe we need a steady money supply growth from the Federal Reserve
-
- Focused on the role of legal and social norms (institutions)
- Extension of the Neoclassical School
- Created the concept of transactional cost( searching for products, negotiating terms, etc.)
- Ronald Coase believed that economists should study real markets and not theoretical ones.