A recent symposium in the Journal of Political Economy was devoted to two papers in which Professor Friedman had developed more explicitly than previously the theoretical framework underlying his monetary analysis. In the view of the present authors — and, to judge from his reply to his critics, in Friedman's view as well — the symposium was disappointing in its concentration on secondary and polemical questions to the neglect of the basic issues that Friedman had raised. The present paper therefore returns to a consideration of what we conceive to be the fundamental questions posed by Friedman's two papers. The most important of these is, we shall argue, an issue that was never raised in the symposium at all: namely, whether it is appropriate to construct a theory which seeks first to predict changes in nominal income and then to determine the price‐output breakdown, rather than to predict price and output changes separately and to obtain changes in nominal income by aggregating the two. But discussion of this question requires a brief survey of one of Friedman's models, and two related models specified at the same level of generality.
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1 February 1974
Review Article|
February 01 1974
FRIEDMAN ON THE THEORY OF INCOME ADJUSTMENT
JOHN WILLIAMSON;
JOHN WILLIAMSON
University of Warwick and International Monetary Fund
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NICHOLAS RAU
NICHOLAS RAU
University College, London and University of Rochester
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7387
Print ISSN: 0144-3585
© MCB UP Limited
1974
Journal of Economic Studies (1974) 1 (2): 77–87.
Citation
WILLIAMSON J, RAU N (1974), "FRIEDMAN ON THE THEORY OF INCOME ADJUSTMENT". Journal of Economic Studies, Vol. 1 No. 2 pp. 77–87, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb008039
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