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Edward J. Nell

Edward J. Nell (born July 16, 1935) is an American economist and a former professor at the New School for Social Research. Nell was a member of the New School faculty from 1969 to 2014. He achieved the rank of Malcolm B. Smith Professor of Economics in 1990.

Edward J. Nell
Born (1935-07-16) July 16, 1935 (age 88)
NationalityAmerican
Academic career
InstitutionNew School for Social Research, N.Y
FieldMacroeconomics, development economics, monetary analysis, finance, philosophy of economics
School or
tradition
Post-Keynesian economics Georgism
Alma materPrinceton University, Oxford University

Nell's contributions are in the field of macroeconomic theory, monetary analysis and finance, economic methodology and philosophy, and development.[1] His articles on economic theory and methodology have appeared in leading journals like the American Economic Review, the Journal of Political Economy, the Journal of Economic Literature, Cambridge Journal of Economics, Eastern Economic Journal, Review of Political Economy, Economic Development and Cultural Change, Analysis, and Social Research.[2]

Nell is known for his critical view of the methodological and philosophical foundations of neoclassical economics, examined in his best known book Rational Economic Man (Cambridge University Press, 1975) and coauthored with English rationalist philosopher Martin Hollis.[3] Nell is also the originator of the General Theory of 'Transformational Growth'. The full development of the General Theory of Transformational Growth came in the 90s, and was published as The General Theory of Transformational Growth (Cambridge University Press, 1998).[4] The methodology/philosophy which underlies the Theory of Transformational Growth is a form of realism, based on filling in 'conceptual truths' by doing fieldwork and then building models of solidly based institutionally grounded relationships.[5]

Biography edit

Nell was born in Riverside, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, on July 16, 1935, only son of Marcella and Edward Nell. His father was a journalist and professor of journalism at Northwestern University; he ran the Quill and Scroll foundation for high school journalism. His mother was a public school administrator and then a professor of education at Roosevelt University.

Nell attended Princeton University (1954–1957) and received his B.A magna cum laude in 1957 (in the Woodrow Wilson School). His field of study at Princeton varied a good deal. He studied mathematics, physics and philosophy, before discovering a passion for economics and politics. He was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship[6] in 1957 which took him to Oxford University. Though he had already completed a B.A from Princeton, Oxford enrolled him for another, as was the custom at the time. He obtained a First in PPE in 1959 at Magdalen College, studying with Frank Burchardt and David Worswick. Nell then stayed at Nuffield College (1959–1962), Oxford University, to do his advanced work on the foundations of economic analysis, complete his doctoral thesis and further develop his research.

He returned to the US to teach at Wesleyan University, but later went back to the UK to lecture at the University of East Anglia, also doing research at Cambridge University. On various leaves of absence from the New School for Social Research he taught at Bennington College, and at Bard College, at McGill University, the University of Siena in Italy, and the University of Bremen, and Goethe University in Frankfurt, Germany. He gave sets of lectures and seminars in Europe — in France, at the Universities of Paris, Orleans and Nice; in the U.K at the Universities of Oxford, and Cambridge, and at East Anglia, Warwick, Essex, and Sussex; in Italy at the Universities of Rome, Milano, Catania and Siena; in Austria at the Universities of Graz and Vienna; in Germany at the Universities of Bremen, Frankfurt, Kiel, Regensburg, and Hanover; in Canada, at Trent University, Waterloo, McGill and HEC-Montreal. And at New South Wales, Melbourne, Newcastle, Adelaide and Sydney in Australia. Many of these lectures were associated with research projects with colleagues in these universities.[7]

Contributions to economics edit

Economics and philosophy edit

Nell's best known research on economics and philosophy was a book published in 1975 by Cambridge University Press under the title Rational Economic Man (coauthored with philosopher Martin Hollis).[8] Lavoie, D. C. (1977, p. 325)[9] argued that

To the devastating critiques of positivism by such philosophers as Brand Blanshard, W. V. Quine, S. Toulmin, A. R. Lousch and Karl Popper, can now be added that of Professors Hollis and Nell. The reason for the impotence modern economics, these authors show, lies in its method. The rejuvenation of economics necessitates developing a different methodology, one which pays attention to the aspects of social sciences which distinguish them from natural sciences. We need a method which recognizes that people are not atoms and that society is not a laboratory.

Since the early 1960s Nell had been critical of the neoclassical research program and had attempted to draw out the unstated assumptions of neoclassical economics and submit them to methodological scrutiny. His 1966 doctoral thesis was on 'Models of Behavior'. Hollis and Nell (1975) is an extension of that doctoral thesis. In Hollis and Nell (1975), they outline an alternative vision to neo-Classicism based on a rationalist theory of knowledge. They dissect the textbook combination of neo-Classicism and Positivism, so crucial to the defence of orthodox economics against now-familiar objections. Hollis and Nell's approach to methodology breaks with the traditional approach by focusing on the problems of the applicability of (the then) current neo-Classical theories. Coherent theories, describing the behaviour of 'assumed' – thus imaginary — rational agents, are developed. But what are the conditions for applying such theories to actual agents? The neo-Classical answer hinges on its view of rational individuals.[10]

Fiscal theory: Georgism edit

Fiscally, Nell is a strong and active proponent of Georgist tax reform. Not only for its widely accepted benefits for economic efficiency, but because he believes that the land market contributes to inequality and financial instability.[11] Nell is ex-vice-president and board member of the Henry George School of Social Science (New York).

Theory of money and finance edit

His first papers, in the 1960s, laid the basis for his later work. Wicksell's Theory of Circulation, set out the problem of explaining how money circulates – that is, showing how a given sum of money 'monetizes' all the basic economic variables.[12] Indeed, Lavoie, Rodriguez and Seccareccia (2004, pp. 3–4))[13] argued that

As early 1967, Nell had published a paper on Wicksell's monetary circuit in the Journal of Political Economy. There, he explored several of the questions that were to become the prime focus of the French circuit theories, and that were highlighted again, first in a little-known working paper (Nell, 1986), and then in the highly successful book that he edited with Ghislain Deleplaces in 1996, Money in motion....In his 1967 paper on monetary circulation within a Wickselian framework, Nell took into account the impact of interest payments on aggregate demand and on the closure of the monetary circuit. Even since 1967, we believe, Nell has been tantalized by the relationship between the real and the monetary aspects of the economy.

In many ways Nell's approach goes back to Francois Quesnay; where money traced out the transactions between the different classes and sectors of society. Although Wassily Leontief was best known for his 'Input Output Mode', a major contribution to economic analysis could be found in his doctoral thesis, done in 1928 at the University of Berlin, on 'Economics as a Circulation' (in German "Wirtschaft als Kreislauf."), under the direction of L.Von Bortkiewicz and Werner Sombart. This work helped to influence Nell's vision of 'Monetary Circulation'. (Although they had met previously he came to know Leontief when he founded the Institute for Economic Analysis in N.Y; later he met and appreciated Faye Duchin and others there. He particularly appreciated their studies of wage-profit relations, and the work on input-output and the environment). John Hicks (1967) noted the difference between the 'transactions demand', which rested on structure and contracts, and the speculative demand which he described as a 'voluntary' matter, a proper subject for the theory of choice. James Tobin and Franco Modigliani both analyze the decision to hold money; Nell, following Wicksell and the early Quantity Theorists, is concerned with the pattern according to which it is spent, to determine how much money is required to ensure that all transactions are fully 'monetized'. These questions stem from Quesnay, via Leontief.

Like Robert Mundell Nell places himself at the intersection of three theoretical schools: Keynesian, monetarist, and Ricardian. Each camp contributes something of value to economic analysis and policymaking. For Mundell, Keynesians contribute the multiplier effect of federal budgets for stabilization; Monetarists, monetary stability for encouraging growth-promoting investments; and the Ricardians, the importance of free trade and investment flows for maximizing social welfare. Nell draws in the same way on the Keynesians, but looks to the older Quantity Theorists for accounts of monetary circulation, and draws on the Ricardians for the theory of value while he looks to Joseph Schumpeter for an approach to innovation and competition.

In 2004 Monetizing the Classical Equations, which had been circulating for three years was finally published. It finally pulls the story of monetary circulation together, detailing how the pressures of transformational growth – including the emergence of fixed capital and the finance necessary for it — led to systematic changes first in the monetary system, then in banking, with the result that the way the interest rate is determined changed significantly.[14]

Theory of transformational growth edit

The first statement of the theory of transformational growth came in 1988 in his book Prosperity and Public Spending, laying out the idea that markets worked differently when technology was craft-based. Costs were structured differently, and it made sense that prices would be flexible, but employment would tend to be inflexible. This gave rise to incentives to change the structure of costs, however, leading to Mass Production, and cost conditions in which it makes sense to hold prices steady and vary employment.[15]

The full development of the theory of transformational growth came in the 90s, and was published as The General Theory of Transformational Growth (Cambridge University Press, 1998), starting from a critique of equilibrium –supporting creative destruction instead – working through methodological and philosophical questions about the role of contracts and obligations in understanding the persistence of institutional structures, to the circulation of money, understanding productivity and the structure of production – especially the relationship between the wage bill of capital goods and the capital requirements in consumer goods – then going on to dynamics, and from there to aggregate demand and the business cycle. 'Investment' must be separated into two steps: investment planning, which depends on innovation and requires planning for prices and costs, and investment spending, which depends on earnings and finance. There can be no single, simple "investment function" which sums this up; macro models have to be reconstructed. Finally the book concludes by examining the interactions between economic forces and pressures and the changing character of social institutions.[16]

Nell is the originator of the Theory of 'Transformational Growth', which traces the pattern of capitalist development through a succession of stages, in each of which markets adjust differently, and in doing so, give rise to market pressures leading to innovations which move the system to the next stage. In each stage the working of markets will be governed in part by the structure of costs and the pattern of growth in demand, both of which depend on technology and innovation. The approach draws on the empirical work of Simon Kuznets, and makes use of Nicholas Kaldor's notion of stylized facts; it also draws on the work of W. Arthur Lewis and Gunnar Myrdal in regard to stages of development. It is, however, consistent only in part with Robert Solow's neo-Classical approach; as in that construction the substitution of capital for labor is crucial. However, transformational growth rejects the idea of a steady state and presents a model of multiple sectors regularly changing in size and importance. On the other hand, Douglass North's emphasis on institutions is echoed here.[17] Ross Thomson (2004, pp. 81) argued that

Understanding capitalist development is still beyond the capabilities of economic theory, at least in its formalized version. Intrinsically innovative, uneven across sectors and countries, and evolving through qualitative changes in institutional structure, development involves such complexity that major insights, including those of Marx,Veblen, Schumpeter, and Chandler, often come from outside formal theory. The usefulness of these insights suggests that theory must be reconceptualized to understand capitalist development. Edward Nell attempts such a reconceptualization. Nell portrays development as a cumulative process in which economic institutions and technologies evolve in a single, mutually engendering dynamic. In the General Theory of Transformational Growth (1998), he gives theory the task of understanding this cumulative process. In the TG approach, markets generate innovations, most importantly technological changes, and these innovations restructure markets. This process imparts a direction to capitalist development as sectors rise and fall, production is reorganized, and markets are reshaped.

Furthermore, Geoffrey M. Hudgson (2004)[18] argued that:

Edward Nell's rich and enlightening The General Transformational Growth (1998) has over seven hundred pages and cites many authors. But there is no reference to Thorstein Veblen. Yet there are remarkable connections and similarities between the thought of Veblen and that of Nell. Most obviously, both are acutely concerned with the perilous dynamics and checkered effects of modern capitalism. But the similarities go deeper. At the core of their separate arguments concerning capitalist development are deep understandings of the significance and role of technology. Furthermore, Nell (1998, 26–36, 410–68) key argument concerning the shift from a craft economy to mass production has uncannily close parallels in Veblen's (1904: 364–68; 1914: 230–355) analysis of the transformation from the era of handicraft production to the machinery industry with its machine process. Indeed, both Veblen and Nell invest this transformation with major economic, cultural, and dynamic consequences.

In contrast to many conventional theories, the economic analysis which supports the transformational growth perspective is not based primarily on rational choice. There is a place for rational choice, and for equilibrium theory, but in Nell's view it is a subordinate place – and much of the activity there will be prescriptive rather than descriptive. Actual markets are always in motion; equilibrium is rare and dynamic analysis necessary.[19]

The methodology/philosophy which underlies the Theory of Transformational Growth is a form of realism, based on filling in 'conceptual truths' by doing fieldwork and then building models of solidly based institutionally grounded relationships. The result will be open models, which can only be closed temporarily by 'setting' certain inherently unreliable relationships. This has implications for econometrics – not all economic relationships are on a par. Some are reliable and can be reliably established; others are inherently unreliable, especially those which are forward-looking. They are likely to change 'spontaneously'. They have to be estimated on a temporary basis by fieldwork and good guessing. Nor is there anything wrong with this. But it means that an econometric model must be divided into two parts – the reliable relationships and the volatile ones.[20][21]

Nell's published and unpublished papers dealing with these and other issues were collected in his 1992 book (Transformational Growth and Effective Demand, New York University Press, 1992). This book was intended at the time to provide as comprehensive a statement of an alternative approach as possible. In retrospect, however, it only partly succeeds; there is no discussion of money, credit and banking. Circulation was left out, because at that time the theory had not been completed. And the theory of transformational growth was only sketched. However, the historical sections and the theory of effective demand are presented very well.

When the 1992 book came out it was supported by a separate volume, published by Nell in 1998 (Transformational Growth and the Business Cycle, London: Routledge, 1998). The book contained the work of a study group of New School students, testing the empirical validity of the approach, by examining the time series of prices, wages, employment, output and productivity in six countries. About the same time Nell wrote a book in 1996 (Making Sense of a Changing Economy, London: Routledge, 1996) and laying out the 'paradoxes of individualism', and providing both a critique of the social philosophy of individualism and suggestions for a more satisfactory approach.

The shift from Craft to Mass Production leads to new policy requirements; it calls for what Abba Lerner called 'Functional Finance', but this approach fell out of favor during the difficult times following the oil shocks. There was a widespread, if temporary, experiment with monetarism, and a lasting disillusionment with 'fine tuning' and demand management. But the basics of functional finance are sound, and reflect understanding of modern (fiat and credit-based) money, money which has no 'anchor'. Reviving this approach today leads to the program for an "employer of last resort", (ELR). This offers a policy framework that will support full employment, while constraining inflation. It offers an opportunity to fulfill many social objectives as well. And it takes advantage of transformational growth, which changes the Federal budget from neutral or pro-cyclical to counter-cyclical.

A further implication of transformational growth is that if there is substantial mobility of labor and capital, exchange rates will deviate from purchasing power parity only because of speculative pressures. In other words, a universal currency, such as that proposed by Robert Mundell, would not only be desirable, it would appear to be a natural culmination of the processes of transformational growth.

Econometrics and philosophy edit

More recently Nell has worked with his colleague Karim Errouaki on the methodological foundations of structural econometrics. The position exposed by Martin Hollis and E.J Nell (1975)'s Rational Economic Man was further extended and developed in their recent book Rational Econometric Man, Edward Elgar, 2013).[22] They argued that is not too farfetched to see Hollis and Nell (1975) Rational Economic Man as a foundation for reconstructing the scientific foundations of structural econometrics; one might say Rational Econometric Man. They argued that there are good reasons for considering Hollis and Nell's (1975) framework as a foundation for reconstructing structural econometrics, a foundation that complements and extends the original ideas of Trygve Haavelmo. Haavelmo's (1944) work is probably the most important landmark in the history of econometric modelling. It is a remarkable monograph which, unfortunately for econometrics, became a classic much too early, part of the reason it is misunderstood. A foundation that complements and extends the original ideas of Haavelmo. Haavelmo's (1944) work is probably the most important landmark in the history of econometric modelling.[23] It is a remarkable monograph which, unfortunately for econometrics, became a classic much too early, part of the reason it is misunderstood.[24] They present their distinctive methodological contribution as a blend of fieldwork and conceptual analysis designed to ensure that their models are well grounded in reality and at the same time, conceptually coherent as well as statistically adequate. In so doing, they also outline a number of elements that will be needed to develop a 'good' macro-econometric model of an advanced economy.[25]

Development economics edit

More recently, Nell has worked with his two colleagues Federico Mayor Zaragoza and Karim Errouaki on Reinventing Globalization after the Crash (forthcoming in 2015).[26] The book is based on material provided by Federico Mayor Zaragoza's book The World Ahead (Zed Books, UNESCO, 2001), revisited and animated by the theoretical framework put forward by Nell in his opus magnum book General Theory of Transformational Growth (Cambridge University Press, 1998) and extended by Karim Errouaki (UM, HEC-Montreal, 2003) who argued that Transformational Growth provides a new vision and a new framework, for thinking about economic development, bringing it into the framework of economic history. The purpose of the book, which is embodied in their title, is to re-invent globalization in a way that it will ensure that globalization is only profitable and sustainable – the subject of many studies – but it will result in human development. They want to suggest ways to recreate global economy as to humanize it.[27]

Other books edit

  • Rational Economic Man (with Martin Hollis), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1975. (Portuguese edition, O Homem Economico Rational, trans. by A. Addor, Zahar, Rio, 1977. Japanese edition 1982).
  • Growth, Profits and Property, edited by E.J. Nell, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1980.
  • Demanda Effectiva, Precios y Salarios, (edited and translated by A.Schneider), Mexico: Editorial Trillas, Mexico, 1983.
  • Historia y Teoria Economica, edited by A. Barcelo y Lluis Argemi, Barcelona, Spain: Editorial Critica, Grijalbo, 1984.
  • Free Market Conservatism: A Critique of Theory and Practice, London, UK: George Allen and Unwin, 1984.
  • Prosperity and Public Spending: Transformational Growth and the Role of the State, London, UK: Unwin and Hyman, 1988.
  • Nicholas Kaldor and Mainstream Economics: Confrontation and Convergence, edited with Willi Semmler, Essays from the Kaldor Conference, London, UK: Macmillan, 1991.
  • Transformational Growth and Effective Demand, London, UK: Macmillan, 1992.
  • Beyond the Steady State: Essays in the Revival of Growth Theory, edited with Joseph Halevi and David Laibman, London, UK: Macmillan, 1992.
  • Economics as Worldly Philosophy: Essays in Honor of Robert Heilbroner, edited with Jaspal Chatha and Ron Blackwell, London, UK: Macmillan, 1992.
  • Money in Motion, edited with Ghislain Deleplace, London, UK: Macmillan, 1995.
  • Making Sense of a Changing Economy. Routledge: London and New York, 1996.
  • The General Theory of Transformational Growth: Keynes After Sraffa. Cambridge University Press, 1998.
  • Transformational Growth and the Business Cycle, London,. Routledge, 1998.
  • Reinventing Functional Finance, ed w. M. Forstater; Cheltenham: Edward Elgar,2003.
  • The State The Market and the Euro, E.Elgar, 2003.
  • Rational Economic Man (with Martin Hollis), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, second edition, 2006.
  • Rational Econometric Man: Transforming Structural Econometrics, with Karim Errouaki; E. Elgar, 2013.
  • Reinventing Globalization after the Crash, with Federico Mayor Zaragoza and Karim Errouaki, forthcoming in 2015.
  • Hard Drugs and Easy Money, with Karim Errouaki (with the assistance of M. Nell), forthcoming in 2015.
  • Leviathan's Wallet, with Ray Majewski (with the assistance of Jacob Nell), forthcoming.
  • Iraq, Oil and the World Economy with Willi Semmler, forthcoming.
  • Towards a New Paradigm in Development Economics, with Karim Errouaki, forthcoming.
  • Le Statut Scientifique de la Méthodologie Econométrique, with Karim Errouaki, forthcoming.
  • Economics and Management in Dialogue: Reinventing Management (Organizational Strategies through the Transformational Growth Lens), with Karim Errouaki, and Federico Mayor Zaragoza, forthcoming.
  • The General Theory of Transformational Growth, second edition, forthcoming.
  • Rationality, Action and Value in the Philosophy of Social Science, Martin Hollis Memorial Conference, edited with Brendan Hogan and Karim Errouaki, forthcoming.

Articles edit

Over 150 articles in professional economics journals and edited volumes; 6 articles in professional philosophy journals; numerous articles in popular magazines, and numerous TV interviews.

Selected articles edit

  • Nell, E.J. (1966) "No Proposition can describe itself". Analysis. Vol.26, No. 4. March 1966.
  • Nell, E.J. (1967) "Wicksell's Theory of Circulation". The Journal of Political Economy. Vol. 75, No. 4, Part I, August 1967.
  • Nell, E. J. (1967) "Theories of Growth and Theories of Value," Economic Development and Cultural Change, Vol. 16, No. 1 (December 1967).
  • Nell, E.J. (1970) "A Note on Cambridge Controversies In Capital Theory". The Journal of Economic Literature. Volume VIII, Number 1, March 1970
  • Nell, E.J. (1972) "The Revival of Political Economy". Social Research. Spring 1972 (Vol. 39. No. 1)
  • Nell, E.J. (1973) "Cyclical Accumulation: A Marxian Model of Development". The American Economic Review. Volume I.XIII, Number 2. May 1973.
  • Nell, E.J. (1973) "The Fall of the House of Efficiency". The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science. Special Issue on Income Inequality. Volume 409. September 1973.
  • Edward J. Nell (1976) "An Alternative Presentation of Lowe's basic Model". In Adolph Lowe (1976), The Path of Economic Growth. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 289–329.
  • Nell, E. J. (1977) "No Statement Is Immune to Revision." Social Research, Vol. 44, n4 (Winter 1977): 801–23.
  • Nell, E. J. and Laibman, D. (1977) "Reswitching, Wicksell Effects, and the Neoclassical Production Function," American Economic Review, Vol. 67, n5 (Dec. 1977): 878–88.
  • Nell, E.J (1984) "Structure and Behavior in Classical and Neo-Classical Theory". Eastern Economic Journal, Vol. XI, No. 2, April–June 1984.
  • Nell, E.J. (1986) "On Monetary Circulation and the Rate of Exploitation", Thames Papers in Political Economy, Summer.
  • Nell, E. J. (1989) "Notes on Finance, Risk and Investment Spending," in Barrere, A. (ed.), Money, credit and prices in Keynesian perspective: Proceedings of a conference held at the University of Paris I--Pantheon-Sorbonne. New York: St. Martin's Press, (1989): 16–47.
  • Nell, E. J. (1989) "Accumulation and Capital Theory", in Feiwel, G. (ed.), Joan Robinson and Modern Economics., New York: New York University Press.
  • Nell, E.J. (1990) "Velocity of Circulation and the Mark-Up", Economie Appliquée, Summer.
  • Nell, E. J. (1994) "Instrumentalism" and the Role of the State," Economie Appliquée Vol. 47, n2 (1994): 81–113.
  • Nell, E.J. (1994) "Minsky, Keynes and Sraffa: Investment and the Long Period" in G. Dymski and R. Pollin (Eds), New Perspectives on Monetary Macroeconomics. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
  • Nell, E.J. and Phillips, Th. F. (1995) "Transformational Growth And The Business Cycle". Eastern Economic Journal, Vol. 21, No. 2, Spring 1995.
  • Nell, E. J. (1996) "Transformational Growth and the Long-Period Method," Review of Political Economy, Vol. 8, No. 4 (October 1996): 379–401.
  • Nell, E. J. (1998) "Price Theory and Macroeconomics: Stylized Facts and New Keynesian Fantasies", in Roy Rotheim, R. (ed.)., New Keynesian Economics/ Post Keynesianism Alternatives, New York and London: Routledge, pp. 71–105, 1998
  • Nell, E. J. (1998) "Stages in the Development of the Business Cycle", in Hagemann, H. and Kurz, H. D. Political Economics in Retrospect: Essays in memory of Adolph Lowe, Edward Elgar, 1998, pp. 131–55.
  • Nell, E. J. (1998) "Limiti di Comprensione: La Trasformazione della Crescita e il Ruolo dello Stato", in Graziani, A. and Nassisi, A. M. L'Economia Mondiale in Transformaziona. Manifestolibri srl, 1998, pp. 193–227.
  • Nell, E.J. (1999) "Wicksell After Sraffa: 'Capital Arbitrage' and 'Normal" Rate of Growth, Interest and Profits," in Mongiovi, G. and F. Petri, editors, Value, Distribution and Capital: Essays in honour of Pierangelo Garegnani. London: Routledge. Ch.13 (pp. 266–93).
  • Nell, E. J. (1999) "Discussion – Financial Markets and Excess Capital Flows in Asia", Global Financial Turmoil and Reform, Herman, B. (ed.), United Nations University Press, 1999, pp. 448–53
  • Nell, E.J. (2001) "Notes on Hicks on Money and Monetary Theory", in L.P. Rochon and M. Vernengo, editors, Credit, Interest Rates and the Open Economy: Essays on horizontalism. Cheltenham, UK: Elgar.
  • Nell, E. J. (2002) "Crecimiento Transformativo e Inestabilidad Financiera. Tensions entre el Tipo de Interés y la Tasa de Crecimiento." Oscar de Juan and Eladio Febrero (eds.). La Fragilidad Financiera del Capitalismo. Ediciones de la Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Cuenca, 2002.
  • Nell, E.J. (2002) "On Realizing Profits in Money", Review of Radical Political Economy, Vol. 14 (4), pp. 519–30.
  • Nell, E.J. (2003) "Nominal Money, Real Money and Stabilization", in S. Bell and E.J. Nell, editors, The State, the Market and the Euro: Chartalism verus Metallism in the theory of money. Cheltenham, UK: Elgar.
  • Nell, E. J. and Semmler, W. (2003) “The Economic Consequences of the Peace in Iraq". Constellations, Summer, 2003.
  • Nell, E. J., Federico Mayor Zaragoza and Errouaki, K. (2006) Preface. Democratizar la Globalizacion. Boutros Boutros Ghali.Universidad del Valle. Artes Graficas del Valle Ltda. Colombia.
  • Nell, E.J. (2004) "Monetising the Classical Equations: A Theory of Circulation" Cambridge Journal of Economics. 28(2), 2004.
  • Nell, E.J (2004) "Critical Realism and Transformational Growth". In Transforming Economics. Edited by P. Lewis. London: Routledge. 76–95.
  • Nell, E. J. (2004) "Hiring Invisible Hands for Public Works", in B. Hodgson, ed., The Invisible Hand and the Common Good, Springer-Verlag, 2004
  • Nell, E. J. (2004) "Economic Causes of the Rise of Fundamentalism" in M. Achaari, The Dialogue of Cultures: Is it Possible?, Royal Academy of Morocco, 2004
  • Nell, E. J. and Errouaki, K. (2006) Preface. Le Management entre Tradition et Renouvellement. Omar Aktouf. Montreal: Gaetin Morin.Fourth Edition.
  • Nell, E. J. and Semmler, W. (2007) "The Iraq War and the World Oil Economy". Constellations. Volume 14, No. 4, December 2007
  • Nell, E. J. (2008) "Aggregate Demand, Employment and Equilibrium with Marginal Productivity: Keynesian Adjustment in the Craft Economy." METU Studies in Development. Volume 35, No. 1, June 2008. Middle East Technical University, Faculty of Economic and Administrative Sciences.
  • Nell, E. J. and Semmler, W. (2009) "Financial Crisis, Real Crisis and Policy Alternatives". Constellations. Volume 16, No. 2, June 2009.
  • Nell, E.J. (2009) "On the History of Economic Theory and the Emergence of Capitalism", History of Economic Thought and Economic History, Economic History Year Book. Jahrbuch Fur Wirtschaftsgeschichte, Akademie Verlag.2009/1. Berlin, Germany.
  • Nell, E.J and Gualerzi, D. (2010) "Where are the New Markets?", Challenge, March–April, 2010, pp. 30–46.
  • Nell, E.J and Gualerzi, D. (2010) "Transformational Growth in the 1990s: Government, Finance and Hi-tech", Review of Political Economy. Vol. 22, No. 1, January, 2010, pp. 97–117.
  • Nell, E.J and Gualerzi, D. (2011) "The Crisis, Long Term Depression and New Markets" International Journal of Management Concepts and Philosophy.
  • Nell, E.J., Kinsella, S, and Greiff, M.(2011) `Income Distribution in a Stock-Flow-Consistent Model with Education and Technological Change', Eastern Economic Journal, 37, 134–149.

References edit

  1. ^ For an account of Nell's contributions to economics see G. Argyrous, M. Forstater and G. Mongiovi (eds.) (2004) Growth, Distribution, And Effective Demand: Essays in Honor of Edward J. Nell. New York: M.E. Sharpe.
  2. ^ For a brief overview of Nell's work see The University of Missouri – Kansas City Center for Full Employment and Price Stability (www.cfeps.org/people/nellej/)
  3. ^ For a review essay of the book see DON C. LAVOIE (1977) From Hollis and Nell to Hollis and Misses. Review-essay of Martin Hollis and Edward J. Nell, Rational Economic Man: A Philosophical Critique of Neo-Classical Economics (London: Cambridge University Press).Journal of Libertarian Studies. Vol. 1. No. 4, pp. 325–336.
  4. ^ For a review essay of the book see S. Abu Turab Rizvi (1998) The General Theory of Transformational Growth, (London: Cambridge University Press, 1998,by Edward J. Nell). Journal of Economic Literature. Vol. 36, No. 4, Dec., 1998. For an account of the Theory of Transformational Growth see Ross Thomson (2004) Transformational Growth and the Universality of Technology. In Argyrous, G., Forstater, M and Mongiovi, G. (eds.) (2004) Growth, Distribution, And Effective Demand: Essays in Honor of Edward J. Nell. New York: M.E. Sharpe.
  5. ^ For an account of the methodology/philosophy which underlies the Theory of Transformational Growth see Nell, E.J. (2004) Critical Realism and Transformational Growth. In Transforming Economics. Edited by P. Lewis. London: Routledge. 76–95.
  6. ^ Nell is a Rhodes Scholar. See the "Association of American Rhodes Scholars" .(http://www.americanrhodes.org/)
  7. ^ For an account of Nell's biography see Arestis, Ph. and Sawyer, M. (eds.) (2000) A Biographical Dictionary of Dissenting Economics. See pages 442–450.
  8. ^ Edward J. Nell,Brendan Hogan, and Karim Errouaki have organized in memory of Martin Hollis the Martin Hollis Memorial Conference on Rationality, Action, and Value and the Philosophy of Social Science. It was held at the Graduate Faculty, New School, New York, between 18 and 20 November 2004. Prominent economists and philosophers in the World from the New School (NY), Columbia University and Cambridge University and other universities participated to the conference.
  9. ^ For a Review-essay of Martin Hollis and Edward J. Nell, Rational Economic Man: A Philosophical Critique of Neo-Classical Economics (London: Cambridge University Press)see DON C. LAVOIE (1977) From Hollis and Nell to Hollis and Mises. Journal of Libertarian Studies. Vol. 1. No. 4, pp. 325–336.
  10. ^ Errouaki, K (2004) "Rereading Hollis and Nell (1975): Laying Down the Blueprints for Reconstructing Structural Econometrics". Paper presented at the Martin Hollis Memorial Conference, The New School, NY, November 18th, 2004. Forthcoming in Nell, E.J., B. Hogan, B. and Errouaki, K. (eds.) Rationality, Action and Value in the Philosophy of Social Science, Martin Hollis Memorial Conference.
  11. ^ Nell, Edward (2019). Henry George and How Growth in Real Estate Contributes to Inequality and Financial Instability (PDF). Palgrave Studies on Henry George for the 21st Century. Palgrave. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-18663-0. ISBN 978-3-030-18662-3. S2CID 204445750.
  12. ^ Nell, E.J. (1967) Wicksell's Theory of Circulation. The Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 75, No. 4, Part I, August 1967.
  13. ^ For an account see Lavoie, M., Rodriguez, G. and Seccareccia, M. (2004) Transformational Growth, Interest Rates, and the Golden Rule. In: Argyrous, G., Forstater, M and Mongiovi, G. (eds.) (2004) Growth, Distribution, And Effective Demand: Essays in Honor of Edward J. Nell. New York: M.E. Sharpe. pp. 3–4
  14. ^ Nell, E.J. (2004) "Monetizing the Classical Equations: A Theory of Circulation", Cambridge Journal of Economics.
  15. ^ Nell, E.J. (1988) Prosperity and Public Spending: Transformational Growth and the Role of the State, London, UK: Unwin and Hyman, 1988. See the Introduction and chapter 7.
  16. ^ Nell, E.J. and Phillips, Th. F. (1995) Transformational Growth and the Business Cycle, Eastern Economic Journal, Spring 1995.
  17. ^ For an exposition of Nell's General Theory of Transformational Growth see Ross Thomson's article (Transformational Growth and the Universality of Technology, Chapter 5.) in Argyrous, G., Forstater, M and Mongiovi, G. (eds.) (2004) Growth, Distribution, And Effective Demand: Essays in Honor of Edward J. Nell. New York: M.E. Sharpe. See also Pressman, S.1998's Interview on Transformational Growth with E.J. Nell in Nell, E.J. (ed.) (1998)Transformational Growth and the Business Cycle, London,. Routledge, 1998.
  18. ^ For an account see Geoffrey M. Hudgson (2004) Thorstein Veblen and the Machine Process. In Argyrous, G., Forstater, M, and Mongiovi, G. (Eds.) (2004) Growth Distribtution, and Effective Demand. London and NY: M.E Sharpe. pp. 261–279.
  19. ^ For further details on Nell's General Theory of Transformational Growth see M. Lavoie, G. Rodriguez and M. Seccareccia's article (2004) (Transformational Growth, Interest Rates, and the Golden Rule, chapter 1) in Argyrous, G., Forstater, M and Mongiovi, G. (eds.) (2004) Growth, Distribution, And Effective Demand: Essays in Honor of Edward J. Nell. New York: M.E. Sharpe.
  20. ^ For an account of the methodology/philosophy which underlies the Theory of Transformational Growth see Errouaki. K (2008) Rethinking the Foundations of Transformational Growth. UM, The New School, NY.
  21. ^ For a recent account see Karim Errouaki (2014) A Klein-Nell Alternative to the Failed Macroeconometrics of Lucas and the Rational Expectations Hypothesis. Working paper CAFRAD.
  22. ^ See Edward Elgar 2011 publications catalog, p. 19.
  23. ^ For a recent account see Karim Errouaki (2014) Does Neoclassical Econometrics have a Scientific Foundation? A Critique Based on Hollis and Nell”, Revue Interventions Economiques 50 (2014).
  24. ^ For an account of Haavelom's contribution to econometrics see Aris Spanos 's 1986 book (Statistical Foundations of Econometric Modeling. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.1986). For a good discussion and a retrospective view of Haavelmo's ideas and probabilistic approach to econometrics see Spanos, A. (1989) On Rereading Haavelmo: A Retrospective View of Econometric Modeling. Econometric Theory 5, 405–429).
  25. ^ Errouaki, K. (2006) "Rereading Haavelmo: Three commentaries", paper presented at Ramiro Cercos's Seminar, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid, Madrid.
  26. ^ Errouaki, K, et al.(2006) De la Difference entre Mondialisation et Mondialisation Neoliberale. Le Journal de Tanger, No. 3380, 17 juin, 2006.
  27. ^ Errouaki, K. (2003) "Globalization and Transformational Growth: Rethinking the Foundations of Economic Development". UM, HEC-Montreal, 2003. Paper presented at the Global Progressive Forum, the European Parliament, Brussels, 2003.

External links edit

  • The New School (www.newschool.edu/NSSR/faculty)
  • The Pari Center for New Learning (Pari, Italy) ()
  • The University of Missouri – Kansas City Center for Full Employment and Price Stability (www.cfeps.org/people/nellej/)
  • The Open Library (www.openlibrary.org/authors/OL228128A/Edward_J._Nell)
  • Bibliography of Nell, Edward J., by subject ()
  • The New Work Times. See the debate between Minsky, Nell and Tobin in Joel Kurtzman, Business Forum: Economists Look at the Market Collapse; A Falling Dollar Can Only Help. November 8, 1987. (www.nytimes.com/ref/membercenter/nytarchive.html)
  • The New York Review of Books. See articles by E.J. Nell (www.nybooks.com/contributors/edward-j-nell/)
  • S. Pressman (1994) "Interview with Edward J. Nell". Review of Political Economy. Vol. 6 No. 1, January 1994. (Dr. Steven Pressman – Monmouth University)
  • S. Abu Turab Rizvi (1998) The General Theory of Transformational Growth, (London: Cambridge University Press, 1998,by Edward J. Nell). Journal of Economic Literature. Vol. 36, No. 4, Dec., 1998. (www.jstor.org/stable/2565055)
  • DON C. LAVOIE (1977) "From Hollis and Nell to Hollis and Mises". Review-essay of Martin Hollis and Edward J. Nell, Rational Economic Man: A Philosophical Critique of Neo-Classical Economics (London: Cambridge University Press).Journal of Libertarian Studies. Vol. 1. No. 4, pp. 325– 336. (https://mises.org/journals/jls/1_4/1_4_6.pdf)
  • The American Rhodes Scholarships. See "Association of American Rhodes Scholars". http://www.americanrhodes.org/. See also "Education: Reunion of a Scholarly Elite". Time.com. July 11, 1983. .
  • "Income Distribution: Two Viewpoints," a taped discussion with E.J. Nell and Joseph Stiglitz, Sussex Tapes, 1973.

edward, nell, born, july, 1935, american, economist, former, professor, school, social, research, nell, member, school, faculty, from, 1969, 2014, achieved, rank, malcolm, smith, professor, economics, 1990, born, 1935, july, 1935, riverside, illinoisnationalit. Edward J Nell born July 16 1935 is an American economist and a former professor at the New School for Social Research Nell was a member of the New School faculty from 1969 to 2014 He achieved the rank of Malcolm B Smith Professor of Economics in 1990 Edward J NellBorn 1935 07 16 July 16 1935 age 88 Riverside IllinoisNationalityAmericanAcademic careerInstitutionNew School for Social Research N YFieldMacroeconomics development economics monetary analysis finance philosophy of economicsSchool ortraditionPost Keynesian economics GeorgismAlma materPrinceton University Oxford UniversityNell s contributions are in the field of macroeconomic theory monetary analysis and finance economic methodology and philosophy and development 1 His articles on economic theory and methodology have appeared in leading journals like the American Economic Review the Journal of Political Economy the Journal of Economic Literature Cambridge Journal of Economics Eastern Economic Journal Review of Political Economy Economic Development and Cultural Change Analysis and Social Research 2 Nell is known for his critical view of the methodological and philosophical foundations of neoclassical economics examined in his best known book Rational Economic Man Cambridge University Press 1975 and coauthored with English rationalist philosopher Martin Hollis 3 Nell is also the originator of the General Theory of Transformational Growth The full development of the General Theory of Transformational Growth came in the 90s and was published as The General Theory of Transformational Growth Cambridge University Press 1998 4 The methodology philosophy which underlies the Theory of Transformational Growth is a form of realism based on filling in conceptual truths by doing fieldwork and then building models of solidly based institutionally grounded relationships 5 Contents 1 Biography 2 Contributions to economics 2 1 Economics and philosophy 2 2 Fiscal theory Georgism 2 3 Theory of money and finance 2 4 Theory of transformational growth 2 5 Econometrics and philosophy 2 6 Development economics 2 7 Other books 2 8 Articles 2 9 Selected articles 3 References 4 External linksBiography editNell was born in Riverside Illinois a suburb of Chicago on July 16 1935 only son of Marcella and Edward Nell His father was a journalist and professor of journalism at Northwestern University he ran the Quill and Scroll foundation for high school journalism His mother was a public school administrator and then a professor of education at Roosevelt University Nell attended Princeton University 1954 1957 and received his B A magna cum laude in 1957 in the Woodrow Wilson School His field of study at Princeton varied a good deal He studied mathematics physics and philosophy before discovering a passion for economics and politics He was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship 6 in 1957 which took him to Oxford University Though he had already completed a B A from Princeton Oxford enrolled him for another as was the custom at the time He obtained a First in PPE in 1959 at Magdalen College studying with Frank Burchardt and David Worswick Nell then stayed at Nuffield College 1959 1962 Oxford University to do his advanced work on the foundations of economic analysis complete his doctoral thesis and further develop his research He returned to the US to teach at Wesleyan University but later went back to the UK to lecture at the University of East Anglia also doing research at Cambridge University On various leaves of absence from the New School for Social Research he taught at Bennington College and at Bard College at McGill University the University of Siena in Italy and the University of Bremen and Goethe University in Frankfurt Germany He gave sets of lectures and seminars in Europe in France at the Universities of Paris Orleans and Nice in the U K at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge and at East Anglia Warwick Essex and Sussex in Italy at the Universities of Rome Milano Catania and Siena in Austria at the Universities of Graz and Vienna in Germany at the Universities of Bremen Frankfurt Kiel Regensburg and Hanover in Canada at Trent University Waterloo McGill and HEC Montreal And at New South Wales Melbourne Newcastle Adelaide and Sydney in Australia Many of these lectures were associated with research projects with colleagues in these universities 7 Contributions to economics editEconomics and philosophy editNell s best known research on economics and philosophy was a book published in 1975 by Cambridge University Press under the title Rational Economic Man coauthored with philosopher Martin Hollis 8 Lavoie D C 1977 p 325 9 argued thatTo the devastating critiques of positivism by such philosophers as Brand Blanshard W V Quine S Toulmin A R Lousch and Karl Popper can now be added that of Professors Hollis and Nell The reason for the impotence modern economics these authors show lies in its method The rejuvenation of economics necessitates developing a different methodology one which pays attention to the aspects of social sciences which distinguish them from natural sciences We need a method which recognizes that people are not atoms and that society is not a laboratory Since the early 1960s Nell had been critical of the neoclassical research program and had attempted to draw out the unstated assumptions of neoclassical economics and submit them to methodological scrutiny His 1966 doctoral thesis was on Models of Behavior Hollis and Nell 1975 is an extension of that doctoral thesis In Hollis and Nell 1975 they outline an alternative vision to neo Classicism based on a rationalist theory of knowledge They dissect the textbook combination of neo Classicism and Positivism so crucial to the defence of orthodox economics against now familiar objections Hollis and Nell s approach to methodology breaks with the traditional approach by focusing on the problems of the applicability of the then current neo Classical theories Coherent theories describing the behaviour of assumed thus imaginary rational agents are developed But what are the conditions for applying such theories to actual agents The neo Classical answer hinges on its view of rational individuals 10 Fiscal theory Georgism edit Fiscally Nell is a strong and active proponent of Georgist tax reform Not only for its widely accepted benefits for economic efficiency but because he believes that the land market contributes to inequality and financial instability 11 Nell is ex vice president and board member of the Henry George School of Social Science New York Theory of money and finance editHis first papers in the 1960s laid the basis for his later work Wicksell s Theory of Circulation set out the problem of explaining how money circulates that is showing how a given sum of money monetizes all the basic economic variables 12 Indeed Lavoie Rodriguez and Seccareccia 2004 pp 3 4 13 argued thatAs early 1967 Nell had published a paper on Wicksell s monetary circuit in the Journal of Political Economy There he explored several of the questions that were to become the prime focus of the French circuit theories and that were highlighted again first in a little known working paper Nell 1986 and then in the highly successful book that he edited with Ghislain Deleplaces in 1996 Money in motion In his 1967 paper on monetary circulation within a Wickselian framework Nell took into account the impact of interest payments on aggregate demand and on the closure of the monetary circuit Even since 1967 we believe Nell has been tantalized by the relationship between the real and the monetary aspects of the economy In many ways Nell s approach goes back to Francois Quesnay where money traced out the transactions between the different classes and sectors of society Although Wassily Leontief was best known for his Input Output Mode a major contribution to economic analysis could be found in his doctoral thesis done in 1928 at the University of Berlin on Economics as a Circulation in German Wirtschaft als Kreislauf under the direction of L Von Bortkiewicz and Werner Sombart This work helped to influence Nell s vision of Monetary Circulation Although they had met previously he came to know Leontief when he founded the Institute for Economic Analysis in N Y later he met and appreciated Faye Duchin and others there He particularly appreciated their studies of wage profit relations and the work on input output and the environment John Hicks 1967 noted the difference between the transactions demand which rested on structure and contracts and the speculative demand which he described as a voluntary matter a proper subject for the theory of choice James Tobin and Franco Modigliani both analyze the decision to hold money Nell following Wicksell and the early Quantity Theorists is concerned with the pattern according to which it is spent to determine how much money is required to ensure that all transactions are fully monetized These questions stem from Quesnay via Leontief Like Robert Mundell Nell places himself at the intersection of three theoretical schools Keynesian monetarist and Ricardian Each camp contributes something of value to economic analysis and policymaking For Mundell Keynesians contribute the multiplier effect of federal budgets for stabilization Monetarists monetary stability for encouraging growth promoting investments and the Ricardians the importance of free trade and investment flows for maximizing social welfare Nell draws in the same way on the Keynesians but looks to the older Quantity Theorists for accounts of monetary circulation and draws on the Ricardians for the theory of value while he looks to Joseph Schumpeter for an approach to innovation and competition In 2004 Monetizing the Classical Equations which had been circulating for three years was finally published It finally pulls the story of monetary circulation together detailing how the pressures of transformational growth including the emergence of fixed capital and the finance necessary for it led to systematic changes first in the monetary system then in banking with the result that the way the interest rate is determined changed significantly 14 Theory of transformational growth edit The first statement of the theory of transformational growth came in 1988 in his book Prosperity and Public Spending laying out the idea that markets worked differently when technology was craft based Costs were structured differently and it made sense that prices would be flexible but employment would tend to be inflexible This gave rise to incentives to change the structure of costs however leading to Mass Production and cost conditions in which it makes sense to hold prices steady and vary employment 15 The full development of the theory of transformational growth came in the 90s and was published as The General Theory of Transformational Growth Cambridge University Press 1998 starting from a critique of equilibrium supporting creative destruction instead working through methodological and philosophical questions about the role of contracts and obligations in understanding the persistence of institutional structures to the circulation of money understanding productivity and the structure of production especially the relationship between the wage bill of capital goods and the capital requirements in consumer goods then going on to dynamics and from there to aggregate demand and the business cycle Investment must be separated into two steps investment planning which depends on innovation and requires planning for prices and costs and investment spending which depends on earnings and finance There can be no single simple investment function which sums this up macro models have to be reconstructed Finally the book concludes by examining the interactions between economic forces and pressures and the changing character of social institutions 16 Nell is the originator of the Theory of Transformational Growth which traces the pattern of capitalist development through a succession of stages in each of which markets adjust differently and in doing so give rise to market pressures leading to innovations which move the system to the next stage In each stage the working of markets will be governed in part by the structure of costs and the pattern of growth in demand both of which depend on technology and innovation The approach draws on the empirical work of Simon Kuznets and makes use of Nicholas Kaldor s notion of stylized facts it also draws on the work of W Arthur Lewis and Gunnar Myrdal in regard to stages of development It is however consistent only in part with Robert Solow s neo Classical approach as in that construction the substitution of capital for labor is crucial However transformational growth rejects the idea of a steady state and presents a model of multiple sectors regularly changing in size and importance On the other hand Douglass North s emphasis on institutions is echoed here 17 Ross Thomson 2004 pp 81 argued thatUnderstanding capitalist development is still beyond the capabilities of economic theory at least in its formalized version Intrinsically innovative uneven across sectors and countries and evolving through qualitative changes in institutional structure development involves such complexity that major insights including those of Marx Veblen Schumpeter and Chandler often come from outside formal theory The usefulness of these insights suggests that theory must be reconceptualized to understand capitalist development Edward Nell attempts such a reconceptualization Nell portrays development as a cumulative process in which economic institutions and technologies evolve in a single mutually engendering dynamic In the General Theory of Transformational Growth 1998 he gives theory the task of understanding this cumulative process In the TG approach markets generate innovations most importantly technological changes and these innovations restructure markets This process imparts a direction to capitalist development as sectors rise and fall production is reorganized and markets are reshaped Furthermore Geoffrey M Hudgson 2004 18 argued that Edward Nell s rich and enlightening The General Transformational Growth 1998 has over seven hundred pages and cites many authors But there is no reference to Thorstein Veblen Yet there are remarkable connections and similarities between the thought of Veblen and that of Nell Most obviously both are acutely concerned with the perilous dynamics and checkered effects of modern capitalism But the similarities go deeper At the core of their separate arguments concerning capitalist development are deep understandings of the significance and role of technology Furthermore Nell 1998 26 36 410 68 key argument concerning the shift from a craft economy to mass production has uncannily close parallels in Veblen s 1904 364 68 1914 230 355 analysis of the transformation from the era of handicraft production to the machinery industry with its machine process Indeed both Veblen and Nell invest this transformation with major economic cultural and dynamic consequences In contrast to many conventional theories the economic analysis which supports the transformational growth perspective is not based primarily on rational choice There is a place for rational choice and for equilibrium theory but in Nell s view it is a subordinate place and much of the activity there will be prescriptive rather than descriptive Actual markets are always in motion equilibrium is rare and dynamic analysis necessary 19 The methodology philosophy which underlies the Theory of Transformational Growth is a form of realism based on filling in conceptual truths by doing fieldwork and then building models of solidly based institutionally grounded relationships The result will be open models which can only be closed temporarily by setting certain inherently unreliable relationships This has implications for econometrics not all economic relationships are on a par Some are reliable and can be reliably established others are inherently unreliable especially those which are forward looking They are likely to change spontaneously They have to be estimated on a temporary basis by fieldwork and good guessing Nor is there anything wrong with this But it means that an econometric model must be divided into two parts the reliable relationships and the volatile ones 20 21 Nell s published and unpublished papers dealing with these and other issues were collected in his 1992 book Transformational Growth and Effective Demand New York University Press 1992 This book was intended at the time to provide as comprehensive a statement of an alternative approach as possible In retrospect however it only partly succeeds there is no discussion of money credit and banking Circulation was left out because at that time the theory had not been completed And the theory of transformational growth was only sketched However the historical sections and the theory of effective demand are presented very well When the 1992 book came out it was supported by a separate volume published by Nell in 1998 Transformational Growth and the Business Cycle London Routledge 1998 The book contained the work of a study group of New School students testing the empirical validity of the approach by examining the time series of prices wages employment output and productivity in six countries About the same time Nell wrote a book in 1996 Making Sense of a Changing Economy London Routledge 1996 and laying out the paradoxes of individualism and providing both a critique of the social philosophy of individualism and suggestions for a more satisfactory approach The shift from Craft to Mass Production leads to new policy requirements it calls for what Abba Lerner called Functional Finance but this approach fell out of favor during the difficult times following the oil shocks There was a widespread if temporary experiment with monetarism and a lasting disillusionment with fine tuning and demand management But the basics of functional finance are sound and reflect understanding of modern fiat and credit based money money which has no anchor Reviving this approach today leads to the program for an employer of last resort ELR This offers a policy framework that will support full employment while constraining inflation It offers an opportunity to fulfill many social objectives as well And it takes advantage of transformational growth which changes the Federal budget from neutral or pro cyclical to counter cyclical A further implication of transformational growth is that if there is substantial mobility of labor and capital exchange rates will deviate from purchasing power parity only because of speculative pressures In other words a universal currency such as that proposed by Robert Mundell would not only be desirable it would appear to be a natural culmination of the processes of transformational growth Econometrics and philosophy edit More recently Nell has worked with his colleague Karim Errouaki on the methodological foundations of structural econometrics The position exposed by Martin Hollis and E J Nell 1975 s Rational Economic Man was further extended and developed in their recent book Rational Econometric Man Edward Elgar 2013 22 They argued that is not too farfetched to see Hollis and Nell 1975 Rational Economic Man as a foundation for reconstructing the scientific foundations of structural econometrics one might say Rational Econometric Man They argued that there are good reasons for considering Hollis and Nell s 1975 framework as a foundation for reconstructing structural econometrics a foundation that complements and extends the original ideas of Trygve Haavelmo Haavelmo s 1944 work is probably the most important landmark in the history of econometric modelling It is a remarkable monograph which unfortunately for econometrics became a classic much too early part of the reason it is misunderstood A foundation that complements and extends the original ideas of Haavelmo Haavelmo s 1944 work is probably the most important landmark in the history of econometric modelling 23 It is a remarkable monograph which unfortunately for econometrics became a classic much too early part of the reason it is misunderstood 24 They present their distinctive methodological contribution as a blend of fieldwork and conceptual analysis designed to ensure that their models are well grounded in reality and at the same time conceptually coherent as well as statistically adequate In so doing they also outline a number of elements that will be needed to develop a good macro econometric model of an advanced economy 25 Development economics edit More recently Nell has worked with his two colleagues Federico Mayor Zaragoza and Karim Errouaki on Reinventing Globalization after the Crash forthcoming in 2015 26 The book is based on material provided by Federico Mayor Zaragoza s book The World Ahead Zed Books UNESCO 2001 revisited and animated by the theoretical framework put forward by Nell in his opus magnum book General Theory of Transformational Growth Cambridge University Press 1998 and extended by Karim Errouaki UM HEC Montreal 2003 who argued that Transformational Growth provides a new vision and a new framework for thinking about economic development bringing it into the framework of economic history The purpose of the book which is embodied in their title is to re invent globalization in a way that it will ensure that globalization is only profitable and sustainable the subject of many studies but it will result in human development They want to suggest ways to recreate global economy as to humanize it 27 Other books edit Rational Economic Man with Martin Hollis Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1975 Portuguese edition O Homem Economico Rational trans by A Addor Zahar Rio 1977 Japanese edition 1982 Growth Profits and Property edited by E J Nell Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1980 Demanda Effectiva Precios y Salarios edited and translated by A Schneider Mexico Editorial Trillas Mexico 1983 Historia y Teoria Economica edited by A Barcelo y Lluis Argemi Barcelona Spain Editorial Critica Grijalbo 1984 Free Market Conservatism A Critique of Theory and Practice London UK George Allen and Unwin 1984 Prosperity and Public Spending Transformational Growth and the Role of the State London UK Unwin and Hyman 1988 Nicholas Kaldor and Mainstream Economics Confrontation and Convergence edited with Willi Semmler Essays from the Kaldor Conference London UK Macmillan 1991 Transformational Growth and Effective Demand London UK Macmillan 1992 Beyond the Steady State Essays in the Revival of Growth Theory edited with Joseph Halevi and David Laibman London UK Macmillan 1992 Economics as Worldly Philosophy Essays in Honor of Robert Heilbroner edited with Jaspal Chatha and Ron Blackwell London UK Macmillan 1992 Money in Motion edited with Ghislain Deleplace London UK Macmillan 1995 Making Sense of a Changing Economy Routledge London and New York 1996 The General Theory of Transformational Growth Keynes After Sraffa Cambridge University Press 1998 Transformational Growth and the Business Cycle London Routledge 1998 Reinventing Functional Finance ed w M Forstater Cheltenham Edward Elgar 2003 The State The Market and the Euro E Elgar 2003 Rational Economic Man with Martin Hollis Cambridge Cambridge University Press second edition 2006 Rational Econometric Man Transforming Structural Econometrics with Karim Errouaki E Elgar 2013 Reinventing Globalization after the Crash with Federico Mayor Zaragoza and Karim Errouaki forthcoming in 2015 Hard Drugs and Easy Money with Karim Errouaki with the assistance of M Nell forthcoming in 2015 Leviathan s Wallet with Ray Majewski with the assistance of Jacob Nell forthcoming Iraq Oil and the World Economy with Willi Semmler forthcoming Towards a New Paradigm in Development Economics with Karim Errouaki forthcoming Le Statut Scientifique de la Methodologie Econometrique with Karim Errouaki forthcoming Economics and Management in Dialogue Reinventing Management Organizational Strategies through the Transformational Growth Lens with Karim Errouaki and Federico Mayor Zaragoza forthcoming The General Theory of Transformational Growth second edition forthcoming Rationality Action and Value in the Philosophy of Social Science Martin Hollis Memorial Conference edited with Brendan Hogan and Karim Errouaki forthcoming Articles edit Over 150 articles in professional economics journals and edited volumes 6 articles in professional philosophy journals numerous articles in popular magazines and numerous TV interviews Selected articles edit Nell E J 1966 No Proposition can describe itself Analysis Vol 26 No 4 March 1966 Nell E J 1967 Wicksell s Theory of Circulation The Journal of Political Economy Vol 75 No 4 Part I August 1967 Nell E J 1967 Theories of Growth and Theories of Value Economic Development and Cultural Change Vol 16 No 1 December 1967 Nell E J 1970 A Note on Cambridge Controversies In Capital Theory The Journal of Economic Literature Volume VIII Number 1 March 1970 Nell E J 1972 The Revival of Political Economy Social Research Spring 1972 Vol 39 No 1 Nell E J 1973 Cyclical Accumulation A Marxian Model of Development The American Economic Review Volume I XIII Number 2 May 1973 Nell E J 1973 The Fall of the House of Efficiency The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science Special Issue on Income Inequality Volume 409 September 1973 Edward J Nell 1976 An Alternative Presentation of Lowe s basic Model In Adolph Lowe 1976 The Path of Economic Growth Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 289 329 Nell E J 1977 No Statement Is Immune to Revision Social Research Vol 44 n4 Winter 1977 801 23 Nell E J and Laibman D 1977 Reswitching Wicksell Effects and the Neoclassical Production Function American Economic Review Vol 67 n5 Dec 1977 878 88 Nell E J 1984 Structure and Behavior in Classical and Neo Classical Theory Eastern Economic Journal Vol XI No 2 April June 1984 Nell E J 1986 On Monetary Circulation and the Rate of Exploitation Thames Papers in Political Economy Summer Nell E J 1989 Notes on Finance Risk and Investment Spending in Barrere A ed Money credit and prices in Keynesian perspective Proceedings of a conference held at the University of Paris I Pantheon Sorbonne New York St Martin s Press 1989 16 47 Nell E J 1989 Accumulation and Capital Theory in Feiwel G ed Joan Robinson and Modern Economics New York New York University Press Nell E J 1990 Velocity of Circulation and the Mark Up Economie Appliquee Summer Nell E J 1994 Instrumentalism and the Role of the State Economie Appliquee Vol 47 n2 1994 81 113 Nell E J 1994 Minsky Keynes and Sraffa Investment and the Long Period in G Dymski and R Pollin Eds New Perspectives on Monetary Macroeconomics Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press Nell E J and Phillips Th F 1995 Transformational Growth And The Business Cycle Eastern Economic Journal Vol 21 No 2 Spring 1995 Nell E J 1996 Transformational Growth and the Long Period Method Review of Political Economy Vol 8 No 4 October 1996 379 401 Nell E J 1998 Price Theory and Macroeconomics Stylized Facts and New Keynesian Fantasies in Roy Rotheim R ed New Keynesian Economics Post Keynesianism Alternatives New York and London Routledge pp 71 105 1998 Nell E J 1998 Stages in the Development of the Business Cycle in Hagemann H and Kurz H D Political Economics in Retrospect Essays in memory of Adolph Lowe Edward Elgar 1998 pp 131 55 Nell E J 1998 Limiti di Comprensione La Trasformazione della Crescita e il Ruolo dello Stato in Graziani A and Nassisi A M L Economia Mondiale in Transformaziona Manifestolibri srl 1998 pp 193 227 Nell E J 1999 Wicksell After Sraffa Capital Arbitrage and Normal Rate of Growth Interest and Profits in Mongiovi G and F Petri editors Value Distribution and Capital Essays in honour of Pierangelo Garegnani London Routledge Ch 13 pp 266 93 Nell E J 1999 Discussion Financial Markets and Excess Capital Flows in Asia Global Financial Turmoil and Reform Herman B ed United Nations University Press 1999 pp 448 53 Nell E J 2001 Notes on Hicks on Money and Monetary Theory in L P Rochon and M Vernengo editors Credit Interest Rates and the Open Economy Essays on horizontalism Cheltenham UK Elgar Nell E J 2002 Crecimiento Transformativo e Inestabilidad Financiera Tensions entre el Tipo de Interes y la Tasa de Crecimiento Oscar de Juan and Eladio Febrero eds La Fragilidad Financiera del Capitalismo Ediciones de la Universidad de Castilla La Mancha Cuenca 2002 Nell E J 2002 On Realizing Profits in Money Review of Radical Political Economy Vol 14 4 pp 519 30 Nell E J 2003 Nominal Money Real Money and Stabilization in S Bell and E J Nell editors The State the Market and the Euro Chartalism verus Metallism in the theory of money Cheltenham UK Elgar Nell E J and Semmler W 2003 The Economic Consequences of the Peace in Iraq Constellations Summer 2003 Nell E J Federico Mayor Zaragoza and Errouaki K 2006 Preface Democratizar la Globalizacion Boutros Boutros Ghali Universidad del Valle Artes Graficas del Valle Ltda Colombia Nell E J 2004 Monetising the Classical Equations A Theory of Circulation Cambridge Journal of Economics 28 2 2004 Nell E J 2004 Critical Realism and Transformational Growth In Transforming Economics Edited by P Lewis London Routledge 76 95 Nell E J 2004 Hiring Invisible Hands for Public Works in B Hodgson ed The Invisible Hand and the Common Good Springer Verlag 2004 Nell E J 2004 Economic Causes of the Rise of Fundamentalism in M Achaari The Dialogue of Cultures Is it Possible Royal Academy of Morocco 2004 Nell E J and Errouaki K 2006 Preface Le Management entre Tradition et Renouvellement Omar Aktouf Montreal Gaetin Morin Fourth Edition Nell E J and Semmler W 2007 The Iraq War and the World Oil Economy Constellations Volume 14 No 4 December 2007 Nell E J 2008 Aggregate Demand Employment and Equilibrium with Marginal Productivity Keynesian Adjustment in the Craft Economy METU Studies in Development Volume 35 No 1 June 2008 Middle East Technical University Faculty of Economic and Administrative Sciences Nell E J and Semmler W 2009 Financial Crisis Real Crisis and Policy Alternatives Constellations Volume 16 No 2 June 2009 Nell E J 2009 On the History of Economic Theory and the Emergence of Capitalism History of Economic Thought and Economic History Economic History Year Book Jahrbuch Fur Wirtschaftsgeschichte Akademie Verlag 2009 1 Berlin Germany Nell E J and Gualerzi D 2010 Where are the New Markets Challenge March April 2010 pp 30 46 Nell E J and Gualerzi D 2010 Transformational Growth in the 1990s Government Finance and Hi tech Review of Political Economy Vol 22 No 1 January 2010 pp 97 117 Nell E J and Gualerzi D 2011 The Crisis Long Term Depression and New Markets International Journal of Management Concepts and Philosophy Nell E J Kinsella S and Greiff M 2011 Income Distribution in a Stock Flow Consistent Model with Education and Technological Change Eastern Economic Journal 37 134 149 References edit For an account of Nell s contributions to economics see G Argyrous M Forstater and G Mongiovi eds 2004 Growth Distribution And Effective Demand Essays in Honor of Edward J Nell New York M E Sharpe For a brief overview of Nell s work see The University of Missouri Kansas City Center for Full Employment and Price Stability www cfeps org people nellej For a review essay of the book see DON C LAVOIE 1977 From Hollis and Nell to Hollis and Misses Review essay of Martin Hollis and Edward J Nell Rational Economic Man A Philosophical Critique of Neo Classical Economics London Cambridge University Press Journal of Libertarian Studies Vol 1 No 4 pp 325 336 For a review essay of the book see S Abu Turab Rizvi 1998 The General Theory of Transformational Growth London Cambridge University Press 1998 by Edward J Nell Journal of Economic Literature Vol 36 No 4 Dec 1998 For an account of the Theory of Transformational Growth see Ross Thomson 2004 Transformational Growth and the Universality of Technology In Argyrous G Forstater M and Mongiovi G eds 2004 Growth Distribution And Effective Demand Essays in Honor of Edward J Nell New York M E Sharpe For an account of the methodology philosophy which underlies the Theory of Transformational Growth see Nell E J 2004 Critical Realism and Transformational Growth In Transforming Economics Edited by P Lewis London Routledge 76 95 Nell is a Rhodes Scholar See the Association of American Rhodes Scholars http www americanrhodes org For an account of Nell s biography see Arestis Ph and Sawyer M eds 2000 A Biographical Dictionary of Dissenting Economics See pages 442 450 Edward J Nell Brendan Hogan and Karim Errouaki have organized in memory of Martin Hollis the Martin Hollis Memorial Conference on Rationality Action and Value and the Philosophy of Social Science It was held at the Graduate Faculty New School New York between 18 and 20 November 2004 Prominent economists and philosophers in the World from the New School NY Columbia University and Cambridge University and other universities participated to the conference For a Review essay of Martin Hollis and Edward J Nell Rational Economic Man A Philosophical Critique of Neo Classical Economics London Cambridge University Press see DON C LAVOIE 1977 From Hollis and Nell to Hollis and Mises Journal of Libertarian Studies Vol 1 No 4 pp 325 336 Errouaki K 2004 Rereading Hollis and Nell 1975 Laying Down the Blueprints for Reconstructing Structural Econometrics Paper presented at the Martin Hollis Memorial Conference The New School NY November 18th 2004 Forthcoming in Nell E J B Hogan B and Errouaki K eds Rationality Action and Value in the Philosophy of Social Science Martin Hollis Memorial Conference Nell Edward 2019 Henry George and How Growth in Real Estate Contributes to Inequality and Financial Instability PDF Palgrave Studies on Henry George for the 21st Century Palgrave doi 10 1007 978 3 030 18663 0 ISBN 978 3 030 18662 3 S2CID 204445750 Nell E J 1967 Wicksell s Theory of Circulation The Journal of Political Economy Vol 75 No 4 Part I August 1967 For an account see Lavoie M Rodriguez G and Seccareccia M 2004 Transformational Growth Interest Rates and the Golden Rule In Argyrous G Forstater M and Mongiovi G eds 2004 Growth Distribution And Effective Demand Essays in Honor of Edward J Nell New York M E Sharpe pp 3 4 Nell E J 2004 Monetizing the Classical Equations A Theory of Circulation Cambridge Journal of Economics Nell E J 1988 Prosperity and Public Spending Transformational Growth and the Role of the State London UK Unwin and Hyman 1988 See the Introduction and chapter 7 Nell E J and Phillips Th F 1995 Transformational Growth and the Business Cycle Eastern Economic Journal Spring 1995 For an exposition of Nell s General Theory of Transformational Growth see Ross Thomson s article Transformational Growth and the Universality of Technology Chapter 5 in Argyrous G Forstater M and Mongiovi G eds 2004 Growth Distribution And Effective Demand Essays in Honor of Edward J Nell New York M E Sharpe See also Pressman S 1998 s Interview on Transformational Growth with E J Nell in Nell E J ed 1998 Transformational Growth and the Business Cycle London Routledge 1998 For an account see Geoffrey M Hudgson 2004 Thorstein Veblen and the Machine Process In Argyrous G Forstater M and Mongiovi G Eds 2004 Growth Distribtution and Effective Demand London and NY M E Sharpe pp 261 279 For further details on Nell s General Theory of Transformational Growth see M Lavoie G Rodriguez and M Seccareccia s article 2004 Transformational Growth Interest Rates and the Golden Rule chapter 1 in Argyrous G Forstater M and Mongiovi G eds 2004 Growth Distribution And Effective Demand Essays in Honor of Edward J Nell New York M E Sharpe For an account of the methodology philosophy which underlies the Theory of Transformational Growth see Errouaki K 2008 Rethinking the Foundations of Transformational Growth UM The New School NY For a recent account see Karim Errouaki 2014 A Klein Nell Alternative to the Failed Macroeconometrics of Lucas and the Rational Expectations Hypothesis Working paper CAFRAD See Edward Elgar 2011 publications catalog p 19 For a recent account see Karim Errouaki 2014 Does Neoclassical Econometrics have a Scientific Foundation A Critique Based on Hollis and Nell Revue Interventions Economiques 50 2014 For an account of Haavelom s contribution to econometrics see Aris Spanos s 1986 book Statistical Foundations of Econometric Modeling Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press 1986 For a good discussion and a retrospective view of Haavelmo s ideas and probabilistic approach to econometrics see Spanos A 1989 On Rereading Haavelmo A Retrospective View of Econometric Modeling Econometric Theory 5 405 429 Errouaki K 2006 Rereading Haavelmo Three commentaries paper presented at Ramiro Cercos s Seminar Universidad Politecnica de Madrid Madrid Errouaki K et al 2006 De la Difference entre Mondialisation et Mondialisation Neoliberale Le Journal de Tanger No 3380 17 juin 2006 Errouaki K 2003 Globalization and Transformational Growth Rethinking the Foundations of Economic Development UM HEC Montreal 2003 Paper presented at the Global Progressive Forum the European Parliament Brussels 2003 External links editThe New School www newschool edu NSSR faculty The Pari Center for New Learning Pari Italy https web archive org web 20160303171954 http www paricenter com biographies nell php The University of Missouri Kansas City Center for Full Employment and Price Stability www cfeps org people nellej The Open Library www openlibrary org authors OL228128A Edward J Nell Bibliography of Nell Edward J by subject www isbndb com d person nell edward j html The New Work Times See the debate between Minsky Nell and Tobin in Joel Kurtzman Business Forum Economists Look at the Market Collapse A Falling Dollar Can Only Help November 8 1987 www nytimes com ref membercenter nytarchive html The New York Review of Books See articles by E J Nell www nybooks com contributors edward j nell S Pressman 1994 Interview with Edward J Nell Review of Political Economy Vol 6 No 1 January 1994 Dr Steven Pressman Monmouth University 1 S Abu Turab Rizvi 1998 The General Theory of Transformational Growth London Cambridge University Press 1998 by Edward J Nell Journal of Economic Literature Vol 36 No 4 Dec 1998 www jstor org stable 2565055 DON C LAVOIE 1977 From Hollis and Nell to Hollis and Mises Review essay of Martin Hollis and Edward J Nell Rational Economic Man A Philosophical Critique of Neo Classical Economics London Cambridge University Press Journal of Libertarian Studies Vol 1 No 4 pp 325 336 https mises org journals jls 1 4 1 4 6 pdf The American Rhodes Scholarships See Association of American Rhodes Scholars http www americanrhodes org See also Education Reunion of a Scholarly Elite Time com July 11 1983 2 Income Distribution Two Viewpoints a taped discussion with E J Nell and Joseph Stiglitz Sussex Tapes 1973 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edward J Nell amp oldid 1183960297, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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