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Does investment call the tune? Empirical evidence and endogenous theories of the business cycle

José A. Tapia Granados
- Vol. 28, pp 229-259
TLDR
The role of investment in the business cycle can be classified into two main groups, exogenous and endogenous, according to the way they explain economic fluctuations as discussed by the authors, either as responses of the economy to factors that are external (exogenous shocks) or as upturns and downturns of the economic system internally generated (by endogenous factors).
Abstract
Theories of the business cycle can be classified into two main groups, exogenous and endogenous, according to the way they explain economic fluctuations – either as responses of the economy to factors that are external (exogenous shocks) or as upturns and downturns of the economic system internally generated (by endogenous factors). In endogenous theories, investment is generally a key variable to explain the dynamic status of the economy. This essay examines the role of investment in endogenous theories. Two contrasting views on how changes in investment and profitability push the economy towards expansion or contraction are represented by the insights of Kalecki, Keynes, Matthews and Minsky versus those of Marx and Mitchell. Hyman Minsky claimed that investment ‘calls the tune’ to indicate that investment is the only variable not determined by other variables, so that future profits, investment and the dynamic status of the economy are determined by current investment and investment in the near past. However, this hypothesis does not appear to be supported by available empirical data for 251 quarters of the US economy. Statistical evidence rather supports the hypothesis of causality in the direction of profits determining investment and, in this way, leading the economy towards boom or bust.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Determinants of the Profit Rates in the OECD Economies: A Panel Data Analysis of the Kalecki's Profit Equation

TL;DR: In this paper , several determinants of profitability (investment rate, trade surplus, and budget deficit) were considered in the OECD economies in the 1960-2014 period, using the Kalecki's profits equation framework.
Journal ArticleDOI

Economic Growth and the Rate of Profit in Colombia 1967–2019: A VAR Time-Series Analysis

TL;DR: In this article , the authors evaluate the impact of the rate of profit and the accumulation rate on the growth rate in Colombia during 1967-2019, using a generalized vector autoregressive model and find that both variables are statistically significant and, in concordance with Marxian theory predictions, affect positively the growth rates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Investment, Profits and Federal Reserve's Ultra-Low Interest Rate Policy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an account of weak investment after the Great Recession by explaining why investment has grown decreasingly responsive to interest rates, and by focusing on the role of profits in determining investment.
References
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Book

General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money

TL;DR: In this article, a general theory of the rate of interest was proposed, and the subjective and objective factors of the propensity to consume and the multiplier were considered, as well as the psychological and business incentives to invest.
Journal ArticleDOI

Time Series Analysis.

Journal ArticleDOI

Time series analysis

James D. Hamilton
- 01 Feb 1997 - 
TL;DR: A ordered sequence of events or observations having a time component is called as a time series, and some good examples are daily opening and closing stock prices, daily humidity, temperature, pressure, annual gross domestic product of a country and so on.
Book

Capital; A Critique of Political Economy

Karl Marx
TL;DR: In the third volume of "Das Kapital" as discussed by the authors, Marx argues that any market economy is inevitably doomed to endure a series of worsening, explosive crises leading finally to complete collapse.
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