Category Archives: A. W. “Bill” Philips

Bloomberg Wall Street Week: “Economics Has No Good Theory of Inflation.”

This is a companion-piece to Facing Facts: The Ideal Of Constant Value Of The Currency vs. The Fact Of Inflation.  Please read both.

This past weekend, 11/4-5/2023, Cecilia Rouse, future President of The Brookings Institution, appeared on Bloomberg Wall Street Week with moderator, David Westin.  Under the pressure of scant time, they briefly, but inadequately, discussed the notion of a “theory of inflation.” It was opined that

“The reality is that in economics there’s not a fabulous theory and one theory of inflation.”

“…economics doesn’t have one solid and established theory of inflation.”

Also, commenting on the same topic, David mentioned that the Phillips Curve “correlation”, which is a staple of of the Fed’s thinking and decision-making, and which has been supposed by many economists to be a valid correlation of fluctuating wage rates and their resulting pressure on inflation with unemployment, has not been proven valid and reliable.  That is to say that its two main variables are not directly correlated and inextricably linked; that the supposed reliability is bogus; that no matter how often it is considered and bandied about internally among supposedly-expert economists and externally to the truth-seeking public, the Phillips Curve theory is simplistic, insufficiently nuanced, and has been debunked.

Lonergan’s Macroeconomic Field Theory is a comprehensive general theory. It has many aspects and relations, all of which can be grasped at once in a unified whole.  Also, this unified whole virtually and implicitly contains a set of terms and relations constituting a unitary theory of inflation.  So, obviously we disagree with the two opinions quoted verbatim above, but left hanging on Bloomberg Wall Street Week.

It is the viewpoint of the present inquiry that, besides the pricing system, there exists another economic mechanism, that relative to this (other) system man is not an internal factor but an external agent, and that the present economic problems are peculiarly baffling because man as external agent has not the systematic guidance he needs to operate successfully the machine he controls. [CWL 21, 109]

In the mid-70’s, economists were mystified by stagflation, the combination of stagnant production and rising prices. According to the Phillips Curve, the correlation of inflation with unemployment, stagflation should not happen. … the U.S. economy was experiencing the phenomenon of ‘stagflation’ – a clearly discernible overturning of the conventional economic wisdom about the tradeoff between inflation and unemployment so neatly expressed in the Phillips curve. So-called ‘Keynesian fine tuning onto the neoclassical track’ was not working; and forms of socialist planning only promised to deepen rather than resolve the anomalies of welfare economics. … (Lonergan) believed he had an explanation for what, in a statement from the essay we are editing, he described as a “situation – sometimes thought mysterious – in which consumer prices continuously inflate, new enterprise is evaded, unemployment becomes chronic, and despite inflation the value of stocks declines.” [CWL 15, Editors Introduction, xli]

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Alan Blinder re A. W. “Bill” Phillips’ MONIAC; Phillips’ Tubes vs. Lonergan’s Channels

(Lonergan’s) channels of circulation replace the overall dominance claimed for general equilibrium theory, but they reveal the conditions under which partial equilibria can exist. … More positively, the channels account for booms and slumps, for inflation and deflation, for changed rates of profit, for the attraction found in a favorable balance of trade, the relief given by deficit spending, and the variant provided by multinational corporations and their opposition to the welfare state. (CWL15, 17) 

In a Bloomberg News piece, authored by Rich Miller and dated October 11, 2022, Miller quotes Alan Blinder’s remarks about A.W. “Bill” Phiilps, the originator of the Phillips Curve:

This guy was as inter-disciplinary as you can be. He was a practical engineer as a young man, with a wrench in his hand, and then later in his life an academic who took those ideas to economics and in particular to Keynesian economics. He had a very mechanical view of the macro economy. He built this machine where water flowed through clear plastic tubes, like income and expenditure in the economy. People spend money that becomes income to other people, and they spend money that becomes income to other people, and so on. The machine is now at the Reserve Bank of New Zealand. (Blinder re Phillips)

He also had a colorful history. He won a Member of the Order of the British Empire award for bravery handling a machine gun during World War II. He was captured by the Japanese and became a prisoner of war, during which time, among other things, he learned Chinese from his fellow prisoners. (Blinder re Phillips)

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