麻省理工学院与另一个剑桥

MIT and the Other Cambridge

History of Political Economy · 2014
被引 34
人大 A-ABS 2

中文导读

从MIT视角回顾1950-60年代与英国剑桥学派的资本理论之争,分析萨缪尔森和索洛为何深度卷入,并指出索洛-斯蒂格利茨的短期非均衡模型标志着MIT宏观经济学的转折点。

Abstract

In the late 1950s and early 1960s MIT economists, led by Paul Samuelson and Robert Solow, became involved in a long controversy with economists in Cambridge, England, led by Joan Robinson, Luigi Pasinetti, and Nicholas Kaldor, over the theory of capital. This article looks at that controversy from the perspective of MIT, trying to establish why Samuelson and Solow became so involved. It is argued that Robinson was challenging propositions about linear models and their relationship to models with smooth substitution, on which they had been working, in Samuelson’s case, since the 1940s. The article then turns a by-product of the controversy—the model of short-run disequilibrium by Solow and Joseph Stiglitz—arguing that this marked a turning point in macroeconomics at MIT. Throughout it is argued that the close personal contacts between MIT economists and their Cambridge counterparts are important to understand how the debate evolved.

剑桥资本争论MIT经济学派保罗·萨缪尔森罗伯特·索洛