We examine the neoclassical interpretations of Shiller’s tests on stock market volatility and analyze their theoretical and empirical limitations. We then show that volatility can be interpreted in an alternative way in the light of a new macroeconomic model whose main innovative feature is that it relates dividends to the Classical concept of “normal distribution” and stock prices to the Keynesian “principle of effective demand.” While a relatively stable normal rate of profit determines dividends, the continuous fluctuations of investment, income, and saving and the related portfolio choices influence the demand for shares and provoke stock prices volatility with respect to dividends. The Classical-Keynesian model is then extended to contemplate also a “financial instability hypothesis” and a “monetary circuit.” Neoclassical and alternative stock market models are presented here by adopting a comparative approach—that is, a single system of equations in which the causal relations among its variables change according to the theory examined.
Stock Market Volatility Tests: A Classical-Keynesian Alternative to Mainstream Interpretations / Brancaccio, Emiliano; Buonaguidi, Damiano. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF POLITICAL ECONOMY. - ISSN 0891-1916. - 48:3(2019), pp. 253-274. [10.1080/08911916.2019.1655954]
Stock Market Volatility Tests: A Classical-Keynesian Alternative to Mainstream Interpretations
Brancaccio, Emiliano;
2019
Abstract
We examine the neoclassical interpretations of Shiller’s tests on stock market volatility and analyze their theoretical and empirical limitations. We then show that volatility can be interpreted in an alternative way in the light of a new macroeconomic model whose main innovative feature is that it relates dividends to the Classical concept of “normal distribution” and stock prices to the Keynesian “principle of effective demand.” While a relatively stable normal rate of profit determines dividends, the continuous fluctuations of investment, income, and saving and the related portfolio choices influence the demand for shares and provoke stock prices volatility with respect to dividends. The Classical-Keynesian model is then extended to contemplate also a “financial instability hypothesis” and a “monetary circuit.” Neoclassical and alternative stock market models are presented here by adopting a comparative approach—that is, a single system of equations in which the causal relations among its variables change according to the theory examined.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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