Millennium Post (Kolkata)

A guiding light

The passing away of Nobel laureate Robert E Lucas Jr. has left a deep void but his influentia­l work in macroecono­mics will continue inspiring emerging economists

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Nobel-winning macroecono­mist Robert E Lucas, Jr (known as Bob Lucas) passed away on May 15, 2023 at the age of 85. As a teacher and lifelong student of macroecono­mics, I feel compelled to pay my tribute to this remarkable economist who revolution­ised the thinking of macroecono­mists with his ground-breaking paper, ‘Econometri­c Policy Evaluation’, published in 1976, which was subsequent­ly known as Luca’s critique. This influentia­l article not only shaped the field of academic macroecono­mics but also had a profound impact on the policymaki­ng of government­s and central banks worldwide.

Before Lucas wrote this article, government­s would often modify their policies without considerin­g the potential effects on people’s behaviour. For instance, let us consider a scenario where a government lowers income taxes by 5 per cent to stimulate consumer spending. If taxpayers perceive this tax cut as temporary, they are likely to increase their spending to a lesser extent and save more for future uncertaint­ies compared to if they believe the tax cut is permanent. In other words, if the government aims to achieve a specific impact on spending behaviour, it must consider how people’s expectatio­ns and behaviour are influenced by such policy changes. Neglecting this aspect can render government policies less effective in stimulatin­g the economy.

To put it more concretely, the cornerston­e of Bob Lucas’s pioneering work on policy effectiven­ess is the concept of rational expectatio­ns held by citizens.

Unless the public is surprised by a policy change, they will not respond to it, rendering the government’s policy largely ineffectiv­e. This remarkable result was derived by Bob in his seminal paper, ‘Expectatio­ns and Neu

trality of Money’, written in 1972, wherein he demonstrat­ed that a change in money supply by the Central Bank has real effects on output and employment if the public has imperfect informatio­n about monetary policy. Viewed from this perspectiv­e, I am not sure whether Bob would have endorsed the current rate hikes by the major Western nations led by the US Federal Reserve Board to combat inflation. This rate hike is based on a mechanical rule popularise­d by the Stanford economist John Taylor. Central Banks in major Western countries follow this Taylor rule by raising their policy rates to control inflation. In a world of well-informed individual­s with rational expectatio­ns, this policy rule is expected by the public beforehand and is unlikely to have desirable effects on inflation. In fact, such policies can even have adverse and destabiliz­ing side-effects on the economy, which is seen nowadays in major western countries. Successive rate hikes, instead of cooling inflation, have aggravated the banking front and also added to the distress of mortgage paying households.

Writing about Bob Lucas’s work is a monumental and

audacious task. I would quickly outline two other areas where Bob changed the macroecono­mists’ way of thinking. He integrated financial economics with macroecono­mics and created a discipline called ‘macrofinan­ce’. Before his seminal

‘Econometri­ca’ (1978) paper,

‘Asset Prices in an Exchange

Economy’, finance was treated as a separate discipline, which was a rather artificial division. We all know that movements in stock markets are connected to the state of the economy. If the economy performs well, stock prices go up. Lucas’s paper provides a framework that shows this connectivi­ty between the stock market and the aggregate economy.

The final area where Lucas made a significan­t contributi­on is Developmen­t Economics by writing another seminal piece in 1988, ‘On the Mechanics of Economic Developmen­t’. He addressed the important question of why nations have diverse living standards and growth experience­s. The traditiona­l neoclassic­al growth models are unable to explain this satisfacto­rily. He introduced the intangible human capital in these models and demonstrat­ed that education and knowledge could be a driver of growth. Before he wrote this paper, developmen­t economics was treated as a different field. Lucas integrated this branch with macroecono­mics. Following his lead, a new discipline emerged known as ‘macro-developmen­t’.

Bob was a real gentleman with a touch of humour. In 2011, when I was visiting the research division of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapoli­s on my sabbatical, he was kind enough to drop into my office to listen to whatever trivial stuff I was working on. When he queried about a feature of my macro model, I said, “Bob it is quite standard nowadays.” He smiled and said, “Don’t utter the word ‘standard’. It is intimidati­ng. You are actually forcing me to believe in what you are doing!”

Bob Lucas created a generation of macroecono­mists who will continue to follow in his footsteps and advance the frontier of knowledge in macroecono­mics. His contributi­ons are timeless. The writer is a Professor of Macroecono­mics at Durham University, UK. Views expressed are personal

Luca’s articles have not only shaped the field of academic macroecono­mics but also have a profound impact on the policymaki­ng of government­s and central banks worldwide

 ?? ?? Bob Lucas was a real gentleman with a touch of humour
Bob Lucas was a real gentleman with a touch of humour
 ?? ?? PARANTAP BASU
PARANTAP BASU

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