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A RETROSPECTIVE LOOK AT “THE HAYEK STORY”: ROUNDABOUTNESS, STICKY CONSUMPTION, AND SEQUESTERED CAPITAL

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 February 2021

James E. McClure
Affiliation:
James E. McClure, David Chandler Thomas, and Lee C. Spector, Ball State University.
David Chandler Thomas
Affiliation:
James E. McClure, David Chandler Thomas, and Lee C. Spector, Ball State University.
Lee C. Spector
Affiliation:
James E. McClure, David Chandler Thomas, and Lee C. Spector, Ball State University.

Abstract

Friedrich Hayek’s business cycle theory withered throughout the 1930s as he admitted that its underlying model of Böhm-Bawerkian roundaboutness was incomplete and inadequate. In 1934, Hayek started a two-volume book on capital theory, completing only one volume in 1941. Curiously, Hayek ([1941] 2009) cites John Hicks’s (1939) Value and Capital but not the financial measure of roundaboutness that Hicks suggested as a substitute for Böhm-Bawerkian roundaboutness. In 1967, in “The Hayek Story,” Hicks criticized the inexplicable lags. Hayek maintained his view that consumption was sticky and responded to Hicks with a mound-of-honey analogy. Nevertheless, Hayek maintained that his business cycle theory was fundamentally correct and continued to hope that others might someday discover a capital structure theory to undergird it. Toward fulfilling Hayek’s hope, we suggest augmenting the canonical stages of production with a sequestered-capital stage where products are invented, productized, and inventoried prior to launch, uncoordinated by observable prices.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© The History of Economics Society, 2021

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Footnotes

For comments and criticisms on earlier drafts, we thank Roger Garrison and Steven Horwitz. Any remaining errors are ours.

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