Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword by Arthur Brown
- Preface by Robert Leeson
- Part I Bill Phillips: Some Memories and Reflections
- Part II The Phillips Machine
- Part III Dynamic Stabilisation
- 15 The optimal control articles
- 16 Stabilisation policy in a closed economy
- 17 Stabilisation policy and the time-forms of lagged responses
- 18 Arnold Tustin's The Mechanism of Economic Systems: a review
- 19 Michel Kalecki's Theory of Economic Dynamics: An Essay on Cyclical and Long-Run Changes in the Capitalist Economy: a review
- 20 The growth articles
- 21 A simple model of employment, money and prices in a growing economy
- 22 Employment, inflation and growth
- 23 Economic policy and development
- 24 The famous Phillips Curve article
- 25 The relation between unemployment and the rate of change of money wage rates in the United Kingdom, 1861-1957
- 26 Discussion of Dicks-Mireaux and Dow's The Determinants of Wage Inflation: United Kingdom, 1946-1956
- 27 The Melbourne paper
- 28 Wage changes and unemployment in Australia, 1947-1958
- 29 Phillips and stabilisation policy as a threat to stability
- 30 The Phillips Curve in macroeconomics and econometrics
- 31 Bill Phillips' contribution to dynamic stabilisation policy
- 32 A Left Keynesian view of the Phillips Curve trade-off
- 33 Interactions with a fellow research engineer-economist
- 34 Does modern econometrics replicate the Phillips Curve?
- 35 The famous Phillips Curve article: a note on its publication
- Part IV Econometrics
- References
- Index of names
- Index of subjects
31 - Bill Phillips' contribution to dynamic stabilisation policy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword by Arthur Brown
- Preface by Robert Leeson
- Part I Bill Phillips: Some Memories and Reflections
- Part II The Phillips Machine
- Part III Dynamic Stabilisation
- 15 The optimal control articles
- 16 Stabilisation policy in a closed economy
- 17 Stabilisation policy and the time-forms of lagged responses
- 18 Arnold Tustin's The Mechanism of Economic Systems: a review
- 19 Michel Kalecki's Theory of Economic Dynamics: An Essay on Cyclical and Long-Run Changes in the Capitalist Economy: a review
- 20 The growth articles
- 21 A simple model of employment, money and prices in a growing economy
- 22 Employment, inflation and growth
- 23 Economic policy and development
- 24 The famous Phillips Curve article
- 25 The relation between unemployment and the rate of change of money wage rates in the United Kingdom, 1861-1957
- 26 Discussion of Dicks-Mireaux and Dow's The Determinants of Wage Inflation: United Kingdom, 1946-1956
- 27 The Melbourne paper
- 28 Wage changes and unemployment in Australia, 1947-1958
- 29 Phillips and stabilisation policy as a threat to stability
- 30 The Phillips Curve in macroeconomics and econometrics
- 31 Bill Phillips' contribution to dynamic stabilisation policy
- 32 A Left Keynesian view of the Phillips Curve trade-off
- 33 Interactions with a fellow research engineer-economist
- 34 Does modern econometrics replicate the Phillips Curve?
- 35 The famous Phillips Curve article: a note on its publication
- Part IV Econometrics
- References
- Index of names
- Index of subjects
Summary
Bill Phillips made a fundamental contribution to dynamic stabilisation policy and to the application of control methods to this issue. His contribution is contained in chapters 16 and 17, a pair of essays originally published in the Economic Journal. These essays draw upon his background as an engineer and are the first papers to apply feedback control methods to the stabilisation of a macroeconomy. Today that is a burgeoning field, and despite certain challenges stemming from the subsequent development of rational expectations, the application of control methods is now an integral part of the analysis of dynamic economic systems. In fact the Society of Economic Dynamics and Control (now the Society of Economic Dynamics) and the Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, originally developed in 1979 to foster the application of control methods to economics, are both now firmly established within the profession.
Phillips' contribution, like many fundamental contributions, was a simple one. Previously, Samuelson (1939) and Hicks (1950) had shown how if one combines the multiplier in consumption with the accelerator in investment, one can derive a dynamic equation determining the evolution of national income (output). The precise nature of this dynamic relationship depends upon the types of lags one considered and many variants of such relationships are possible. The dynamics can be expressed in discrete time, as by Samuelson and Hicks, or in continuous time, as for example illustrated by R.G.D. Allen (1956) and used by Phillips himself.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- A. W. H. Phillips: Collected Works in Contemporary Perspective , pp. 296 - 303Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
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