Assumptions and objectives It was expressed by
E. Roy Weintraub that neoclassical economics rests on three assumptions, although certain branches of neoclassical theory may have different approaches: • People have
rational preferences between outcomes that can be identified and associated with values. • Individuals
maximize utility and firms
maximize profits. • People act independently on the basis of
full and relevant information. From these three assumptions, neoclassical economists have built a structure to understand the allocation of scarce resources among alternative ends—in fact, understanding such allocation is often considered the definition of economics to neoclassical theorists. Here is how
William Stanley Jevons presented "the problem of Economics". Given, a certain population, with various needs and powers of production, in possession of certain lands and other sources of material: required, the mode of employing their labor which will maximize the utility of their produce. From the basic assumptions of neoclassical economics comes a wide range of theories about various areas of economic activity. For example, profit maximization lies behind the neoclassical
theory of the firm, while the derivation of
demand curves leads to an understanding of
consumer goods, and the
supply curve allows an analysis of the
factors of production. Utility maximization is the source for the neoclassical theory of consumption, the derivation of demand curves for consumer goods, and the derivation of labor supply curves and
reservation demand.
Supply and demand model Market analysis is typically the neoclassical answer to price questions, such as why does an apple cost less than an automobile, why does the performance of work command a wage, or how to account for interest as a reward for saving. An important device of neoclassical market analysis is the graph presenting supply and demand curves. The curves reflect the behavior of individual buyers and individual sellers. Buyers and sellers interact with each other in and through these markets, and their interactions determine the market prices of anything they buy and sell. In the following graph, the specific price of the commodity being bought/sold is represented by P*. In reaching agreed outcomes of their interactions, the market behaviors of buyers and sellers are driven by their preferences (= wants, utilities, tastes, choices) and productive abilities (= technologies, resources). This creates a complex relationship between buyers and sellers. Thus, the geometrical analytics of supply and demand is only a simplified way how to describe and explore their interaction. Market supply and demand are aggregated across firms and individuals. Their interactions determine equilibrium output and price. The market supply and demand for each factor of production is derived analogously to those for market final output
Market failure and externalities Despite favoring markets to organize economic activity, neoclassical theory acknowledges that markets do not always produce the socially desirable outcome due to the presence of
externalities. Wolff and Resnick (2012) describe the
Pareto optimality in another way. According to them, the term "Pareto optimal point" signifies the equality of consumption and production, which indicates that the demand (as a ratio of marginal utilities) and supply (as a ratio of marginal costs) sides of an economy are in balance with each other. The Pareto optimum point also signifies that society has fully realized its potential output.
Normative judgments in neoclassical economics are shaped by the
Pareto criterion. As a result, many neoclassical economists favor a relatively
laissez-faire approach to government intervention in markets, since it is very difficult to make a change where no one will be worse off. However, many less conservative neoclassical economists instead use the
compensation principle, which says that an intervention is good if the total gains are larger than the total losses, even if losers are not compensated in practice. This idea holds that free trade between two countries is mutually beneficial because it allows the greatest total consumption in both countries. == Origins ==
Classical economics, developed in the 18th and 19th centuries, included a
value theory and
distribution theory. The value of a product was thought to depend on the costs involved in producing that product. The explanation of costs in classical economics was simultaneously an explanation of distribution. A landlord received rent, workers received wages, and a capitalist tenant farmer received profits on their investment. This classic approach included the work of
Adam Smith and
David Ricardo. However, some economists gradually began emphasizing the perceived
value of a good to the consumer. They proposed a theory that the value of a product was to be explained with differences in utility (usefulness) to the consumer. (In England, economists tended to conceptualize utility in keeping with the
utilitarianism of
Jeremy Bentham and later of
John Stuart Mill.) The third step from political economy to economics was the introduction of
marginalism and the proposition that economic actors made decisions based on
margins. For example, a person decides to buy a second sandwich based on how full he or she is after the first one, a firm hires a new employee based on the expected increase in profits the employee will bring. This differs from the aggregate decision-making of classical political economy in that it explains how vital goods such as water can be cheap, while luxuries can be expensive.
Marginal revolution The change in economic theory from classical to neoclassical economics has been called the "
marginal revolution", although it has been argued that the process was slower than the term suggests. It is frequently dated from
William Stanley Jevons's
Theory of Political Economy (1871),
Carl Menger's
Principles of Economics (1871), and
Léon Walras's
Elements of Pure Economics (1874–1877). Historians of economics and economists have debated: • Whether
utility or marginalism was more essential to this revolution (whether the noun or the adjective in the phrase "marginal utility" is more important) • Whether there was a revolutionary change of thought or merely a gradual development and change of emphasis from their predecessors • Whether grouping these economists together disguises differences more important than their similarities. In particular, Jevons saw his economics as an application and development of
Jeremy Bentham's utilitarianism and never had a fully developed
general equilibrium theory. Menger did not embrace this hedonic conception, explained diminishing marginal utility in terms of subjective prioritization of possible uses, and emphasized disequilibrium and the discrete; further, Menger had an objection to the use of mathematics in economics, while the other two modeled their theories after 19th-century mechanics. Jevons built on the hedonic conception of Bentham or of Mill, while Walras was more interested in the interaction of markets than in explaining the individual psyche. The thinking of the Cambridge school continued in the steps of classical political economics and its traditions but was based on the new approach that originated from the marginalist revolution. Its founder was
Alfred Marshall, and among the main representatives were
Arthur Cecil Pigou,
Ralph George Hawtrey and
Dennis Holme Robertson. Pigou worked on the theory of
welfare economics and the
quantity theory of money. Hawtrey and Robertson developed the Cambridge cash balance approach to
theory of money and influenced the
trade cycle theory. Until the 1930s,
John Maynard Keynes was also influencing the theoretical concepts of the Cambridge school. The key characteristic of the Cambridge school was its instrumental approach to the economy – the role of the theoretical economist is first to define theoretical instruments of economic analysis and only just then apply them to real economic problems. The main representatives of the Lausanne school of economic thought were
Léon Walras,
Vilfredo Pareto and
Enrico Barone. The school became famous for developing the
general equilibrium theory. In the contemporary economy, the general equilibrium theory is the methodologic basis of
mainstream economics in the form of
New classical macroeconomics and
New Keynesian macroeconomics. == Evolution ==