On the survival of a flawed theory of capital: Mainstream economics and the Cambridge capital controversies

Date

2024-03-01

Embargo

Advisor

Coadvisor

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Oxford University Press
Language
English

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

The Cambridge controversies on capital theory opposed heterodox economists, mainly from the University of Cambridge, UK, to mainstream economists, mostly based at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA. The controversies started in the 1950s and occupied the pages of some of the most influential journals. Their primary outcome was the broad acknowledgement of flaws, which we retrieve, in the concept of aggregate capital. Despite that acknowledgement, aggregate, homogeneous capital remains a staple of contemporary macroeconomics, as if the Cambridge controversies had never existed. To account for this apparent paradox is the aim of this article. We examine the arguments seeking to justify the enduring commitment to the aggregate capital approach and argue that they indicate an implicit commitment to instrumentalism. The indifference to the results of the Cambridge controversies is a consequence of methodological conformism and has shaky foundations.

Keywords

Macroeconomics, Economic Methodology, Investment, Capital, Intangible Capital, Capacity

Document Type

Journal article

Citation

Pereira, F., & Moura, M. G. (2024). On the survival of a flawed theory of capital: Mainstream economics and the Cambridge capital controversies. Cambridge Journal of Economics, 48(2), 169-186. https://doi.org/10.1093/cje/bead056. Repositório Institucional UPT. https://hdl.handle.net/11328/6078

Identifiers

TID

Designation

Access Type

Restricted Access

Sponsorship

Description