This question has bad grammar. Generally speaking, Classical theories lean more towards not having the government involved in the economy. A Keynesian theorist however, is going to believe in a strong fiscal policy, as well as a central banking system to govern the economies.
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Keynesian economic theory focuses on government intervention to manage economic fluctuations, while classical economic theory emphasizes a hands-off approach with minimal government involvement in the economy.
Classical Aggregate Supply function is vertical whereas the Keynesian Aggregate Supply function is positively sloped.
The major difference between the classical model and the Keynesian model is their approach to government intervention in the economy. The classical model believes in a hands-off approach, where the economy will naturally correct itself, while the Keynesian model advocates for government intervention to stimulate economic growth and stabilize fluctuations.
the classical believe the economy is best left to itself whereas the keynesian argued that government intervention could improve economic performance
tor ma k 101 bar....
Keynesian economic theory focuses on government intervention to manage economic fluctuations, while classical economic theory emphasizes a hands-off approach with minimal government involvement in the economy.
Keynesians say that government should interven in economic activities where as classical say not too
Classical Aggregate Supply function is vertical whereas the Keynesian Aggregate Supply function is positively sloped.
The major difference between the classical model and the Keynesian model is their approach to government intervention in the economy. The classical model believes in a hands-off approach, where the economy will naturally correct itself, while the Keynesian model advocates for government intervention to stimulate economic growth and stabilize fluctuations.
the classical believe the economy is best left to itself whereas the keynesian argued that government intervention could improve economic performance
Classical sociological theory makes all persons equal under the state with everything being state owned. Contemporary theory allows for differences in class/sociopolitical standing while retaining the core values of the classical theory.
There is no such thing as neoclassical macroeconomics, only new classical macroeconomics. Neoclassical economics is a dominant school of microeconomics which relies on the use of supply and demand models in order to determine prices, outputs and income distributions and bases its models on utility maximization by individuals with limited income and profit maximization by firms with limited resources (i.e. costs) using production factors. Neoclassical economics developed. Developed at the beginning of the 20th century in the wake of the Marginal Revolution, it is - together with neo-Keynesian macroeconomics - one of the two components of the neoclassical synthesis. As neo-Keynesian macroeconomics failed to provide satisfying solutions to several economic crises in the 1970s new classical economics emerged along with monetarism/Chicago school of economics as new macroeconomic schools of thought. New classical macroeconomics derive their theories on the macroeconomic level from microfoundations based on neoclassical theory. It is therein rivaled by New Keynesian macroeconomics which aims to provide Keynesian macroeconomics with microfoundations of its own.
the main argument between the two schools of thoughts is number one on the price and wage rigidity and secondly on the market clearing idea. new Keynesian economics believe in wage and price rigidity and non clearing (disequilibrium) market models. while the classical tend to disagree with these ideas and believe in wages and price flexibility and market clearing models.
There are a few differences between classical and traditional technology. Traditional technology is something that has always been done and classical technology is something that was once done.
both are theories
often written in Classical Chinese.