Classicals versus Keynesians: Fifty Distinctions between Two Major Schools of Economic Thought
Seyyed Ali Zeytoon Nejad Moosavian

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive comparison between Classical and Keynesian economic schools, highlighting 50 key distinctions to aid students and educators in understanding their fundamental differences.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed, holistic table contrasting Classical and Keynesian schools across 50 aspects, enhancing teaching and learning of macroeconomic thought.
Findings
The table clarifies core differences between the two schools.
Students improve comprehension and critical thinking with this comparison.
Instructors gain a structured tool for teaching macroeconomic theories.
Abstract
Macroeconomics essentially discusses macroeconomic phenomena from the perspectives of various schools of economic thought, each of which takes different views on how macroeconomic agents make decisions and how the corresponding markets operate. Therefore, developing a clear, comprehensive understanding of how and in what ways these schools of economic thought differ is a key and a prerequisite for economics students to prosper academically and professionally in the discipline. This becomes even more crucial as economics students pursue their studies toward higher levels of education and graduate school, during which students are expected to attain higher levels of Bloom's taxonomy, including analysis, synthesis, evaluation, and creation. Teaching the distinctions and similarities of the two major schools of economic thought has never been an easy task to undertake in the classroom.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEconomic Theory and Policy · Economic Theory and Institutions · Innovations in Educational Methods
