Professor Joseph Salerno (2019) has commented on my recent recon-struction of the income effect from a causal-realist perspective (Israel, 2018b). In this rejoinder, I clarify my position and show that the main points of criticism in Salerno’s response are unfounded. In particular, I show that my argument does not involve a claim of greater “realism of assumptions” and it by no means contradicts the law of demand. Moreover, I work out in more detail the similarities and differences of my approach to the standard neoclassical decomposition of income and substitution effects. I show that my approach is closer to the Slutsky decomposition as opposed to the Hicks decomposition.
CITATION STYLE
Israel, K. F. (2020). Income and substitution effects: A rejoinder to professor joseph salerno. Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics, 23(2), 192–211. https://doi.org/10.35297/qjae.010066
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