Labor Market and Business Cycle Theories

Labor Market and Business Cycle Theories

AngličtinaEbook
Ferri, Piero
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
EAN: 9783662008317
Dostupné online
2 217 Kč
Běžná cena: 2 463 Kč
Sleva 10 %
ks

Dostupné formáty

Podrobné informace

Interest in business cycles has had its 'ups and downs'. After a period of almost steady state growth and of economic tranquility, when the business cycle seemed to be obsolete, the turbulence of the 70s and 80s has contributedto a renewed interest in the topic. Important analytical and methodological innovations have also favored the present abundance of contributions. Four innovations are of particular importance: i. microfoundations ii. nonlinearities iii. stochastic variables iv. real aspects. Both Classical macroeconomics and new-Keynesian approaches seem to share these characteristics, which apply both to endogenous and exogenous explanations of the cycle. The distance separating the newer literature from its forebears seems vast. Previously, cycle theory was characterized by a macro approach and utilized nonlinearities either through piecewise 'linear models or with the aid of Classical theorems in the field of dynamic systems. To consider and to compare the old and the new literature on business cycles is one of the goals of this book. To narrow the distance separating them is another goal of this research. We do not try to bridge it, but rather to revisit the former tradition with new tools. Finally, a particular emphasis is put on the 'ceilings and floors' type of literature. One of us has written a D. Phil. thesis with Sir John Hicks, and both have worked with H. P. Minsky. Hicks, along with Goodwin, introdu. ced the concept of ceilings and floors into business cycle analysis, and Minsky made important contributions to the area.
EAN 9783662008317
ISBN 3662008319
Typ produktu Ebook
Vydavatel Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Datum vydání 6. prosince 2012
Jazyk English
Země Germany
Autoři Ferri, Piero; Greenberg, Edward
Série Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems