Recursive Macroeconomic Theory, third edition

Couverture
MIT Press, 31 août 2012 - 1360 pages
A substantially revised new edition of a widely used text, offering both an introduction to recursive methods and advanced material.

Recursive methods offer a powerful approach for characterizing and solving complicated problems in dynamic macroeconomics. Recursive Macroeconomic Theory provides both an introduction to recursive methods and advanced material, mixing tools and sample applications. Only experience in solving practical problems fully conveys the power of the recursive approach, and the book provides many applications. This third edition offers substantial new material, with three entirely new chapters and significant revisions to others. The new content reflects recent developments in the field, further illustrating the power and pervasiveness of recursive methods.

New chapters cover asset pricing empirics with possible resolutions to puzzles; analysis of credible government policy that entails state variables other than reputation; and foundations of aggregate labor supply with time averaging replacing employment lotteries. Other new material includes a multi-country analysis of taxation in a growth model, elaborations of the fiscal theory of the price level, and age externalities in a matching model.

The book is suitable for both first- and second-year graduate courses in macroeconomics and monetary economics. Most chapters conclude with exercises. Many exercises and examples use Matlab programs, which are cited in a special index at the end of the book.

 

Table des matières

Part II Tools
27
Part III Competitive equilibria and applications
225
Part IV The savings problem and Bewley models
697
Part V Recursive contracts
773
Part VI Classical monetary and labor economics
1043
Part VII Technical appendices
1255

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À propos de l'auteur (2012)

Lars Ljungqvist is Professor of Economics at the Stockholm School of Economics.

Thomas J. Sargent, awarded the 2011 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences, is Berkley Professor of Economics and Business at New York University and Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution.

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