Palgrave Macmillan in association with International Economic Association
2005
xiii, 372 sider : illustrations ; 22 cm
I.E.A. conference volume, no. 133
Originalår: 2001;"The congress was dedicated to the memory of the late Michael Bruno, President of the IEA 1992-95"--Page ix;Originally published: 2001
1. Introduction: Advances and Challenges in Macroeconomics / Jacques Dreze --;Part I: The General Framework. 2. From Neoclassical Growth Theory to New Classical Macroeconomics / Robert H. Solow --;3. On the Macroeconomics of Uncertainty and Incomplete Markets (Presidential Address) /Jacques Dreze --;4. Macroeconomic Frictions: What Have We Learnt from the Real Business Cycle Research Programme? / Jean-Pierre Danthine & John B. Donaldson --;Part II: Money and Finance. 5. How the Rational Expectations Revolution Has Changed Macroeconomic Policy Research / John Taylor --;6. Monetary Policy in an Imperfect Information World / B. Greenwald --;7. Understanding Inflation: Implications for Monetary Policy / Stephen G. Cecchetti & Erica L. Groshen --;Part III: Wages and Employment. 8. Single-Peaked versus Diversified Capitalism: The Relation Between Economic Institutions and Outcomes / Richard Freeman --;9. Institutions, Restructuring and Macroeconomic Performance / Ricardo Caballero & Mohamad Hammour --;10. Rigid Wages: What Have We Learnt from Microeconomic Studies? / Francis Kramarz --;Part IV: Econometrics. 11. The Getting of Macroeconomic Wisdom / Adrian Pagan --;Part V: Dynamics. 12. Learning Dynamics: Complete and Incomplete Learning / Seppo Honkapohja --;13. Standard-of-Living Aspirations and Economic Cycles / David de la Croix --;Part VI: Development. 14. Development Policies Beyond Export-Led Growth / Vittorio Corbo --;15. Macroeconomic Policies: Can We Transfer Lessons Across LDC's? / Carlos Rodriguez --;16. Cross-Country Growth Comparison: Theory to Empirics / Danny Quah --;17. Volatility and Macroeconomic Paradigms for Rich and Poor Countries (Michael Bruno Memorial Lecture) / Wiliam Easterly, Roumeen Islam & Joseph E. Stiglitz
Leading world scholars analyze a range of specific departures from general equilibrium theory which have significant implications for the macroeconomic analysis of both developed and developing economies.