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Introduction to Dynamic Macroeconomic Theory: An Overlapping Generations Approach
Harvard University Press, 1991 Cloth: 978-0-674-46111-6 Library of Congress Classification HB172.5.M366 1991 Dewey Decimal Classification 339
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Economies are constantly in flux, and economists have long sought reliable means of analyzing their dynamic properties. This book provides a succinct and accessible exposition of modern dynamic (or intertemporal) macroeconomics. The authors use a microeconomics-based general equilibrium framework, specifically the overlapping generations model, which assumes that in every period there are two generations which overlap. This model allows the authors to fully describe economies over time and to employ traditional welfare analysis to judge the effects of various policies. By choosing to keep the mathematical level simple and to use the same modeling framework throughout, the authors are able to address many subtle economic issues. They analyze savings, social security systems, the determination of interest rates and asset prices for different types of assets, Ricardian equivalence, business cycles, chaos theory, investment, growth, and a variety of monetary phenomena. See other books on: Dynamic Macroeconomic Theory | Equilibrium (Economics) | Macroeconomics | Mathematical models | McCandless, George See other titles from Harvard University Press |
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