Handbook of Macroeconomics Handbook of Macroeconomics Series
Coordonnateurs : Taylor John B., Uhlig Harald
Handbook of Macroeconomics surveys all major advances in macroeconomic scholarship since the publication of Volume 1 (1999), carefully distinguishing between empirical, theoretical, methodological, and policy issues. It courageously examines why existing models failed during the financial crisis, and also addresses well-deserved criticism head on.
With contributions from the world's chief macroeconomists, its reevaluation of macroeconomic scholarship and speculation on its future constitute an investment worth making.
Section 1: The Facts of Economic Growth and Economic Fluctuation1. RBC Methodology and the Development of Aggregate Economic Theory2. The Facts of Economic Growth3. Macroeconomic Shocks and Their Propagation4. Macroeconomic Regimes and Regime Shifts5. The Macroeconomics of Time Allocation6. "Who Bears the Cost of Recessions? The Role of House Prices and Household Debt"7. "Allocative and Remitted Wages: New Facts and Challenges for Keynesian Models"8. Financial and Fiscal Crises
Section 2: The Methodology of Macroeconomics9. Factor Models and Structural Vector Autoregressions in Macroeconomics10. Solution and Estimation Methods for DSGE Models11. Recursive Contracts and Endogenously Incomplete Markets12. Macroeconomics and Household Heterogeneity13. Natural Experiments in Macroeconomics14. Accounting for Business Cycles15. Incomplete Information in Macroeconomics: Accommodating Frictions in Coordination16. New Methods for Macro-Financial Model Comparison and Policy Analysis
Graduate students and professors worldwide working in all subdisciplines of economics and finance. Secondary audience will include researchers working in macroeconomics and related areas, such as growth, economic behavior, international economics, and modeling.
Harald Uhlig, born 1961, is Professor at the Department of Economics of the University of Chicago since 2007, and was chairman of that department from 2009 to 2012. Previously, he held positions at Princeton, Tilburg University and the Humboldt Universität Berlin. His research interests are in quantitative macroeconomics, financial markets and Bayesian econometrics. He served as co-editor of Econometrica from 2006 to 2010 and as editor of the Journal of Political Economy
- Serves a double role as a textbook for macroeconomics courses and as a gateway for students to the latest research
- Acts as a one-of-a-kind resource as no major collections of macroeconomic essays have been published in the last decade
Date de parution : 11-2016
Ouvrage de 1374 p.
19x23.3 cm