The macroeconomics of self-fulfilling prophecies:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cambridge, Mass. [u.a.]
MIT Press
2002
|
Ausgabe: | 2. ed., 2. print. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Literaturverz. S. [289] - 293 |
Beschreibung: | XVI, 300 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 0262062038 |
Internformat
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
Preface to Second Edition xv
1 Introduction 1
1.1 Equilibrium Theory as an Approach to Macroeconomics 1
1.2 Preview of the Argument 3
1.3 Example 4
1.3.1 Regular Case 6
1.3.2 Irregular Case 7
1.4 Concluding Remarks 9
1.5 Problems 9
2 Linear Difference Equations: Part 1 11
2.1 Introduction 11
2.2 Linearizing Nonlinear Models 11
2.2.1 Nonlinear Models to Represent Economies 11
2.2.2 Linearizing Autonomous Equations 12
2.2.3 Linearizing Nonautonomous Equations 13
2.2.4 Example of Linearization: The Solow Model 14
2.3 Solving First-Order Linear Models 17
2.3.1 First-Order Deterministic Equations 18
2.3.2 First-Order Stochastic Equations 18
2.3.3 Sequences of Probability Distributions 21
2.3.4 The Solow Model Revisited 22
2.4 Solving Higher-Order Linear Models 25
2.4.1 Eigenvalues and Eigenvectors 27
2.4.2 Higher-Order Deterministic Equations 29
2.4.3 Diagonalizing Systems of Nonstochastic Equations 32
2.4.4 Stochastic Vector Difference Equations 33
2.4.5 Example of a Vector System—The Behavior of the
Solow Residual 34
2.5 Concluding Remarks 38
2.6 Problems 39
3 Linear Difference Equations: Part 2 41
3.1 Introduction 41
3.2 Linear Rational Expectations Models 42
viii Contents
3.2.1 Optimal Growth as an Illustration of a Rational
Expectations Model 44
3.3 Solving Linear Rational Expectations Models 47
3.3.1 Different Types of Rational Expectations Models 47
3.3.2 Case of a Regular Equilibrium 49
3.3.3 Solving a Rational Expectations Model by Iterating
into the Future 50
3.3.4 Completing the Solution by Solving Equations that
Depend on the Past 51
3.3.5 Optimal Growth Model and the Solow Model
Compared 52
3.4 Cross-equation Restrictions and the Lucas Critique 53
3.4.1 Dynamics of a Monetary Model—A Second
Example 53
3.4.2 Solving the Example Explicitly 55
3.4.3 Lucas Critique and the Cross-equation Restrictions 57
3.4.4 Irregular Solutions 57
3.5 Concluding Remarks 58
3.6 Problems 59
4 General Equilibrium Theory under Certainty 63
4.1 Introduction 63
4.2 Idea of Equilibrium 67
4.3 Theory of Consumer Choice 68
4.3.1 Assumptions about Preferences 68
4.3.2 Consumer s Problem 70
4.4 Excess Demand Functions 71
4.4.1 Individual Excess Demand Functions 71
4.4.2 Aggregate Excess Demand Functions 72
4.5 Equilibria and Their Properties 74
4.5.1 Some Definitions and Development of Notation 75
4.5.2 Geometry of Equilibrium 76
4.5.3 Debreu-Sonnenschein-Mantel Theorem 78
4.6 General Equilibrium Theory and Efficient Allocations of
Resources 79
Contents ix
4.6.1 First Welfare Theorem 79
4.6.2 Second Welfare Theorem 80
4.7 Concluding Remarks 82
4.8 Problems 83
5 Infinite Horizon Economies and Representative Agents 85
5.1 Introduction 85
5.2 Representative Agent Economy 88
5.2.1 Assumptions about Structure 88
5.2.2 Assumptions about Preferences 90
5.2.3 Budget Sets and Market Structure 92
5.2.4 Consumer s Problem 94
5.3 Competitive Equilibrium and the Planner s Problem 95
5.3.1 Competitive Equilibrium 95
5.3.2 Planner s Problem 96
5.4 Using the Representative Agent Model to Explain Time
Series Data 99
5.4.1 Removing the Trend from Data 99
5.4.2 Simple RBC Model and Its Implications 102
5.4.3 Regression on a Common Trend: What the Model
Tells Us to Do 103
5.4.4 Hodrick-Prescott Filter: What RBC Economists
Actually Do 106
5.4.5 Calibration and Surnmary Statistics: How RBC
Theorists Measure Success 108
5.5 Concluding Remarks 109
5.6 Appendix: Transversality Condition 110
5.7 Problems 112
6 Infinite Horizon Economies and Overlapping Generations 115
6.1 Introduction 115
6.2 Structure of the Overlapping Generations Economy 116
6.3 Consumer s Problem 117
6.3.1 Problem of a Young Agent 117
6.3.2 Problem of an Old Agent 118
x Contents
6.4 Example of a Pareto Inferior Equilibrium 119
6.4.1 Case of Early Endowments 119
6.4.2 Case of Late Endowments 120
6.5 Institutions that May Improve Allocations 120
6.6 Set of Equilibria in the Overlapping Generations Model 122
6.6.1 Equilibria as Solutions to Difference Equations 122
6.6.2 Stationary Equilibria 124
6.6.3 Classifying Economies by Types of Stationary
Equilibria 125
6.6.4 Dynamic Equilibria 127
6.7 Some Questions about the Model 128
6.7.1 Why Does the First Welfare Theorem Break Down? 129
6.7.2 When Does Indeterminacy Occur? 129
6.7.3 When Are Equilibria Efficient? 130
6.8 More General Examples of Overlapping Generations
Economies 132
6.8.1 Kehoe-Levine Approach 134
6.8.2 Indeterminacy in the OG Model 135
6.9 Concluding Remarks 135
6.10 Problems 136
7 Infinite Horizon Economies with Nonconvexities 141
7.1 Introduction 141
7.2 Growth Model with Increasing Returns 142
7.2.1 Equations That Characterize an Equilibrium 142
7.2.2 Behavior of the Representative Family 143
7.2.3 Interpretation 1: Externalities in Production 144
7.2.4 Interpretation 2: Monopolistic Competition 145
7.3 Empirical Evidence for Increasing Returns 149
7.4 Equilibria in the Increasing Returns Economy 152
7.4.1 Finding a Balanced Growth Path 152
7.4.2 Approximate Linear Model 154
7.5 Comparing the Theoretical Properties of RA and IR
Models 155
7.5.1 Why Does the IR Model Display Different
Dynamics? 155
Contents xi
7.5.2 RA Model: An Example of a Regular Equilibrium 157
7.5.3 IR Model: An Example of an Irregular Equilibrium 158
7.6 Comparing Some Empirical Predictions of RA and IR
Models 160
7.6.1 Contemporaneous Statistics 160
7.6.2 Dynamic Responses—The Impulse Response
Function 163
7.7 Concluding Remarks 164
7.8 Problems 166
8 Some Recent Developments 171
8.1 Introduction 171
8.2 New Evidence against Big Increasing Returns 171
8.3 Nonseparable Preferences 173
8.3.1 Households 173
8.3.2 Technology 174
8.3.3 Solving the Consumer s Problem 175
8.3.4 Equations That Characterize Equilibrium 176
8.3.5 Example 178
8.4 Two-Sector Models 180
8.4.1 Technology 180
8.4.2 Production Possibilities Frontier 181
8.4.3 Behavior of the Representative Family 183
8.4.4 Indeterminacy and the Two-Sector Model 185
8.4.5 Procyclical Consumption 185
8.4.6 Calibrated Two-Sector Model 187
8.5 Concluding Remarks 187
8.6 Problems 188
9 General Equilibrium Theory and Uncertainty 191
9.1 Introduction 191
9.2 Debreu s Formulation of the Problem 191
9.2.1 Preferences under Uncertainty 191
9.2.2 Budget Constraints 196
9.3 Arrow s Formulation of the Problem 197
9.3.1 Trade in Financial Securities 197
xii Contents
9.3.2 Complete and Incomplete Markets 199
9.3.3 Multiple Budget Constraints and Incomplete
Markets 201
9.4 Infinite Horizon Economies with Uncertainty 202
9.4.1 Asset Pricing in Lucas Tree Economies 202
9.4.2 Digression on Market Structure 204
9.4.3 Asset Pricing in the Representative Agent
Case 206
9.5 Concluding Remarks 208
9.6 Problems 209
10 Sunspots 211
10.1 Introduction 211
10.2 Do Sunspots Matter? 212
10.2.1 Complete and Incomplete Participation 212
10.2.2 Setting up the Environment 213
10.2.3 Sunspot Theorems 215
10.3 Example of a Macroeconomic Model Where Sunspots
Matter 217
10.3.1 Description of the Environment 217
10.3.2 Set of Equilibria 220
10.3.3 Supporting Sunspot Equilibria with Beliefs 223
10.3.4 Sunspots, Bubbles, and Regular Equilibria 226
10.4 Concluding Remarks 228
10.5 Problems 229
11 Macroeconomic Models of Money 231
11.1 Introduction 231
11.1.1 Rate of Return Dominance and Legal Restrictions
Theory 231
11.1.2 Some Quick Fixes to Rate of Return Dominance 232
11.2 Models of Money 233
11.2.1 Budget Sets: the Opportunity Cost of Holding
Money 234
11.2.2 Objective Functions: Cash in Advance and Its
Relationship to Money in the Utility Function 237
Contents xiii
11.3 Dynamics of a Cash-in-Advance Model 239
11.3.1 Different Types of Monetary Policy 239
11.3.2 Government s Budget Constraints 240
11.3.3 Typology of Policy Regimes 242
11.4 Equilibrium under Interest Rate Control 243
11.4.1 Policy Mix A: Fixed Interest Rates and Zero Debt 243
11.4.2 Equilibrium of the Real Economy under Interest
Rate Control 246
11.4.3 Equilibrium Rates of Change of Nominal
Variables under Interest Rate Control 247
11.4.4 Indeterminacy of the Nominal Scale of the
Economy under Interest Rate Control 248
11.4.5 Economics of Indeterminacy under Interest Rate
Control 249
11.5 Equilibrium under a Fixed Money Growth Rate Rule 250
11.5.1 Policy Mix B: Fixed Money Growth Rate and
Zero Debt 251
11.5.2 Equilibrium of the Real Economy with a Fixed
Money Growth Rate 251
11.5.3 Example of Indeterminate Equilibria in a Simple
Economy 252
11.6 Concluding Remarks 254
11.7 Problems 255
12 Applied Monetary Theory 259
12.1 Introduction 259
12.2 Monetary Facts: What There Is to Explain 260
12.3 Simple Monetary Model: Using Equilibrium Theory to
Explain the Facts 263
12.3.1 Modeling the Exchange Process 265
12.3.2 Formalizing the Exchange Technology 266
12.3.3 How to Describe an Equilibrium 267
12.4 How Do Equilibria Behave? 270
12.4.1 Choosing Functional Forms 270
12.4.2 What Do Equilibria Look Like? 271
xiv Contents
12.4.3 Alternative Views of the Money-Income
Correlation? 275
12.4.4 What Does All of This Have to Do with Sticky
Prices? 276
12.5 Concluding Remarks 277
12.6 Problems 278
Notes 281
Bibliography 289
Index 295
|
adam_txt |
Contents
Preface to Second Edition xv
1 Introduction 1
1.1 Equilibrium Theory as an Approach to Macroeconomics 1
1.2 Preview of the Argument 3
1.3 Example 4
1.3.1 Regular Case 6
1.3.2 Irregular Case 7
1.4 Concluding Remarks 9
1.5 Problems 9
2 Linear Difference Equations: Part 1 11
2.1 Introduction 11
2.2 Linearizing Nonlinear Models 11
2.2.1 Nonlinear Models to Represent Economies 11
2.2.2 Linearizing Autonomous Equations 12
2.2.3 Linearizing Nonautonomous Equations 13
2.2.4 Example of Linearization: The Solow Model 14
2.3 Solving First-Order Linear Models 17
2.3.1 First-Order Deterministic Equations 18
2.3.2 First-Order Stochastic Equations 18
2.3.3 Sequences of Probability Distributions 21
2.3.4 The Solow Model Revisited 22
2.4 Solving Higher-Order Linear Models 25
2.4.1 Eigenvalues and Eigenvectors 27
2.4.2 Higher-Order Deterministic Equations 29
2.4.3 Diagonalizing Systems of Nonstochastic Equations 32
2.4.4 Stochastic Vector Difference Equations 33
2.4.5 Example of a Vector System—The Behavior of the
Solow Residual 34
2.5 Concluding Remarks 38
2.6 Problems 39
3 Linear Difference Equations: Part 2 41
3.1 Introduction 41
3.2 Linear Rational Expectations Models 42
viii Contents
3.2.1 Optimal Growth as an Illustration of a Rational
Expectations Model 44
3.3 Solving Linear Rational Expectations Models 47
3.3.1 Different Types of Rational Expectations Models 47
3.3.2 Case of a Regular Equilibrium 49
3.3.3 Solving a Rational Expectations Model by Iterating
into the Future 50
3.3.4 Completing the Solution by Solving Equations that
Depend on the Past 51
3.3.5 Optimal Growth Model and the Solow Model
Compared 52
3.4 Cross-equation Restrictions and the Lucas Critique 53
3.4.1 Dynamics of a Monetary Model—A Second
Example 53
3.4.2 Solving the Example Explicitly 55
3.4.3 Lucas Critique and the Cross-equation Restrictions 57
3.4.4 Irregular Solutions 57
3.5 Concluding Remarks 58
3.6 Problems 59
4 General Equilibrium Theory under Certainty 63
4.1 Introduction 63
4.2 Idea of Equilibrium 67
4.3 Theory of Consumer Choice 68
4.3.1 Assumptions about Preferences 68
4.3.2 Consumer's Problem 70
4.4 Excess Demand Functions 71
4.4.1 Individual Excess Demand Functions 71
4.4.2 Aggregate Excess Demand Functions 72
4.5 Equilibria and Their Properties 74
4.5.1 Some Definitions and Development of Notation 75
4.5.2 Geometry of Equilibrium 76
4.5.3 Debreu-Sonnenschein-Mantel Theorem 78
4.6 General Equilibrium Theory and Efficient Allocations of
Resources 79
Contents ix
4.6.1 First Welfare Theorem 79
4.6.2 Second Welfare Theorem 80
4.7 Concluding Remarks 82
4.8 Problems 83
5 Infinite Horizon Economies and Representative Agents 85
5.1 Introduction 85
5.2 Representative Agent Economy 88
5.2.1 Assumptions about Structure 88
5.2.2 Assumptions about Preferences 90
5.2.3 Budget Sets and Market Structure 92
5.2.4 Consumer's Problem 94
5.3 Competitive Equilibrium and the Planner's Problem 95
5.3.1 Competitive Equilibrium 95
5.3.2 Planner's Problem 96
5.4 Using the Representative Agent Model to Explain Time
Series Data 99
5.4.1 Removing the Trend from Data 99
5.4.2 Simple RBC Model and Its Implications 102
5.4.3 Regression on a Common Trend: What the Model
Tells Us to Do 103
5.4.4 Hodrick-Prescott Filter: What RBC Economists
Actually Do 106
5.4.5 Calibration and Surnmary Statistics: How RBC
Theorists Measure Success 108
5.5 Concluding Remarks 109
5.6 Appendix: Transversality Condition 110
5.7 Problems 112
6 Infinite Horizon Economies and Overlapping Generations 115
6.1 Introduction 115
6.2 Structure of the Overlapping Generations Economy 116
6.3 Consumer's Problem 117
6.3.1 Problem of a Young Agent 117
6.3.2 Problem of an Old Agent 118
x Contents
6.4 Example of a Pareto Inferior Equilibrium 119
6.4.1 Case of Early Endowments 119
6.4.2 Case of Late Endowments 120
6.5 Institutions that May Improve Allocations 120
6.6 Set of Equilibria in the Overlapping Generations Model 122
6.6.1 Equilibria as Solutions to Difference Equations 122
6.6.2 Stationary Equilibria 124
6.6.3 Classifying Economies by Types of Stationary
Equilibria 125
6.6.4 Dynamic Equilibria 127
6.7 Some Questions about the Model 128
6.7.1 Why Does the First Welfare Theorem Break Down? 129
6.7.2 When Does Indeterminacy Occur? 129
6.7.3 When Are Equilibria Efficient? 130
6.8 More General Examples of Overlapping Generations
Economies 132
6.8.1 Kehoe-Levine Approach 134
6.8.2 Indeterminacy in the OG Model 135
6.9 Concluding Remarks 135
6.10 Problems 136
7 Infinite Horizon Economies with Nonconvexities 141
7.1 Introduction 141
7.2 Growth Model with Increasing Returns 142
7.2.1 Equations That Characterize an Equilibrium 142
7.2.2 Behavior of the Representative Family 143
7.2.3 Interpretation 1: Externalities in Production 144
7.2.4 Interpretation 2: Monopolistic Competition 145
7.3 Empirical Evidence for Increasing Returns 149
7.4 Equilibria in the Increasing Returns Economy 152
7.4.1 Finding a Balanced Growth Path 152
7.4.2 Approximate Linear Model 154
7.5 Comparing the Theoretical Properties of RA and IR
Models 155
7.5.1 Why Does the IR Model Display Different
Dynamics? 155
Contents xi
7.5.2 RA Model: An Example of a Regular Equilibrium 157
7.5.3 IR Model: An Example of an Irregular Equilibrium 158
7.6 Comparing Some Empirical Predictions of RA and IR
Models 160
7.6.1 Contemporaneous Statistics 160
7.6.2 Dynamic Responses—The Impulse Response
Function 163
7.7 Concluding Remarks 164
7.8 Problems 166
8 Some Recent Developments 171
8.1 Introduction 171
8.2 New Evidence against Big Increasing Returns 171
8.3 Nonseparable Preferences 173
8.3.1 Households 173
8.3.2 Technology 174
8.3.3 Solving the Consumer's Problem 175
8.3.4 Equations That Characterize Equilibrium 176
8.3.5 Example 178
8.4 Two-Sector Models 180
8.4.1 Technology 180
8.4.2 Production Possibilities Frontier 181
8.4.3 Behavior of the Representative Family 183
8.4.4 Indeterminacy and the Two-Sector Model 185
8.4.5 Procyclical Consumption 185
8.4.6 Calibrated Two-Sector Model 187
8.5 Concluding Remarks 187
8.6 Problems 188
9 General Equilibrium Theory and Uncertainty 191
9.1 Introduction 191
9.2 Debreu's Formulation of the Problem 191
9.2.1 Preferences under Uncertainty 191
9.2.2 Budget Constraints 196
9.3 Arrow's Formulation of the Problem 197
9.3.1 Trade in Financial Securities 197
xii Contents
9.3.2 Complete and Incomplete Markets 199
9.3.3 Multiple Budget Constraints and Incomplete
Markets 201
9.4 Infinite Horizon Economies with Uncertainty 202
9.4.1 Asset Pricing in Lucas Tree Economies 202
9.4.2 Digression on Market Structure 204
9.4.3 Asset Pricing in the Representative Agent
Case 206
9.5 Concluding Remarks 208
9.6 Problems 209
10 Sunspots 211
10.1 Introduction 211
10.2 Do Sunspots Matter? 212
10.2.1 Complete and Incomplete Participation 212
10.2.2 Setting up the Environment 213
10.2.3 Sunspot Theorems 215
10.3 Example of a Macroeconomic Model Where Sunspots
Matter 217
10.3.1 Description of the Environment 217
10.3.2 Set of Equilibria 220
10.3.3 Supporting Sunspot Equilibria with Beliefs 223
10.3.4 Sunspots, Bubbles, and Regular Equilibria 226
10.4 Concluding Remarks 228
10.5 Problems 229
11 Macroeconomic Models of Money 231
11.1 Introduction 231
11.1.1 Rate of Return Dominance and Legal Restrictions
Theory 231
11.1.2 Some Quick Fixes to Rate of Return Dominance 232
11.2 Models of Money 233
11.2.1 Budget Sets: the Opportunity Cost of Holding
Money 234
11.2.2 Objective Functions: Cash in Advance and Its
Relationship to Money in the Utility Function 237
Contents xiii
11.3 Dynamics of a Cash-in-Advance Model 239
11.3.1 Different Types of Monetary Policy 239
11.3.2 Government's Budget Constraints 240
11.3.3 Typology of Policy Regimes 242
11.4 Equilibrium under Interest Rate Control 243
11.4.1 Policy Mix A: Fixed Interest Rates and Zero Debt 243
11.4.2 Equilibrium of the Real Economy under Interest
Rate Control 246
11.4.3 Equilibrium Rates of Change of Nominal
Variables under Interest Rate Control 247
11.4.4 Indeterminacy of the Nominal Scale of the
Economy under Interest Rate Control 248
11.4.5 Economics of Indeterminacy under Interest Rate
Control 249
11.5 Equilibrium under a Fixed Money Growth Rate Rule 250
11.5.1 Policy Mix B: Fixed Money Growth Rate and
Zero Debt 251
11.5.2 Equilibrium of the Real Economy with a Fixed
Money Growth Rate 251
11.5.3 Example of Indeterminate Equilibria in a Simple
Economy 252
11.6 Concluding Remarks 254
11.7 Problems 255
12 Applied Monetary Theory 259
12.1 Introduction 259
12.2 Monetary Facts: What There Is to Explain 260
12.3 Simple Monetary Model: Using Equilibrium Theory to
Explain the Facts 263
12.3.1 Modeling the Exchange Process 265
12.3.2 Formalizing the Exchange Technology 266
12.3.3 How to Describe an Equilibrium 267
12.4 How Do Equilibria Behave? 270
12.4.1 Choosing Functional Forms 270
12.4.2 What Do Equilibria Look Like? 271
xiv Contents
12.4.3 Alternative Views of the Money-Income
Correlation? 275
12.4.4 What Does All of This Have to Do with Sticky
Prices? 276
12.5 Concluding Remarks 277
12.6 Problems 278
Notes 281
Bibliography 289
Index 295 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Farmer, Roger E. A. 1955- |
author_GND | (DE-588)121703444 |
author_facet | Farmer, Roger E. A. 1955- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Farmer, Roger E. A. 1955- |
author_variant | r e a f rea reaf |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV035149727 |
classification_rvk | QC 140 QC 300 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)612163304 (DE-599)BVBBV035149727 |
discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
discipline_str_mv | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
edition | 2. ed., 2. print. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV035149727 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T22:46:12Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:26:06Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0262062038 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016956987 |
oclc_num | 612163304 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR |
owner_facet | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR |
physical | XVI, 300 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2002 |
publishDateSearch | 2002 |
publishDateSort | 2002 |
publisher | MIT Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Farmer, Roger E. A. 1955- Verfasser (DE-588)121703444 aut The macroeconomics of self-fulfilling prophecies Roger E. A. Farmer 2. ed., 2. print. Cambridge, Mass. [u.a.] MIT Press 2002 XVI, 300 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Literaturverz. S. [289] - 293 Rationale Erwartung (DE-588)4121553-9 gnd rswk-swf Gleichgewicht (DE-588)4121372-5 gnd rswk-swf Makroökonomie (DE-588)4037174-8 gnd rswk-swf Makroökonomisches Modell (DE-588)4074486-3 gnd rswk-swf Ökonometrie (DE-588)4132280-0 gnd rswk-swf Allgemeines Gleichgewichtsmodell (DE-588)4210294-7 gnd rswk-swf Mathematisches Modell (DE-588)4114528-8 gnd rswk-swf Self-fulfilling Prophecy (DE-588)4180912-9 gnd rswk-swf Makroökonomisches Modell (DE-588)4074486-3 s DE-604 Gleichgewicht (DE-588)4121372-5 s Ökonometrie (DE-588)4132280-0 s Mathematisches Modell (DE-588)4114528-8 s Self-fulfilling Prophecy (DE-588)4180912-9 s Makroökonomie (DE-588)4037174-8 s Allgemeines Gleichgewichtsmodell (DE-588)4210294-7 s 1\p DE-604 Rationale Erwartung (DE-588)4121553-9 s 2\p DE-604 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016956987&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 2\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Farmer, Roger E. A. 1955- The macroeconomics of self-fulfilling prophecies Rationale Erwartung (DE-588)4121553-9 gnd Gleichgewicht (DE-588)4121372-5 gnd Makroökonomie (DE-588)4037174-8 gnd Makroökonomisches Modell (DE-588)4074486-3 gnd Ökonometrie (DE-588)4132280-0 gnd Allgemeines Gleichgewichtsmodell (DE-588)4210294-7 gnd Mathematisches Modell (DE-588)4114528-8 gnd Self-fulfilling Prophecy (DE-588)4180912-9 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4121553-9 (DE-588)4121372-5 (DE-588)4037174-8 (DE-588)4074486-3 (DE-588)4132280-0 (DE-588)4210294-7 (DE-588)4114528-8 (DE-588)4180912-9 |
title | The macroeconomics of self-fulfilling prophecies |
title_auth | The macroeconomics of self-fulfilling prophecies |
title_exact_search | The macroeconomics of self-fulfilling prophecies |
title_exact_search_txtP | The macroeconomics of self-fulfilling prophecies |
title_full | The macroeconomics of self-fulfilling prophecies Roger E. A. Farmer |
title_fullStr | The macroeconomics of self-fulfilling prophecies Roger E. A. Farmer |
title_full_unstemmed | The macroeconomics of self-fulfilling prophecies Roger E. A. Farmer |
title_short | The macroeconomics of self-fulfilling prophecies |
title_sort | the macroeconomics of self fulfilling prophecies |
topic | Rationale Erwartung (DE-588)4121553-9 gnd Gleichgewicht (DE-588)4121372-5 gnd Makroökonomie (DE-588)4037174-8 gnd Makroökonomisches Modell (DE-588)4074486-3 gnd Ökonometrie (DE-588)4132280-0 gnd Allgemeines Gleichgewichtsmodell (DE-588)4210294-7 gnd Mathematisches Modell (DE-588)4114528-8 gnd Self-fulfilling Prophecy (DE-588)4180912-9 gnd |
topic_facet | Rationale Erwartung Gleichgewicht Makroökonomie Makroökonomisches Modell Ökonometrie Allgemeines Gleichgewichtsmodell Mathematisches Modell Self-fulfilling Prophecy |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016956987&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT farmerrogerea themacroeconomicsofselffulfillingprophecies |