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Reconstructing macroeconomics : a perspective from statistical physics and combinatorial stochastic processes / Masanao Aoki, Hiroshi Yoshikawa.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Japan-U.S. Center UFJ Bank monographs on international financial marketsPublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2007Description: 1 online resource (xviii, 333 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780511510670 (ebook)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version: : No titleDDC classification:
  • 339.01/51923 22
LOC classification:
  • HB172.5 .A583 2007
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction: a new approach to macroeconomics -- The methods: jump Markov process and random partitions -- Equilibrium as distribution: the role of demand in macroeconomics -- Uncertainty trap: policy ineffectiveness and long stagnation of the macroeconomy -- Slow dynamics of macro system: no mystery of inflexible prices -- Business cycles: an endogenous stochastic approach -- Labor market: a new look at the natural unemployment and Okun's law -- Demand saturation-creation and economic growth -- The types of investors and volatility in financial markets: analyzing clusters of heterogeneous agents -- Stock proces and the real economy: power-law versus exponential distributions.
Summary: In this 2007 book, the authors treat macroeconomic models as composed of large numbers of micro-units or agents of several types and explicitly discuss stochastic dynamic and combinatorial aspects of interactions among them. In mainstream macroeconomics sound microfoundations for macroeconomics have meant incorporating sophisticated intertemporal optimization by representative agents into models. Optimal growth theory, once meant to be normative, is now taught as a descriptive theory in mainstream macroeconomic courses. In neoclassical equilibria flexible prices led the economy to the state of full employment and marginal productivities are all equated. Professors Aoki and Yoshikawa contrariwise show that such equilibria are not possible in economies with a large number of agents of heterogeneous types. They employ a set of statistical dynamical tools via continuous-time Markov chains and statistical distributions of fractions of agents by types available in the new literature of combinatorial stochastic processes, to reconstruct macroeconomic models.
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Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015).

Introduction: a new approach to macroeconomics -- The methods: jump Markov process and random partitions -- Equilibrium as distribution: the role of demand in macroeconomics -- Uncertainty trap: policy ineffectiveness and long stagnation of the macroeconomy -- Slow dynamics of macro system: no mystery of inflexible prices -- Business cycles: an endogenous stochastic approach -- Labor market: a new look at the natural unemployment and Okun's law -- Demand saturation-creation and economic growth -- The types of investors and volatility in financial markets: analyzing clusters of heterogeneous agents -- Stock proces and the real economy: power-law versus exponential distributions.

In this 2007 book, the authors treat macroeconomic models as composed of large numbers of micro-units or agents of several types and explicitly discuss stochastic dynamic and combinatorial aspects of interactions among them. In mainstream macroeconomics sound microfoundations for macroeconomics have meant incorporating sophisticated intertemporal optimization by representative agents into models. Optimal growth theory, once meant to be normative, is now taught as a descriptive theory in mainstream macroeconomic courses. In neoclassical equilibria flexible prices led the economy to the state of full employment and marginal productivities are all equated. Professors Aoki and Yoshikawa contrariwise show that such equilibria are not possible in economies with a large number of agents of heterogeneous types. They employ a set of statistical dynamical tools via continuous-time Markov chains and statistical distributions of fractions of agents by types available in the new literature of combinatorial stochastic processes, to reconstruct macroeconomic models.

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