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Full Description
Modern macroeconomics has been based on the paradigm of the rational individual capable of understanding the complexity of the world. This has created a very shallow theory of the business cycle in which nothing happens in the macroeconomy unless shocks occur from outside. Behavioural Macroeconomics: Theory and Policy uses a different paradigm. It assumes that individual agents experience cognitive limitations preventing them from having rational expectations. Instead these individuals use simple rules of behaviour.
Behavioural Macroeconomics introduces rationality by allowing individuals to learn from their mistakes and to switch to the rules that perform better. It introduces the idea of endogenously generated "animals spirits" that drive the business cycle and are in turn influenced by it, and applies this model to shed new light on a number of important issues. It analyses the role of fiscal policy in stabilizing the economy while maintaining debt sustainability; expands the model to include a banking sector and show how banks amplify the booms and busts; and explains how animal spirits help to synchronize the business cycles across countries.
The model set out in Behavioural Macroeconomics leads to very different policy implications from the mainstream macroeconomic model. It shows how policymakers have a responsibility to stabilize an otherwise unstable system.
Contents
Part I: The Basics
1: The need for a new approach in macroeconomic modeling
2: The basic behavioral model
3: Inertia in macroeconomic variables
4: Non-normality in the output gap
5: How are shocks transmitted?
6: Simple and Complex Rules
Part II: Applications
7: Optimal monetary policies
8: Inflation targets and the zero lower bound
9: Monetary policy and structural reforms
10: Animal spirits and fiscal policy
11: Banks in the behavioral model
12: Synchronization of business cycles. The role of animal spirits