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Economic Complexity: Chaos, Sunspots, Bubbles, and Nonlinearity
Proceedings of the Fourth International Symposium in Economic Theory and Econometrics
The contents of this volume comprise the proceedings of the International Symposia in Economic Theory and Econometrics conference held in 1987 at the IC^T2.
William A. Barnett (Edited by), John Geweke (Edited by), Karl Shell (Edited by)
9780521355636, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 28 July 1989
424 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 2.7 cm, 0.79 kg
The contents of this volume comprise the proceedings of the International Symposia in Economic Theory and Econometrics conference held in 1987 at the IC^T2 (Innovation, Creativity, and Capital) Institute at the University of Texas at Austin. The essays present fundamental new research on the analysis of complicated outcomes in relatively simple macroeconomic models. The book covers econometric modelling and time series analysis techniques in five parts. Part I focuses on sunspot equilibria, the study of uncertainty generated by nonstochastic economic models. Part II examines the more traditional examples of deterministic chaos: bubbles, instability, and hyperinflation. Part III contains the most current literature dealing with empirical tests for chaos and strange attractors. Part IV deals with chaos and informational complexity. Part V, Nonlinear Econometric Modelling, includes tests for and applications of nonlinearity.
Editor's introduction
Part I. Sunspot Equilibria: 1. Sunspot equilibrium in an overlapping-generations economy with an idealized contingent-commodites market David Cass and Karl Shell
2. On stationary sunspot equilibria of order K Pierre-André Chiappori and Roger Guesnerie
3. Local bifurcations and stationary sunspots Jean-Michel Grandmont
4. On the nonequivalence of the Arrow-securities game and the contingent-commodities game James Peck and Karl Shell
Part II. Bubbles, Instability, and Hyperinflation: 5. Endogenous financial-production cycles in a macroeconomic model Duncan K. Foley
6. Speculative bubbles and exchange of information on the market of a storable good L. Broze, C. Gourieroux and A. Szafarz
7. Least-squares learning and the dynamics of hyperinflation Albert Marcet and Thomas J. Sargent
Part III. Empirical Tests for Chaos: 8. A comparison between the conventional economic approach to structural inference and the nonparametric chaotic attractor approach William A. Barnett and Seungmook S. Choi
9. Nonlinear dynamics and GNP data José A. Scheinkman and Blake LeBaron
Part IV. Chaos and Informational Complexity in Economic Theory: 10. Paths of optimal accumulation in two-sector models Michele Boldrin
11. Economic growth in the very long run: on the multiple-phase interaction of population, technology, and social infrastructure Richard H. Day and Jean-Luc Walter
12. When are small frictions negligible? Stephen E. Spear
13. Imperfect financial intermediation and complex dynamics Michael Woodford
Part V. Nonlinear Economic Modeling: 14. Modeling with normal polynominal expansions John Geweke
15. Hysteresis and the evolution of postwar US and UK unemployment James H. Stock
16. Evidence of nonlinearity in the trade-by-trade stock market return generating process Melvin J. Hinich and Douglas M. Patterson.
Subject Areas: Econometrics [KCH]
