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The Friedman-Lucas Transition in Macroeconomics
A Structuralist Approach

Investigates the drives and biases of post-war Chicago theories of large-scale macroeconomic fluctuations

Peter Galbács (Author)

9780128165652, Elsevier Science

Paperback, published 19 February 2020

396 pages
22.9 x 15.1 x 2.5 cm, 0.61 kg

"Peter Galbács has spent almost a year reading and analyzing my work on economics, partly in Chicago where we talked frequently. He also spent time at Duke University, where my manuscripts are archived. Peter has thoroughly diagnosed my work and my relationship to a wide range of other writers. An interesting and unusual book indeed!" --Robert E. Lucas, Jr., The John Dewey Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus in Economics and the College, The University of Chicago

"In this provocative work, Galbács presents the history of macroeconomics as featuring a profound transition from instrumentalism, in Friedman, to a form of realism, in Lucas. Unflinchingly, he confronts deep questions of how models represent the world. Employing the notion of ‘semirealism’, he offers a stirring account of macro-phenomena in terms of their causal foundations." --Anjan Chakravartty, Appignani Foundation Professor, University of Miami

The Friedman-Lucas Transition in Macroeconomics: A Structuralist Approach considers how and to what extent monetarist and new classical theories of the business-cycle can be regarded as approximately true descriptions of a cycle’s causal structure or whether they can be no more than useful predictive instruments. This book will be of interest to upper-division undergraduates, graduate students, researchers and professionals concerned with practical, theoretical and historical aspects of macroeconomics and business-cycle modeling.

1. Methodology…?! Why?2. Standing on the edge: Lucas in the Chicago tradition3. Agents and structures4. Realism and instrumentalism along the Friedman-Lucas transition5. The end of economics?

Subject Areas: Public finance [KFFD], Macroeconomics [KCB], Economic theory & philosophy [KCA], Economics [KC]

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