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The Theory of Economic Policy in a Strategic Context

A new unified theory of economic policy which responds to conflicts between strategic public and private policymakers.

Nicola Acocella (Author), Giovanni Di Bartolomeo (Author), Andrew Hughes Hallett (Author)

9781107023864, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 1 November 2012

363 pages, 16 b/w illus. 4 tables
23.5 x 15.5 x 2.2 cm, 0.63 kg

In developing a new and highly innovative theory of economic policy, this book deals with conflicts between strategic actions by public and private agents. It builds on the Lucas critique but also applies the tools introduced by Tinbergen and Theil to dynamic policy games, and from there derives a new theory of economic policy. Its main propositions describe such properties in the models currently used for policy-making as neutrality and equilibrium existence, uniqueness, and multiplicity. These properties are key to understanding the impact of concepts such as rational expectations, time inconsistency, communication and the use of policy announcements. As the numerous examples show, they are useful both for model building and for devising optimal institutions. The Theory of Economic Policy in a Strategic Context is an essential but accessible tool for economic researchers involved in policy questions.

List of figures
List of tables
Preface
Common symbols
1. An overview: the realm of economic policy
Part I. The Classical Theory of Economic Policy: 2. Statics
3. Dynamics
Part II. From the Classical to the New Theory of Economic Policy: 4. The Lucas critique
5. Policy games: an introduction
Part III. The New Theory of Economic Policy: Statics: 6. A theory of strategic conflict: foundations
7. From individual players to system controllability
8. Conflicts and coordination among groups
9. Announcements as a coordination mechanism
Part IV. The New Theory of Economic Policy: Dynamics: 10. Controllability in a strategic dynamic setting
11. Dynamic policy games with rational expectations
12. Credibility, dynamic controllability and rational expectations
13. Expectations and target coordination: institutional aspects
14. A summary and round-up of conclusions
References.

Subject Areas: Monetary economics [KCBM], Macroeconomics [KCB]

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