IS-LM and modern macroeconomics
Bibliographic Information
IS-LM and modern macroeconomics
edited by Warren Young, Ben Zion Zilberfarb
(Recent economic thought series)
Springer Science+Business Media, c2000
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Note
Reprint. Originally published: Boston : Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2000
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
IS-LM is perhaps the prime example of `cognitive dissonance' in economics, and is problematic to many economists. On the one hand, the IS-LM model is still taught by many academic economists or they use it to derive the AD-AS approach. On the other hand, the same economists realize the limitations of the basic IS-LM model and would not now use it for policy analysis, as they did in the past. The distinction between pedagogical and analytical efficacy is made by all the authors in this volume regarding the IS-LM model. Indeed, even those who would reject using the model for modern policy analysis still see the basic model as useful for teaching purposes. Moreover, in an augmented form, some of the authors in this volume would even see fit to use IS-LM for modern policy analysis. As will be seen, therefore, the IS-LM model is `not yet dead'. Rather, the model's `plasticity' has enabled it to undergo a metamorphosis into augmented form, enabling its continuing utilization in economics accordingly.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Quo Vadis IS-LM.- 1. Old, New and Post Keynesian Perspectives on the IS-LM Framework: A Contrast and Evaluation.- 2. Post Walrasian Macroeconomics and IS/LM Analysis.- 3. IS-LM and Aggregate Demand: A Restatement.- 4. How to Construct IS and LM Curves in the Spirit of Hicks Or, Why We Do Not Need the Aggregate Demand Curve.- 5. On Money in ISLM and AD/AS Models.- 6. IS-LM and Leijonhufvud's Re-Appraisal.- 7. IS-LM and Macroeconometric Models.- 8. Macroeconomics without IS-LM: a Counterfactual.- 9. What Keynes Would Have Thought of the Development of IS-LM.- 10. The IS-LM Model: Its Role in Macroeconomics.
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