Hall's excellent survey of business cycles is concise, lucid,
and up-to-date discussing not only early theories of the business
cycle and Keynesian and monetarist models, but also the rational
expectationist and new Keynesian models along with actual business
cycles. . . . Strengths of the book include an excellent
bibliography and Hall's insightful history of business cycles from
the panic of 1907 to the long cyclical expansion beginning in late
1982. "Choice"
Intended as a primary text for upper-level undergraduate and
graduate courses in business cycles and economic fluctuations, this
book treats the nature and causes of business cycles. In contrast
to previous works on the subject, which have tended to focus on
basic macroeconomic models and intermediate level theory, "Business
CycleS" offers both a broader scope and more in-depth coverage,
concentrating on modern theories of the business cycle, data
analysis, and recent and historical episodes of economic
fluctuation. The author amplifies and combines the various theories
that comprise the modern view of business cycles and develops a
systematic rationale for economic fluctuations that integrates the
key concept of economic shocks. Hall demonstrates that an economy
grows over time but receives periodic shocks--such as oil price
increases or monetary instability--which generate fluctuations. In
addition to examining the nature of shocks that cause recessions
and expansions, Hall suggests ways to forcast these cycles.
Hall begins with a general overview of economic cycles and
economic indicators and goes on to review the historical
explanations for economic fluctuations that form the foundation for
more modern theories. The contemporary theories of
fluctuations--Keynesian, and real business cycles--receive extended
treatment. Each theory is discussed in detail in a separate chapter
that includes relevant empirical data. Hall then describes the
nature and causes of several business cycles during the twentieth
century, enabling the reader to see how the various alternative
models of cycles explain actual phenomena over time. Finally, he
examines some macroeconomic puzzles in the study of cycles and
concludes with some observations about the performance of
macroeconomic forecasting methods.
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