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The financial crisis of 2007 required the economics discipline to
thoroughly re-evaluate its prevailing theories about economic
cycles and economic growth. With a focus on Europe, this volume
identifies the latest strands of research on business cycles,
monetary theory, the evolution of social policies and public
spending, and the institutional context of the European Union. It
also considers whether these new ideas could have helped us avoid
the crisis, and how they might reshape the current economic
paradigm. This book will be of interest to advanced students and
researchers in European economics, macroeconomics and economic
history.
The financial crisis of 2007 required the economics discipline to
thoroughly re-evaluate its prevailing theories about economic
cycles and economic growth. With a focus on Europe, this volume
identifies the latest strands of research on business cycles,
monetary theory, the evolution of social policies and public
spending, and the institutional context of the European Union. It
also considers whether these new ideas could have helped us avoid
the crisis, and how they might reshape the current economic
paradigm. This book will be of interest to advanced students and
researchers in European economics, macroeconomics and economic
history.
This work represents the French Regulation School approach to the
study of economics. Regulationists focus on the long-term evolution
of capitalist economies with a strong emphasis on cross-country
comparisons. Their theory centers on the notion of "accumulation
regimes", a concept that analyzes long-wave growth patterns and how
those patterns were shaped by five key regulatory mechanisms: 1)
forms of competition; 2) the socio-technical system covering all
aspects of the capital-labor relation; 3) money; 4) forms of state
intervention; and 5) arrangements regulating international economic
relations. Methodologically, their approach is very flexible and
innovative, ranging from econometric models to interdisciplinary
studies.
This work represents the French Regulation School approach to the
study of economics. Regulationists focus on the long-term evolution
of capitalist economies with a strong emphasis on cross-country
comparisons. Their theory centers on the notion of "accumulation
regimes", a concept that analyzes long-wave growth patterns and how
those patterns were shaped by five key regulatory mechanisms: 1)
forms of competition; 2) the socio-technical system covering all
aspects of the capital-labor relation; 3) money; 4) forms of state
intervention; and 5) arrangements regulating international economic
relations. Methodologically, their approach is very flexible and
innovative, ranging from econometric models to interdisciplinary
studies.
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