Exploring General Equilibrium

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Fischer Black is known for his brilliance as well as his sometimes controversial opinions. Highly respected for his scholarly writings in finance, he now moves into different territory with this incisive, unconventional assessment of general equilibrium theory and what that theory reveals about business cycles, growth, and labor economics.

The general equilibrium approach, Black asserts, can be used to explain most of the economy's behavior. It can explain business cycles and growth without using sticky prices, irrationality, economies of scale, or imperfect competition. It can explain the volatility of consumption, output, sales, investment, and inventories with axiomatic utility and constant-returns-to-scale production. It can explain temporary layoffs, job changes with and without intervening unemployment, and the behavior of vacancies. It can explain lower wages in part-time jobs, wages that increase rapidly with time on the job, and the forces that cause migration from poor to rich countries.

Although the general equilibrium approach can't be tested in conventional ways, it can be used to generate examples that explain stylized facts—generalized observations from the real world—that have preoccupied macroeconomists for the last decade. Black contrasts his interpretation of these facts with conventional interpretations. Finally, he reviews a substantial body of literature on these topics.

Author(s): Fischer Black
Publisher: The MIT Press
Year: 1995

Language: English
Pages: 368

Cover
Contents
Preface
Part I
Introduction
Classical Theories
Puzzles
Stylized Facts
What Matters
What Doesn't Matter
Part II
Aspects of General Equilibrium
General Utility
Consumption Smoothing
Local Substitution
Production
Output
Firms
Inputs
Smoothed Output
Units and Unit Value
Consumption
Innovation
Return
Risk
Shocks
The Match
Sectors
Growth
Convergence
Migration
Volatility
Business Cycles
Durables
Inventories
Careers
Obsolescence
Human Capital
Output and Effort
Unmeasured Activity
World Human Capital and Effort
Saving and Investment
Incomplete Markets
Money
Inflation
Fixed and Floating Exchange Rates
The Great Depression
Evidence
Part III
Issues
Readings
Summary
References
Index