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1 - Microeconomic versus macroeconomic theoretical model building

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 October 2014

Lawrence A. Boland
Affiliation:
Simon Fraser University, British Columbia
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Summary

When we approach the study of business cycle with the intention of carrying through an analysis that is truly dynamic … we are naturally led to distinguish between two types of analyses: the micro-dynamic and the macro-dynamic types. The micro-dynamic analysis is an analysis by which we try to explain in some detail the behaviour of a certain section of the huge economic mechanism, taking for granted that certain general parameters are given …

The macro-dynamic analysis, on the other hand, tries to give an account of the fluctuations of the whole economic system taken in its entirety. Obviously in this case it is impossible to carry through the analysis in great detail. Of course, it is always possible to give even a macro-dynamic analysis in detail if we confine ourselves to a purely formal theory.

Ragnar Frisch [1933a, p. 2, emphasis in original]

One of the functions of theoretical economics is to provide fully articulated, artificial economic systems that can serve as laboratories in which policies that would be prohibitively expensive to experiment with in actual economies can be tested out at much lower cost. To serve this function well, it is essential that the artificial ‘model’ economy be distinguished as sharply as possible in discussion from actual economies. …

Any model that is well enough articulated to give clear answers to the questions we put to it will necessarily be artificial, abstract, patently ‘unreal’.

Robert Lucas [1980, p. 696]
Type
Chapter
Information
Model Building in Economics
Its Purposes and Limitations
, pp. 19 - 45
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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