Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword by Alan Kirman
- Introduction
- PART I WHERE WE ARE IN MACRO AND HOW WE GOT THERE
- PART II EDGING AWAY FROM THE DSGE MODEL
- 5 Social Interactions and Macroeconomics
- 6 Macroeconomics and Model Uncertainty
- 7 Restricted Perceptions Equilibria and Learning in Macroeconomics
- 8 Not More So: Some Concepts Outside the DSGE Framework
- PART III LEAPING AWAY FROM THE DSGE MODEL
- PART IV LETTING THE DATA GUIDE THEORY
- PART V POLICY IMPLICATIONS
- Bibliography
- Index
6 - Macroeconomics and Model Uncertainty
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword by Alan Kirman
- Introduction
- PART I WHERE WE ARE IN MACRO AND HOW WE GOT THERE
- PART II EDGING AWAY FROM THE DSGE MODEL
- 5 Social Interactions and Macroeconomics
- 6 Macroeconomics and Model Uncertainty
- 7 Restricted Perceptions Equilibria and Learning in Macroeconomics
- 8 Not More So: Some Concepts Outside the DSGE Framework
- PART III LEAPING AWAY FROM THE DSGE MODEL
- PART IV LETTING THE DATA GUIDE THEORY
- PART V POLICY IMPLICATIONS
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
“The owl of Minerva begins its flight only with the onset of dusk.”
G. W. F. Hegel, Elements of the Philosophy of RightThis chapter provides some reflections on the new macroeconomics of model uncertainty. Research on model uncertainty represents a broad effort to understand how the ignorance of individuals and policymakers about the true structure of the economy should and does affect their respective behaviors. As such, this approach challenges certain aspects of modern macroeconomics, most notably the rational expectations assumptions that are generally made in modeling aggregate outcomes. Our goal is to explore some of the most interesting implications of model uncertainty for positive and normative macroeconomic analysis. Our discussion will suggest directions along which work on model uncertainty may be fruitfully developed; as such it is necessarily somewhat speculative as we cannot say to what extent these directions are feasible.
Our interest in model uncertainty is certainly not unique; in fact, within macroeconomics, studies of model uncertainty have become one of the most active areas of research. Much of this new work was stimulated by the seminal contributions of Hansen and Sargent of which (2001, 2003a, b) are only a subset of their contributions. Hansen and Sargent's work explores the question of robustness in decision making. In their approach, agents are not assumed to know the true model of the economy, in contrast to standard rational expectations formulations.
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- Information
- Post Walrasian MacroeconomicsBeyond the Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium Model, pp. 116 - 134Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006
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