Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Introduction: Production and economic dynamics
- Part I Decomposition of economies and structural dynamics
- 1 Traverse analysis in a neo-Austrian framework
- 2 Vertical integration, the temporal structure of production processes and transition between techniques
- 3 Production and efficiency with global technologies
- 4 Efficient traverses and bottlenecks: a structural approach
- 5 Structural change and macroeconomic stability in disaggregated models
- Part II Production organisation and economic dynamics
- Name index
- Subject index
5 - Structural change and macroeconomic stability in disaggregated models
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 March 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Introduction: Production and economic dynamics
- Part I Decomposition of economies and structural dynamics
- 1 Traverse analysis in a neo-Austrian framework
- 2 Vertical integration, the temporal structure of production processes and transition between techniques
- 3 Production and efficiency with global technologies
- 4 Efficient traverses and bottlenecks: a structural approach
- 5 Structural change and macroeconomic stability in disaggregated models
- Part II Production organisation and economic dynamics
- Name index
- Subject index
Summary
Introduction
This paper considers a number of contributions which have attempted to formulate business cycle models in a disaggregated framework. In the history of economic thought the fact that ‘structural change’ in the sense of changes in the relationships of components (industries, firms, activities) of an economic system to each other plays an important role in the dynamics of aggregate economic fluctuations has long been recognised. Most prominently, we find a strong emphasis on this relationship in the writings of Marx and Schumpeter. But a host of other writers have picked up this theme, from the late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century contributions of Michail Ivanovic Tugan-Baranowski, Mentor Bouniation, Albert Aftalion, Arthur Spiethoff to the interwar contributions of such diverse figures as Rudolf Hilferding, Otto Bauer, Friedrich August von Hayek and Dennis Robertson. They all emphasised the importance of industrial structural change in the form of repercussions of the phases of the industrial cycle upon technical change, the uneven growth of industries, the degree of market concentration, etc. With Keynes and the advent of short-run aggregate macroeconomic analysis these issues were pushed into the background, only to reemerge after 1973 when the experience of two oil crises and the strong competitive challenge from newly industrialising countries put the issue of industrial structural change again near the top of the agenda.
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- Production and Economic Dynamics , pp. 167 - 188Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996
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