The Econometrics of Macroeconomic Modelling - Gunnar Bårdsen, Øyvind Eitrheim, Eilev S. Jansen, Ragnar Nymoen

The Econometrics of Macroeconomic Modelling

Buch | Softcover
368 Seiten
2005
Oxford University Press (Verlag)
978-0-19-924650-2 (ISBN)
69,80 inkl. MwSt
Inflation targeting has moved the quality of econometric methodology and practice into the limelight of economic policy debate. This book describes how the discipline has adapted to changing demands by adopting insights from economic theory and by taking advantage of the methodological and conceptual advances within time series econometrics.
Macroeconometric models, in many ways the flagships of the economist's profession in the 1960s, came under increasing attack from both theoretical economist and practitioners in the late 1970s. Critics referred to their lack of microeconomic theoretical foundations, ad hoc models of expectations, lack of identification, neglect of dynamics and non-stationarity, and poor forecasting properties. By the start of the 1990s, the status of macroeconometric models had declined markedly, and had fallen completely out of, and with, academic economics. Nevertheless, unlike the dinosaurs to which they often have been likened, macroeconometric models have never completely disappeared from the scene.

This book describes how and why the discipline of macroeconometric modelling continues to play a role for economic policymaking by adapting to changing demands, in response, for instance, to new policy regimes like inflation targeting. Model builders have adopted new insights from economic theory and taken advantage of the methodological and conceptual advances within time series econometrics over the last twenty years.

The modelling of wages and prices takes a central part in the book as the authors interpret and evaluate the last forty years of international research experience in the light of the Norwegian 'main course' model of inflation in a small open economy. The preferred model is a dynamic model of incomplete competition, which is evaluated against alternatives as diverse as the Phillips curve, Nickell-Layard wage curves, the New Keynesian Phillips curve, and monetary inflation models on data from the Euro area, the UK, and Norway.

The wage price core model is built into a small econometric model for Norway to analyse the transmission mechanism and to evaluate monetary policy rules. The final chapter explores the main sources of forecast failure likely to occur in a practical modelling situation, using the large-scale nodel RIMINI and the inflation models of earlier chapters as case studies.

Eilev S. Jansen, b. 1948, is a Director at the Central Bank of Norway and a Professor at Department of Economics, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim. He has previously been Head of the Model Building Unit (1983-1988) and Director of Research (1988-2001) at the central bank. He has been a Visiting Scholar at London School of Economics (1975-76), University of California (1993-93,2003-04), and the European Central Bank, Frankfurt (2003). Other affiliations include Department of Economics, University of Oslo (1972-77, 2001-02) and Stastitics Norway (1978-82). He has published papers in international journals and books and he is a co-author of "The econometrics of incomplete time-series/cross-section data" (with Erik Biørn). Gunnar Bårdsen is Senior Advisor at Norges Bank (Central Bank of Norway) and Associate Professor at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim. He has published papers in macroeconomics, monetary economics, and theoretical and applied econometrics. Øyvind Eitrheim, b. 1958, has been Director of Research at Norges Bank since 2001. He has previously been Head of the Model Building Unit (1996-2001) at the central bank. He has been a Visiting Scholar at University of California, San Diego (1990-1991). Eitrheim has been with Norges Bank since January 1984. He has published papers in macroeconomics, monetary economics, and theoretical and applied econometrics. Ragnar Nymoen, b. 1957, is Professor at the Department of Economics, University of Oslo. He has published papers in macroeconomics and econometrics. In the period 1985-1996, he worked as an economists in the Research Department in Central Bank of Norway.

1. Introduction ; 2. Methodological issues of large scale macromodels ; 3. The Norwegian main-course model ; 4. The Phillips curve ; 5. Wage bargaining and price setting ; 6. Wage-price dynamics ; 7. The New Keynesian Phillips Curve ; 8. Money and inflation ; 9. Transmission channels and model properties ; 10. Evaluation of monetary policy rules ; 11. Forecasting using econometric models ; 12. Appendices

Erscheint lt. Verlag 14.4.2005
Reihe/Serie Advanced Texts in Econometrics
Verlagsort Oxford
Sprache englisch
Maße 157 x 233 mm
Gewicht 570 g
Themenwelt Mathematik / Informatik Mathematik Angewandte Mathematik
Wirtschaft Volkswirtschaftslehre Makroökonomie
Wirtschaft Volkswirtschaftslehre Ökonometrie
ISBN-10 0-19-924650-5 / 0199246505
ISBN-13 978-0-19-924650-2 / 9780199246502
Zustand Neuware
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