Supplementary material for 
Macroeconomics
New   
Recent stuff on macro and 
macro-finance    
Fiscal policy and public debt   
The financial and economic crisis 2007-?   
Macroeconomic theory and policy   
Miscellaneous   
New and recent
	Conference Coordinators:
	
	Olivier Blanchard (PIIE) and Lawrence H. Summers (Harvard University)
 
Noah Smith:
Summing-up-my-thoughts-on-macroeconomics. Blog, June 10, 2017.
Recent books:
J. Tirole: 
Economics for the Common 
Good, Princeton Univ. Press, 2017.
Brunnermeier, James, 
and Landau:
Europe’s Future Will 
Be Settled By a Battle of Ideas, Princeton University Press 2016.
Blanchard's
blog 
posts and working papers at the PIIE website. See for instance
How to teach intermediate macroeconomics after the crisis? and 
Do DSGE models 
have a future?
Paul Krugman and Olivier Blanchard in Conversation: 
Saving the World Economy. Dec. 21, 2015.
"Rethinking 
Macro Policy III - Progress or Confusion? Conference at IMF, April 15-16, 
2015.
Blanchard's summary: 
Ten Takeaways 
from the ‘Rethinking Macro Policy. Progress or Confusion?’, VOX CEPR's 
Policy Portal, 25 May 2015.
Blanchard's
Rethinking macroeconomic policy: Introduction, VOX CEPR's Policy Portal, 20 
April 2015.
Blanchard, O., and D. Leigh, 2013, 
Growth forecast errors and fiscal multipliers,
IMF WP 1301. 
The authors conclude: "this suggests that actual multipliers were substantially 
above 1 early in the crisis." This working paper is both the basis for and an 
elaboration on 
Chart, 
p. 43: Growth Forecast Errors and 
Fiscal Consolidation Plans. The whole chapter is here: IMF,
World Economic Outlook, Oct. 2012,
Chapter 1: 
Global prospects and policies (on 
underestimating fiscal multipliers).
Chad Jones:
Useful Macro 
Graphs, Stanford, Jan. 12, 2015.
Mian, A., and A. Sufi,
What explains the 2007-2009 drop in employment?
Econometrica, 
Nov. 2014. Accessible, primarily empirical paper.
Slides on the empirical part and
Slides on the theoretical part (by Ferran Elias Moreno and Chr. Groth, 
respectively).
From IMF, World Ec. Outlook, 
Oct. 2012, 
Chart 1: Growth Forecast Errors and Fiscal 
Consolidation Plans. 
More about this publication below.
Willem  
Buiter, The 
Simple Analytics of Helicopter 
Money: Why It Works — Always, 
Economics. The Open-Access, Open-Assessment E-Journal, vol. 
8, 2014-28: 1-51.
More on helicopter money:
De Grauwe, P., and Y. Ji, 2013, Fiscal implications of the ECB's bond-buying 
programme,
VOX CEPR's Policy Portal, June 14, 2013.
Reichlin, L., A. Turner, and M. Woodford, 2013, Helicopter money as a policy 
option, 
VOX CEPR's Policy Portal, May 20, 2013.
 Crises: yesterday and today:
The Annual 
Research Conference at the IMF
Long-run supply effects in the US of the prolonged Great Recession:
D. 
Reifschneider et al. (2013). 
    Abstract: 
	
		
			
				
					
						
							
								
									
										We recent financial crisis and 
										ensuing recession appear to have put the 
										productive capacity of the economy on a 
										lower and shallower trajectory than the 
										one that seemed to be in place prior to 
										2007. Using a version of an unobserved 
										components model introduced by 
										Fleischman and Roberts (2011), we 
										estimate that potential GDP is currently 
										about 7 percent below the trajectory it 
										appeared to be on prior to 2007.
										We also examine the recent 
										performance of the labor market. While 
										the available indicators are still 
										inconclusive, some indicators suggest 
										that hysteresis should be a more present 
										concern now than it has been during 
										previous periods of economic recovery in 
										the United States. We go on to argue 
										that a significant portion of the recent 
										damage to the supply side of the economy 
										plausibly was endogenous to the weakness 
										in aggregate demand—contrary to the 
										conventional view that policymakers must 
										simply accommodate themselves to 
										aggregate supply conditions. 
										Endogeneity of supply with respect to 
										demand provides a strong motivation for 
										a vigorous policy response to a 
										weakening in aggregate demand, and we 
										present optimal-control simulations 
										showing how monetary policy might 
										respond to such endogeneity in the 
										absence of other considerations. We then 
										discuss how other considerations— such 
										as increased risks of financial 
										instability or inflation instability—could 
										cause policymakers to exercise restraint 
										in their response to cyclical weakness.
									
De 
Grauwe, P. (2013), Design Failures in the Eurozone. Can they be fixed?
LEQS Paper No. 57/2013.
									
									
									Eichengreen and O'Rourke, 2010, 
									Comparing today’s global crisis to the Great 
									Depression. Voxeu.org.
									
Eggertsson et al. (2013), Can Structural Reforms Help 
Europe? WP prepared for Carnegie-Rochester Series on public policy.
									
									
									P. Krugman (2013),
									Currency 
									Regimes, Capital Flows, and Crises.
									
									
									
									P. Krugman, Danish doldrums. New York 
									Times, Oct. 18, 2015.
									
									M. Obstfeld 
									(2013), Never Say Never: Commentary on 
									a Policymakers's Reflections
									
									
									Ball, DeLong, and Summers (2014), Fiscal 
									policy and full employment. Center on Budget 
									and Policy Priorities, April 2, 2014.
									
			L. 
			H. Summers (2014), Idle workers + Low Interest rates = Time to rebuild 
			infrastructure, The Boston Globe, April 11, 2014.
									
									
									L. H. Summers, 
									U.S. Economic Prospects: Secular Stagnation, 
									Hysteresis, and the Zero Lower Bound,
									
									Business Economics 
									49 (2).  
									 
										George A. Akerlof & Olivier Blanchard & 
										David Romer & Joseph E. Stiglitz (eds.), 
										2014.
										
										What Have We Learned? Macroeconomic 
										Policy After the Crisis,
										
										MIT Press Books, ed. 1, vol. 1.
										
										
										Stiglitz' talk (2011): 
										Diagnosis and policy in the aftermath of 
										the global crisis.
Blanchard, Olivier J. & David Romer 
										& Michael Spence & Joseph E. 
										Stiglitz (eds.), 2012. 
										
										In the Wake of the Crisis: Leading 
										Economists Reassess Economic Policy,
										
										MIT Press Books, ed. 1, vol. 1.
									
          						  
									Thomas Piketty, 2014, and related debates on income and wealth distribution 
			
			here.
 
							 
						 
					 
				 
			 
		 
	 
 
Recent stuff on macro and macro-finance. Debt slumps
Adrian & Shin, The changing nature of financial intermediation and the financial 
crisis of 2007-2009, 
Annual Review of Economics, vol. 
2, 603-618, 2010.
Brunnermeier, M., T. M. Eisenbach, and Y. Sannikov,
Macroeconomics with financial 
frictions (a survey), 2012.
Claessens, S., M. A. Kose, L. Laeven, and F. Valencia, 2014, 
Financial 
crises: Causes, consequenses, and policy responses, IMF.
Eggertsson and Krugman: Debt, deleveraging, and the liquidity trap: 
The Fisher-Minsky-Koo approach,
Quarterly J. of Economics, vol. 27 (3), 2012. 
Supplementary material. Brief summary by Krugman is
here.
Farmer, R. 2010, Animal spirits, persistent unemployment and the belief 
function. NBER Working Paper No. 16522.
Roger 
Farmer's recent books, emphasizing the phenomenon of a natural range 
of unemployment and monetary policy to restore confidence in asset markets:
   
http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/0195397908/ref=sib_dp_pt#reader-link 
Recommendations:
http://farmer.sscnet.ucla.edu/NewWeb/WebPages/Reviews_Academic.html#Daron_Acemoglu
   
http://www.amazon.com/How-Economy-Works-Confidence-Self-Fulfilling/dp/0195397916/ref=pd_bxgy_b_img_b, 
where Farmer gives a summary of his ideas about 
demand-constrained equilibrium in a chapter of this book: 
	Macroeconomics in the Small and the Large. Essays on Microfoundations, Macroeconomic Applications and Economic History in Honor of 
Axel Leijonhufvud. Edited by R. E. A. Farmer, Edward Elgar: Cheltenham (UK) 
2008.
Gertler and Kiyotaki: 
Financial intermediation and credit policy in business cycle analysis, (mimeo) 
March 2010.
Laibson, D., 
lecture on: Asset prices and economic fluctuations, 2011.
Morris and Shin (2012): Contageous adverse selection, AEJ Macroeconomics, 
vol. 4 (1), 1-21. Presentation slides
here.
Mortensen, 
Dale: 
Markets with search friction and the Great Recession, Lecture,
June 14, 2011.
Perotti, R., 2011, The "Austerity Myth": Gain Without Pain? NBER WP Series no. 
17571.
 Quiggin, J., Zombie economics: How dead ideas still 
walk among us. 
Princeton University Press 2010.
Shin, H.S.: Global banking glut and loan risk premium, WP 2011,
http://www.princeton.edu/~hsshin/www/mundell_fleming_lecture.pdf
Stiglitz, J.E., 2011, Macroeconomics, monetary policy, and the crisis. 
Fiscal policy 
and public debt
Atkinson, A. B., 2014,
Public Economics in an Age of Austerity, Routledge.
DeLong, J. B., and L. H. Summers, 2012: 
Fiscal Policy in a Depressed Economy 
[with Comments and Discussion], 
Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, Spring 
2012, 233-297. Includes discussion by Martin Feldstein and 
Valerie Ramey.
			DeLong, B., and L. Summers, 2012:
			
			The not-so-simple arithmetic of fiscal policy in a depressed 
			economy.
Report on
Investing in 
America's economy. Short- and long-run aspects of fiscal policy in the US. A 
Keynesian proposal.
Groth, C., 2012: 
Short- and long-run aspects of fiscal policy in a deep recession. A 
didactive note, 
February 2011, revised May 2012.
Fiscal Policy 
after the Financial Crisis, edited by Alberto Alesina and 
Francesco Giavazzi, National Bureau of Economic Research.  
http://www.nber.org.ep.fjernadgang.kb.dk/books/ales11-1
Perotti , R., 2011, The "Austerity Myth'': Gain Without Pain? NBER WP 
17571.
The other side of openness:
Tax Justice 
Network
Spending multipliers 
and how they depend on the state of the economyAuerbach, A.J., and Y. Gorodnichenko, 
2012, Fiscal multipliers in recession and expansion, 
American Economic Journal: 
Economic Policy, vol. 4 (2).
Auerbach, A.J., W.G. Gale, and B.H. 
Harris, 2010, Activist Fiscal Policy, 
J. of Economic Perspectives,
vol. 24 (4), 141-164.
Blanchard, O., and D. Leigh, 2013, 
Growth forecast errors and fiscal multipliers,
IMF WP 1301. 
The authors conclude: "this suggests that actual multipliers were substantially 
above 1 early in the crisis." This working paper is the basis for Box 1.1, 
p. 41-43, in IMF's  World Ec. Outlook, Oct. 2012:
From IMF, World Ec. Outlook, 
Oct. 2012, Box 1.1, p. 41-43: "This box 
sheds light on these issues using international evidence. The main finding, 
based on data for 28 economies, is that the multipliers used in generating 
growth forecasts have been systematically too low since the start of the Great 
Recession, by 0.4 to 1.2, depending on the forecast source and the specifics of 
the estimation approach. Informal evidence suggests that the multipliers 
implicitly used to generate these forecasts are about 0.5. So actual multipliers 
may be higher, in the range of 0.9 to 1.7." 
Chart, p. 43: Growth Forecast 
Errors and Fiscal Consolidation Plans.
The whole chapter is 
here: IMF, World 
Economic Outlook, Oct. 2012,
Chapter 1: 
Global prospects and policies (on underestimating 
fiscal multipliers).
Christiano, 
L. et al., 2011, When is the government spending multiplier large?
J. of 
Political Economy, 
vol. 119 (1), 78-121.
Coenen, G., et al., 2012, Effects of fiscal stimulus in structural models,
American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, 
vol. 4 (1), 22-68.
DeLong, J. B., and L. H. Summers, 
Fiscal Policy in a Depressed Economy [with Comments and Discussion],
Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 
Spring 2012, 233-297. Includes discussion by Martin Feldstein 
and Valerie Ramey.
	Gordon and Krenn, The end of 
	the Great Depression 1939-41, NBER WP 16380, Sept. 2010.
Holden, S., 
and V. Sparrman, Do Government Purchases Affect Unemployment?
CES-ifo WP Series, May 2011.
	Ilzetzki's summary 
	on government spending multipliers.
Parker, J.A., N.S. Souleles, D. S. Johnson, and R. 
McClelland, 2013, Consumer spending and the economic stimulus payments of 2008,
American Economic 
Review, vol. 103 (6), 2530-2553.
Romer, C., What do 
we know about the effects of fiscal policy? Separating evidence from ideology? 
(speech Nov. 2011).
	Woodford, 
M., 2011, Simple analytics of the government expenditure multiplier,
American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, vol. 
3 (1), 1-35. 
An alternative approach:
Valerie A. Ramey, 
Quarterly J. of Economics, vol. 126 (1), 2011.
Public debt
The global public debt clock:
The Economist (the 
applied public debt measure not entirely reliable). 
Gross and net public debt in the EU member countries (in Danish):
AE.
Different kinds of debt
Jeffrey Frankel:
“Is 
the Debt Important?”, New England Republican Council Issues 
Conference, Boston, April 2007.
Discussion of the Stability and Growth Pact (1997, 2005, 2012) of the EMU and the Fiscal Compact 
(March 2012)
Groth, C.: 
Debatten om stabilitets- og vækstpagten, Samfundsøkonomen,
2008, nr.1, 42-48 
	(in Danish).
	Erratum.
Groth, C.: Finanspagten - forkert timing af stramninger,
Politiken, 30. marts 2012 (in Danish).
The financial and economic crisis 2007-?
Rethinking the Financial Crisis, ed. by A. S. Blinder, A. W. Lo, and R. 
M. Solow, Russell Sage Foundation, 2012.
Alan S. Blinder: 
After the Music Stopped. The Financial Crisis, the Response, and the Work Ahead, 
Penguin Press 2013.
J. Bradford Delong: The Second Great Depression. Why the Economic Crisis is 
Worse Than You Think,
Foreign Affairs, July/August 2013.
Eichenbaum, Laibson et al.: Keynote lectures at the conference "Challenges 
for economic research in the aftermath of the financial crisis", Copenhagen, June 15, 2011:
http://www.fi.dk/raad-og-udvalg/det-strategiske-forskningsraad/arrangementer/afholdte-arrangementer/konference-future-challenges-for-economic-research/konferencens-praesentationer
Jeffrey Frankel: How do we know this will not be 
another Great Depression?” Lessons from the Current Crisis, 
Belfer Center, 
HKS, May 4, 2009.
slides
Research-based policy analysis: 
http://www.voxeu.org/index.php?q=node/3421 
Special issue on the financial crisis,
CESifo Forum, vol. 9, no. 4, 
Winter 2008.
Nederlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis:
http://www.cpb.nl/eng/research/sector2/data/trademonitor.html
   The 
First Global Financial Crisis of the 21st Century | vox - Research-based policy 
analysis and commentary from leading  economists
P. Krugman,
End This 
Depression Now, Norton: New York, 2013. 
H. S. Shin, Princeton, has a very useful 
website: 
http://www.princeton.edu/~hsshin/teachingresources.html
Discussion and 
overviews
Bean, C.,
The great 
	moderation, the great panic, and the great contraction.
Willem Buiter on the 
financial crisis.
De Grauwe, 2010, Top-Down versus Bottom-Up Macroeconomics,
CESifo 
Economic Studies, vol. 56 (4), 465-497.
Eichengreen, Interview 
	with Barry Eichengreen, January 22, 2009.  
Eichengreen, B., The last 
temptation of risk, April 30, 2009.
Jones, C. I.: The global financial crisis 
of 2007-20??.  
WP March 12, 2009.
Paul Krugman on the
				
				financial crisis
Eric Maskin:
On economic theory and the financial crisis, The Browser, February 2010.
Quiggin, John, 
Zombie Economics. 
How Dead Ideas Still Walk Among Us, Collingwood, VIC 3066, Australia, 
2012.
Reinhart, C.: Reflections on the International Dimensions and Policy Lessons 
of the US Subprime Crisis, VOX March 15, 2008,  
http://www.voxeu.org/index.php?q=node/988
Reinhart, C.: The economic and fiscal consequenses of fiscal crises, VOX, 
Jan. 26, 2009, 
http://voxeu.org/index.php?q=node/2877
Nouriel Roubini on the 
financial crisis
          Reinhardt, C. M., and K. S. Rogoff: Banking crises: An equal opportunity menace.
NBER WP # 14587, Dec. 2008.
          Paul Romer on the disagreement among economists concerning 
the policy response to the financial crisis:
The growth blog   
Stiglitz: 
Financial Hypocricy, The Economist's Voice, 2007
Lawrence Summers in Financial Times.    
The Economist's Voice, 
2008
Macroeconomic theory, 
empirics, and policy
Blanchard: The state of macro, 
Annual Review of Economics, vol. 1, 209-228, 2009.
Blanchard et al.: Rethinking macroeconomic policy,
IMF Staff Position Note, SPN/10/03, Febr. 12, 2010.
DeLong and Summers: Fiscal policy in a 
depressed economy,
http://www.brookings.edu/economics/bpea/Latest-Conference/delongsummers.aspx
Gali, J., 1992, How well does the IS-LM model fit U.S. data? 
Quarterly J. of 
Economics, vol. 107 (2), 709-738.
DeLong and Summers:
The not-so-simple arithmetic of fiscal policy in a depressed economy.
Kiyotaki: Credit and 
Business Cycles, 1998.
Krugman: 
			How 
			did economists get it so wrong? 
NYT Magazine Sept. 6, 2009.
Response to Krugman, by
John Cochrane, Sept. 11, 
		2009. Brief
		rejoinder by Krugman.
Krugman on Keynes' General Theory: 
The 
Unofficial Paul Krugman Web Page
Krugman:
The instability of moderation, NYT, Nov. 26, 2010.
Krugman: 
 
Economics in the crisis, NYT March 5, 
2012.
Krugman:
The mutilated economy, NYT November 7, 2013.
Krugman: 
Economics: What went right?, Youtube, 
January 4, 2016.
Symposium: Macroeconomics after the 
financial crisis,
J. of Economic Perspectives, vol. 24, no. 4, 2010.
The stimulus controversy and 
the Say's Law fallacy
Fama: Bailouts and stimulus plans.
Jan. 13, 2009.
DeLong: Fama's fallacy. Take III,
Jan. 
14, 2009. 
Mankiw: Fama on fiscal stimulus.
Jan. 14, 2009.
Krugman: The Dark Age of macroeconomics,
NYT January 27, 2009.
Cochran: Fiscal stimulus, ...
Febr. 27, 2009 (the earlier version as of Jan. 2009 seems not accessible any 
more). 
Follow-ups by Cochran
here.
Delong: Shichinin no Economusutai -NOT!!
Sept. 
20, 2009 (DeLong first cites seven famous fresh-water macroeconomists and 
then gives his own opinion). 
DeLong: I confess ....
DeLong's blog, May 6, 2013.
Krugman: There's Something About Maynard,
NYT May 8, 2013.
Expectations formation. Alternatives to rational 
expectations
   
Fuster, Laibson, and Mendel, Natural expectations and macroeconomic 
fluctuations, 
Journal of Economic Perspectives, 
vol. 24, no. 4, Fall 2010.
    New Keynesian Economics (NKE) with adaptive learning:
    George Evans' lecture on The dynamics of new Keynesian models with learning:
http://www.youtube.com/watch? 
Also
here.
NKE literature
Labor market and unemployment
Farmer, 
 R. E. A., Chapter in: Macroeconomics in the Small and the Large. Essays on Microfoundations, Macroeconomic Applications and Economic History in Honor of 
Axel Leijonhufvud. Edited by R. E. A. Farmer, Edward Elgar: Cheltenham (UK) 
2008.
Manning, A.: 
Monopsony in motion: Imperfect competition in labour markets, Princeton 
University Press, 2003.
The natural RANGE of unemployment:
Lye, J. N., and I. M. McDonald, ......,
Australian Economic Papers, Sept. 2006.
Schlefer, Jonathan:
There is no 
Invisible Hand, NYT, April 4, 2012.
Akerlof 
and Obstfeld, course in Macroeconomic Theory, Berkeley, Fall 2007.
The housing market
Mayer, C., 2011, Housing Bubbles: A Survey, Annual Review of Economics, 
vol. 3, 559-77.
Myan and Sufi: What explains high unemployment? 
The aggregate demand channel:
http://faculty.chicagobooth.edu/amir.sufi/MianSufi_WhatExplainsUnemployment_Nov2011.pdf
Housing wealth effects: see
Christopher Carroll.
A 
list of references 
about housing and macroeconomics (2009).
	On the effect of housing wealth upon household consumption: In the above 
list, see in particular:
Buiter (2008). 
	Case, 
	Quigley, and Shiller (2005) (page 2 in the list).
Speculative bubbles
Salge, M.: Rational bubbles. 
Springer Verlag, 1996. 
More up-to-date references in 
Blanchard: The state of macro, 
Annual Review of Economics, 
vol. 1, 209-228, 2009.
800 years of financial crises
Book and interviews with
Reinhardt and Rogoff.
Bernard 
Madoff and modern Ponzi finance:
Wikipedia
Liquidity trap
George Evans' lecture on The dynamics of new Keynesian models with learning:
here.
Krugman, P., It´s 
Baaack! Japan´s Slump and the Return of the Liquidity Trap, 
Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, no. 
2, 1998, 137-87.
Krugman, P., Japan's trap, 
mimeo, May 1998. 
Several other short notes by Krugman are on the liquidity trap 
issue are on his Japan page: 
here.
Svensson, L., 
Escaping from a Liquidity Trap and Deflation: The Foolproof Way and others,
J. of Economic Perspectives, vol. 17, no. 4, 2003, 145-166. 
Simple models of how an economy may end up in a liquidity trap:
Groth, C.: Some unfamiliar dynamics of a familiar macro model: A 
	note. Journal of 
	Economics, vol. 58 (3), 1993, pp. 293-3 (bridging Leijonhufvud's "corridor hypothesis" 
and the liquidity trap).
A sligthly extended version is here: Groth, C., Keynesian-Monetarist 
  Dynamics and the Corridor, Institute of Economics Discussion Papers, No. 93-13 
  (PDF).
Krugman, P., Deflationary 
spirals, mimeo, February 1999.
Are productivity fluctuations primarily due to 
supply or demand shocks?
Rudebusch, G. D., Are productivity fluctuations due to real supply shocks? 
Economics Letters, vol. 27, 1988, 327-331.
Kim, S., and H. 
Lim, 
2004, Does the Solow residual for Korea reflect pure technology shocks? 
Working paper.
Miscellaneous
Supplementary textbooks and similar.    
List
here
A sceptical view: Jonathan Schlefer: 
The 
Assumptions Economists Make, Belknap Press/Harvard University Press 
2012.
Lecture notes in economics, econometrics 
and mathematics at the Web   List and access
here and
here
About student seminars
About writing papers
Math resources
	A useful internet source:
	WolframMathWorld
	Recommended Math Manual:
	    
	K. Sydsaeter, A. Strom and P. Berck,
	Economists' Mathematical Manual, 4th ed. (or later),
	Springer Verlag, 2004, 
	or later.
Useful Dictionary of 
Economics
   
The New Palgrave 
Dictionary of Economics (online 
via the library of Dept. of Economics).
Diverse
	Some stylized facts
	Vickrey on Fifteen 
Fatal Fallacies of Financial Fundamentalism
	List of references for macroeconomics 
(2000)
	Miscellaneous readings and 
            debates
	Hansen, C. Thustrup: Monopolistic Competition and 
        Aggregate Demand: Comment. EPRU Working Paper 
        Series 98-06
	History of economic 
  thought, theoretical schools
	As to the history  of macroeconomics, Snowdon 
    and Vane: A Macroeconomics Reader, London 1997, is recommended.
	The World's 
Smallest Macroeconomic Model, by Paul Krugman, January 1999.
	Resources for economists on the internet (Bill Goffe).
	Economic growth resources (Jonathan Temple).
	Stock markets.
	The Economist
	
Supplementary material for
Economic Growth