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Model (macroeconomics)



 
 
A model in macroeconomics
Macroeconomics

Macroeconomics is a branch of economics that deals with the performance, structure, and behavior of a national or regional economy as a whole....
 is a logical, mathematical, and/or computational framework designed to describe the operation of a national or regional economy, and especially the dynamics of aggregate quantities such as the total amount of goods and services produced, total income earned, the level of employment of productive resources, and the level of prices.

There are different types of macroeconomic models that serve different purposes and have different advantages and disadvantages.






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A model in macroeconomics
Macroeconomics

Macroeconomics is a branch of economics that deals with the performance, structure, and behavior of a national or regional economy as a whole....
 is a logical, mathematical, and/or computational framework designed to describe the operation of a national or regional economy, and especially the dynamics of aggregate quantities such as the total amount of goods and services produced, total income earned, the level of employment of productive resources, and the level of prices.

There are different types of macroeconomic models that serve different purposes and have different advantages and disadvantages. Models are used to clarify and illustrate basic theoretical principles in macroeconomics; they are used to test, compare, and quantify different theories of the macroeconomy; they are used to produce “what if” scenarios, and especially to evaluate the possible effects of changes in monetary
Monetary policy

Monetary policy is the process by which the government, central bank, or monetary authority of a country controls the supply of money, availability of money, and cost of money or rate of interest, in order to attain a set of objectives oriented towards the growth and stability of the economy....
, fiscal
Fiscal policy

In economics, fiscal policy is the use of government spending and revenue collection to influence the economy.Fiscal policy can be contrasted with the other main type of economic policy, monetary policy, which attempts to stabilize the economy by controlling interest rates and the supply of money....
, or other macroeconomic policies; and they are used for generating economic forecasts
Forecasting

Forecasting is the process of estimation in unknown situations. Prediction is a similar, but more general term. Both can refer to estimation of time series, cross-sectional data or longitudinal study data....
. Thus macroeconomic models are used in academic teaching and research, and are also widely used by international organizations, national governments and larger corporations, as well as by economics consultancies and think tank
Think tank

A think tank is an organization, institute, corporation, or group that conducts research and engages in advocacy in areas such as social policy, political strategy, economy, science or technology issues, industrial or business policies, or military advice....
s.

Types of macroeconomic models


Simple theoretical models


Simple textbook descriptions of the macroeconomy involving a small number of equations or diagrams are often called ‘models’. Examples include the IS-LM model and Mundell-Fleming model
Mundell-Fleming model

The Mundell-Fleming model is an economics model first set forth by Robert Mundell and Marcus Fleming. The model is an extension of the IS-LM model....
 of Keynesian macroeconomics, and the Solow model of neoclassical growth theory. These models share several features. They are based on a few equations involving a few variables, which can often be explained with simple diagrams. Many of these models are static, but some are dynamic, describing the economy over many time periods. The variables that appear in these models often represent macroeconomic aggregates (such as GDP or total employment) rather than individual choice variables, and while the equations relating these variables are intended to describe economic decisions, they are not usually derived directly by aggregating models of individual choices. They are simple enough to be used as illustrations of theoretical points in introductory explanations of macroeconomic ideas; but therefore quantitative application to forecasting, testing, or policy evaluation is usually impossible without substantially augmenting the structure of the model.

Empirical forecasting models


In the 1940s and 1950s, as governments began accumulating national income and product accounting
National Income and Product Accounts

National Income and Product Accounts use double-entry accounting to report the monetary value and sources of output produced in a country and the distribution of incomes that production generates....
 data, economists set out to construct quantitative models to describe the dynamics observed in the data. These models estimated the relations between different macroeconomic variables using (mostly linear) time series analysis. Like the simpler theoretical models, these empirical models described relations between aggregate quantities, but many addressed a much finer level of detail (for example, studying the relations between output, employment, investment, and other variables in many different industries). Thus, these models grew to include hundreds or thousands of equations describing the evolution of hundreds or thousands of prices and quantities over time, making computers
Computational economics

Computational economics explores the intersection of economics and computation.Areas encompassed under computational economics include Agent-Based Computational Economics, computational econometrics and statistics, computational finance, computational modeling of Model , of transaction costs, computational tools for the design...
 essential for their solution. While the choice of which variables to include in each equation was partly guided by economic theory (for example, including past income as a determinant of consumption, as suggested by the theory of adaptive expectations
Adaptive expectations

In economics, adaptive expectations means that people form their expectations about what will happen in the future based on what has happened in the past....
), variable inclusion was mostly determined on purely empirical grounds.

Dutch economist
Economist

An economist is an expert in the social science of economics. The individual may also study, develop, and apply theories and concepts from economics and write about economic policy....
 Jan Tinbergen
Jan Tinbergen

Jan Tinbergen , The Netherlands economist, was awarded the first Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel in 1969, which he shared with Ragnar Frisch for having developed and applied dynamic models for the analysis of economic processes....
 developed the first comprehensive national model, which he first built for the Netherlands
Netherlands

The Netherlands is a country that is part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. It is a parliamentary democratic constitutional monarchy. The Netherlands is located in North-West Europe, and bordered by the North Sea to the north and west, Belgium to the south, and Germany to the east....
 and later applied to the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 and the United Kingdom
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 after World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
. The first global macroeconomic model, Wharton Econometric Forecasting Associates
Wharton Econometric Forecasting Associates

Wharton Economic Forecasting Associates was a world-leading economics forecasting and consulting organisation founded by Nobel Prize winner Lawrence Klein....
' LINK
Link

selfref|For help creating links in Wikipedia, see...
 project, was initiated by Lawrence Klein
Lawrence Klein

Lawrence Robert Klein is an American economics. For his work in creating computer models to forecast economic trends in the field of econometrics at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, he was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1980....
. The model was cited in 1980 when Klein, like Tinbergen before him, won the Nobel Prize
Nobel Prize in Economics

The Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, officially named The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel , is an award for outstanding contributions in the field of economics and is generally considered one of the most prestigious awards in that field....
. Large-scale empirical models of this type, including the Wharton model, are still in use today, especially for forecasting purposes.

The Lucas critique of empirical forecasting models

Econometric studies in the first part of the 20th century showed a negative correlation between inflation and unemployment called the Phillips curve
Phillips curve

The Phillips curve is a historical inverse relation between the rate of unemployment and the rate of inflation in an economy. Stated simply, the lower the unemployment in an economy, the higher the rate of increase in nominal wages in the economy....
. Empirical macroeconomic forecasting models, being based on roughly the same data, had similar implications: they suggested that unemployment could be permanently lowered by permanently increasing inflation. However, in 1968, Milton Friedman
Milton Friedman

Milton Friedman was an United States economist, statistician and public intellectual, and a recipient of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences....
 and Edmund Phelps
Edmund Phelps

Edmund Strother Phelps, Jr. is an American economist and the winner of the 2006 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. Early in his career he became renowned for his research at Yale University's Cowles Foundation in the first half of the 1960s on the sources of economic growth....
 argued that this apparent tradeoff was illusory. They claimed that the historical relation between inflation and unemployment was due to the fact that past inflationary episodes had been largely unexpected. They argued that if monetary authorities permanently raised the inflation rate, workers and firms would eventually come to understand this, at which point the economy would return to its previous, higher level of unemployment, but now with higher inflation too. The stagflation
Stagflation

Stagflation is an economic situation in which inflation and economic stagnation occur simultaneously and remain unchecked for a period of time. The Portmanteau word "stagflation" is generally attributed to British politician Iain Macleod, who coined the term in a speech to Parliament of the United Kingdom in 1965....
 of the 1970s appeared to bear out their prediction.

In 1976, Robert Lucas, Jr.
Robert Lucas, Jr.

Robert Emerson Lucas, Jr. is an United States economist at the University of Chicago. He was named among the 10 best economists, and received the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel in 1995....
, published an influential paper arguing that the failure of the Phillips curve in the 1970s was just one example of a general problem with empirical forecasting models. He pointed out that such models are derived from observed relationships between various macroeconomic quantities over time, and that these relations differ depending on what macroeconomic policy regime is in place. In the context of the Phillips curve, this means that the relation between inflation and unemployment observed in an economy where inflation has usually been low in the past would differ from the relation observed in an economy where inflation has been high. Furthermore, this means one cannot predict the effects of a new policy regime using an empirical forecasting model based on data from previous periods when that policy regime was not in place. Lucas argued that economists would remain unable to predict the effects of new policies unless they built models based on economic fundamentals
Microfoundations

In economics, the term microfoundations refers to the microeconomics analysis of the behavior of individual Agent such as households or firms that underpins a macroeconomics theory...
 (like preferences, technology
Production function

In economics, a production function is a Function that specifies the output of a firm, an industry, or an entire economy for all combinations of inputs....
, and budget constraint
Budget constraint

A Budget constraint represents the combinations of goods and services that a consumer can purchase given current prices and his income. Consumer theory uses the concepts of a budget constraint and a preference map to analyze consumer choices....
s) that should be unaffected by policy changes.

Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models


Partly as a response to the Lucas critique
Lucas critique

The Lucas Critique, named for Robert Lucas Jr's work on macroeconomic policymaking, says that it is naive to try to predict the effects of a change in economic policy entirely on the basis of relationships observed in historical data, especially highly Aggregate data historical data....
, economists of the 1980s and 1990s began to construct microfounded
Microfoundations

In economics, the term microfoundations refers to the microeconomics analysis of the behavior of individual Agent such as households or firms that underpins a macroeconomics theory...
  macroeconomic models based on rational choice, which have come to be called dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) models. These models begin by specifying the set of agents
Agent (economics)

In economics, an agent is an actor or decision maker in a Mathematical model. Typically, the actor makes decisions by solving an Optimization problem....
 active in the economy, such as households, firms, and governments in one or more countries, as well as the preferences, technology
Production function

In economics, a production function is a Function that specifies the output of a firm, an industry, or an entire economy for all combinations of inputs....
, and budget constraint
Budget constraint

A Budget constraint represents the combinations of goods and services that a consumer can purchase given current prices and his income. Consumer theory uses the concepts of a budget constraint and a preference map to analyze consumer choices....
 of each one. Each agent is assumed to make an optimal choice
Optimization (mathematics)

In mathematics, the simplest case of optimization, or mathematical programming, refers to the study of problems in which one seeks to maxima and minima or maxima and minima a Function of a real variable by systematically choosing the values of Real number or integer variables from within an allowed set....
, taking into account prices and the strategies of other agents, both in the current period and in the future. Summing up the decisions of the different types of agents, it is possible to find the prices that equate supply with demand in every market. Thus these models embody a type of equilibrium
Economic equilibrium

In economics, economic equilibrium is simply a state of the world where economic forces are balanced and in the absence of external influences the values of economic variables will not change....
 self-consistency: agents choose optimally given the prices, while prices must be consistent with agents’ supplies and demands.

DSGE models often assume that all agents of a given type are identical (i.e. there is a ‘representative
Representative agent

Economists use the term representative agent to refer to the typical decision-maker of a certain type .More technically, an Model is said to have a representative agent if all Agent of the same type are identical....
 household’ and a ‘representative
Representative agent

Economists use the term representative agent to refer to the typical decision-maker of a certain type .More technically, an Model is said to have a representative agent if all Agent of the same type are identical....
 firm’) and can perform perfect calculations that forecast the future correctly on average (which is called rational expectations
Rational expectations

Rational expectations is an assumption used in many contemporary Model , and also in other areas of contemporary economics and game theory and in other applications of rational choice theory....
). However, these are only simplifying assumptions, and are not essential for the DSGE methodology; many DSGE studies aim for greater realism by considering heterogeneous agents or various types of adaptive expectations
Adaptive expectations

In economics, adaptive expectations means that people form their expectations about what will happen in the future based on what has happened in the past....
. Compared with empirical forecasting models, DSGE models typically have less variables and equations, mainly because DSGE models are harder to solve, even with the help of computers
Computational economics

Computational economics explores the intersection of economics and computation.Areas encompassed under computational economics include Agent-Based Computational Economics, computational econometrics and statistics, computational finance, computational modeling of Model , of transaction costs, computational tools for the design...
. Simple theoretical DSGE models involving only a few variables have been estimated to attempt to test what mechanisms are most important for explaining business cycles; this empirical work has given rise to two main competing frameworks called the real business cycle model and the New Keynesian DSGE model
New Keynesian economics

New Keynesian economics is a school of contemporary macroeconomics that strives to provide microfoundations for Keynesian economics. It developed partly as a response to criticisms of Keynesian macroeconomics by adherents of New classical macroeconomics....
. More elaborate DSGE models are used to predict the effects of changes in economic policy and evaluate their impact on social welfare
Social welfare function

In economics a social welfare function can be defined as a Function of a real variable that ranks conceivable social states from lowest on up as to welfare of the society....
. However, economic forecasting is still largely based on more traditional empirical models, which are still widely believed to achieve greater accuracy in predicting the impact of economic disturbances over time.

DSGE versus CGE models
A closely related methodology that pre-dates DSGE modeling is computable general equilibrium (CGE) modeling. Like DSGE models, CGE models are often microfounded
Microfoundations

In economics, the term microfoundations refers to the microeconomics analysis of the behavior of individual Agent such as households or firms that underpins a macroeconomics theory...
 on assumptions about preferences, technology, and budget constraints. However, CGE models focus mostly on long-run relationships, making them most suited to studying the long-run impact of permanent policies like the tax system or the openness of the economy to international trade. DSGE models instead emphasize the dynamics of the economy over time (often at a quarterly frequency), making them suited for studying business cycles and the cyclical effects of monetary and fiscal policy.

Agent-based computational macroeconomic models


Another modeling methodology which has developed at the same time as DSGE models is that of Agent-based computational economics (ACE). Like the DSGE methodology, ACE seeks to break down aggregate macroeconomic relationships into microeconomic decisions of individual agents
Agent (economics)

In economics, an agent is an actor or decision maker in a Mathematical model. Typically, the actor makes decisions by solving an Optimization problem....
. ACE models also begin by defining the set of agents that make up the economy, and specify the types of interactions individual agents can have with each other or with the market as a whole. Instead of defining the preferences of those agents, ACE models often jump directly to specifying their strategies
Strategy (game theory)

In game theory, a player's strategy in a Game theory is a complete plan of action for whatever situation might arise; this fully determines the player's behaviour....
. Or sometimes, preferences are specified, together with an initial strategy and a learning rule whereby the strategy is adjusted according to its past success. Given these strategies, the interaction of large numbers of individual agents (who may be very heterogeneous) can be simulated on a computer, and then the aggregate, macroeconomic relationships that arise from those individual actions can be studied.

Strengths and weaknesses of DSGE and ACE models

DSGE and ACE models have different advantages and disadvantages due to their different underlying structures. DSGE models may exaggerate individual rationality and foresight, and understate the importance of heterogeneity, since the rational expectations
Rational expectations

Rational expectations is an assumption used in many contemporary Model , and also in other areas of contemporary economics and game theory and in other applications of rational choice theory....
, representative agent
Representative agent

Economists use the term representative agent to refer to the typical decision-maker of a certain type .More technically, an Model is said to have a representative agent if all Agent of the same type are identical....
 case remains the simplest and thus the most common type of DSGE model to solve. Also, unlike ACE models, it is typically very difficult to study local interactions between individual agents in DSGE models, which instead focus mostly on the way agents interact through aggregate prices. On the other hand, ACE models may exaggerate errors in individual decision-making, since the strategies assumed in ACE models may be very far from optimal choices unless the modeler is very careful. A related issue is that ACE models which start from strategies
Strategy (game theory)

In game theory, a player's strategy in a Game theory is a complete plan of action for whatever situation might arise; this fully determines the player's behaviour....
 instead of preferences may remain vulnerable to the Lucas critique
Lucas critique

The Lucas Critique, named for Robert Lucas Jr's work on macroeconomic policymaking, says that it is naive to try to predict the effects of a change in economic policy entirely on the basis of relationships observed in historical data, especially highly Aggregate data historical data....
: a changed policy regime should generally give rise to changed strategies.

See also

  • Model (economics)
    Model (economics)

    In economics, a model is a theory construct that represents economic Process by a set of variables and a set of logical and/or quantitative relationships between them....
  • Mathematical model
    Mathematical model

    A mathematical model uses mathematics language to describe a system. Mathematical models are used not only in the natural sciences and engineering disciplines but also in the social sciences ; physicists, engineers, computer sciences, and economists use mathematical models most extensively....
  • Macroeconomics
    Macroeconomics

    Macroeconomics is a branch of economics that deals with the performance, structure, and behavior of a national or regional economy as a whole....
  • Economics
    Economics

    File:Ballard Farmers' Market - vegetables.jpgEconomics is the Social sciences that studies the Production theory basics, Distribution , and Consumption of Good and Service ....
  • Computational economics
    Computational economics

    Computational economics explores the intersection of economics and computation.Areas encompassed under computational economics include Agent-Based Computational Economics, computational econometrics and statistics, computational finance, computational modeling of Model , of transaction costs, computational tools for the design...
  • Lucas critique
    Lucas critique

    The Lucas Critique, named for Robert Lucas Jr's work on macroeconomic policymaking, says that it is naive to try to predict the effects of a change in economic policy entirely on the basis of relationships observed in historical data, especially highly Aggregate data historical data....
  • Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium
    Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium

    Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium modeling is a branch of applied general equilibrium theory that is increasingly influential in contemporary macroeconomics....
  • Agent-Based Computational Economics
    Agent-Based Computational Economics

    Agent-based Computational Economics is the computational study of economic processes modeled as dynamic systems of interacting agents....


External links

  • - An on-line, interactive model of the Canadian Economy