Economics 314

Macroeconomic Theory

Spring 2012

Jeffrey Parker, Reed College

Course Outline and Reading List

For the most part, only required readings are shown here. However, many sections of the Mankiw text are only for background. If you understand the Romer chapter adequately, you don't need to read Mankiw.

The Mankiw text is on reserve in the Reed Library. Other readings are either linked electronically from this page or are on print reserve.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction to Macroeconomics
2. Economic Growth
3. Business Cycles

4. Modern Theories of the Short-Run Economy

5. Microfoundations of Investment

6. Unemployment
7. Macroeconomic Policy
(probably not covered)

1. Introduction to Macroeconomics

The nature of macroeconomics. Macroeconomic models. Definitions of major macroeconomic variables. Issues in the measurement of national income and product, prices and inflation. The outlines of aggregate supply and demand as an interpretive device for understanding macroeconomic theory.

A. Introduction to Macroeconomics

  • Coursebook, Chapter 1.
  • Mankiw, N. Gregory, "The Macroeconomist as Scientist and Engineer," Journal of Economic Perspectives 20(4), October 2006, 29-46.
  • Mankiw, N. Gregory, Macroeconomics, 5th ed., (New York: Worth Publishers, 2003), Chapters 1 through 3. (Should read as a basic intro to macroeconomics.)

B. The Basic AS/AD Model

  • Coursebook, Chapter 2.

Back to Top

2. Economic Growth

The long-run behavior of macroeconomies. Growth in real output. Roles of capital accumulation and technological progress in sustaining economic growth.

A. Solow's Neoclassical Growth Model

  • Coursebook, Chapter 3.
  • Mankiw, Chapters 7 and 8. (This reading is for background only; read it if you have trouble with the Romer chapter.)
  • Romer, David, Advanced Macroeconomics, 3d ed. (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2006), Chapter 1.

B. Optimal Consumer Behavior and Growth Theory

  • Coursebook, Chapter 4.
  • Romer, Chapter 2, Sections 8.1-8.4, and Sections 12.1-12.3.

C. Modern Growth Theory

  • Coursebook, Chapter 5.
  • Romer, Chapters 3 and 4.

D. Empirical Evidence on Economic Growth

  • Coursebook, Chapter 6.
  • Additional papers may be assigned.

Back to Top

3. Business Cycles

Properties of business-cycle fluctuations. The real business cycle theory. Keynesian theories of the business cycles.

A. Real-Business-Cycle Theory

  • Mankiw, Section 19.1. (Background only.)
  • Chatterjee, Satyajit, "From Cycles to Shocks: Progress in Business-Cycle Theory," Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia Business Review March-April 2000, 27-37. (A discussion of how business-cycle theory has evolved.) 
  • (Recommended, not required) Stock, James H., and Mark W. Watson, "Business Cycle Fluctuations in U.S. Macroeconomic Time Series," in Handbook of Macroeconomics, Volume 1A, edited by J. B. Taylor and M. Woodford (Amsterdam: Elsevier Science, 1999), 3-65. (An excellent statistical description of U.S. business cycles. Paper is not as long as it looks because there are many pages of pictures.) 
  • Coursebook, Chapter 7.
  • Romer, Chapter 5.
  • Plosser, Charles I., "Understanding Real Business Cycles," Journal of Economic Perspectives 3:3, Summer 1989, 51-77. Reprinted in Snowdon and Vane, A Macroeconomics Reader, pp. 396-424. (A survey of real-business-cycle theory from one of its primary exponents. Includes some empirical support for the hypothesis.) 
  • Mankiw, N. Gregory, "Real Business Cycles: A New Keynesian Perspective," Journal of Economic Perspectives 3, Summer 1989, 79-99. Reprinted in Snowdon and Vane, A Macroeconomics Reader, pp. 425-36. (A prominent new Keynesian presents the argument against the "real" interpretation of business cycles.)

B. Money, Inflation, Growth, and Business Cycles

  • Coursebook, Chapter 8.
  • *Walsh, Carl E., Monetary Theory and Policy, 2nd ed., MIT Press, 2003, Chapters 2 and 3. (An optional reading for those wanting more depth on monetary growth models.)

C. Keynesian Business Cycle Theory: The IS/LM Model and Aggregate Demand and Supply

  • Coursebook, Chapter 9.
  • Mankiw, Chapters 9 through 12. (You may want to read these, because the Romer chapter provides very little information about the IS/LM model.) 
  • Romer, Chapter 6, Part A.

Back to top

4. Modern Theories of the Short-Run Economy

Microfoundations of aggregate supply. Why should real output and employment respond to purely nominal changes in aggregate demand? Theories of short-run imperfections. Imperfect information as a mechanism for supply effects. Rigidity of prices. Coordination failures. Empirical evidence.

A. New Keynesian Economics: Imperfect Competition, Rigidities and Coordination Failures

  • Coursebook, Chapter 10.
  • Romer, Chapter 6, Part B, Sections 6.5 through 6.8.
  • Mankiw, Section 19-2. (Background only.)
  • Cooper, Russell, and Andrew John, "Coordinating Coordination Failures in Keynesian Models," Quarterly Journal of Economics 103:3, August 1988, 441-463. Reprinted in N. Gregory Mankiw and David Romer (eds.), New Keynesian Economics (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1991), Volume 2, pp. 3-24. (This paper is the basis of Romer's Section 6.7. Read the first couple of sections.)
  • *Ball, Laurence, and David Romer, "Real Rigidities and the Non-Neutrality of Money," Review of Economic Studies 57:2, April 1990, 183-203. Reprinted in N. Gregory Mankiw and David Romer (eds.), New Keynesian Economics (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1991), Volume 1, pp. 59-86. (Optional reading: This paper is the basis of Romer's Section 6.6.)

B. Imperfect-Information Models with Market-Clearing

  • Lucas, Robert E., Jr., and Thomas J. Sargent, "After Keynesian Macroeconomics," in After the Phillips Curve: Persistence of High Inflation and High Unemployment, Boston: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 1979.
  • Coursebook, Chapter 11.
  • Romer, Chapter 6, Section 6.9. 
Back to top

C. Dynamic New Keynesian Models

  • Coursebook, Chapter 12.
  • Romer, Chapter 7.

D. Empirical Evidence on Business Cycles

Back to top

E. Empirical Evidence on Aggregate Supply Models

  • Coursebook, Chapter 13.
  • Romer, Chapter 6, empirical parts of sections 6.3 and 6.10.
Back to top

5. Microfoundations of Investment Behavior

Dynamic production problem of the firm. Theory of the demand for capital. Costly adjustment and the optimal flow of investment. Tobin's q and the relationship between investment spending and asset prices. Financing of investment and the effects of capital-market imperfections.

  • Coursebook, Chapter 15.
  • Mankiw, Chapter 17. (Background only.)
  • Romer, Chapter 9.
  • Dixit, Avinash K., and Robert S. Pindyck, Investment under Uncertainty, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1994, Chapters 1 and 2.
Back to top

6. Unemployment

Examination of theories about the "natural" or equilibrium rate of unemployment. Evidence about changes in the natural rate and differences across countries. Economic policies that affect natural unemployment.

Back to top

7. Macroeconomic Policy

Inflation and monetary policy. Seigniorage and the fiscal impact of inflation. Theories about why countries pursue inflationary policies. Stabilization policy: pros and cons. Government budget constraints, deficits, and debt. Ricardian equivalence. Theories of government budget behavior.

A. Monetary Policy and Inflation

  • Coursebook, Chapter 17.
  • Mankiw, Chapters 14, 18. (Background only.)
  • Romer, Chapter 11.
  • Bernanke, Ben S., and Mark Gertler, "Inside the Black Box: The Credit Channel of Monetary Policy Transmission," Journal of Economic Perspectives 9:4, Fall 1995, 27-48. 
  • Romer, Christina D., and David H. Romer, "What Ends Recessions?" NBER Macroeconomics Annual 9, 1994, 13-79. (A controversial analysis that suggests that countercyclical monetary policy has been the primary cause of economic stabilization in the postwar United States. Be sure to read Cochrane's comments for some important criticisms of this approach.)

B. Fiscal Policy

  • Coursebook, Chapter 18.
  • Mankiw, Chapter 15. (Background only.)
  • Romer, Chapter 12.
Back to top