Behavioral and complexity macroeconomics
European Journal of Economics and Economic Policies
2017
14
2
186-199
macroeconomics ; economic model ; methodology
Economics
http://dx.doi.org/10.4337/ejeep.2017.02.03
English
Bibliogr.
"This paper sketches the history of behavioral macroeconomics and presents four current approaches in the literature: the ad hoc behavioral approach, partial behavioral macroeconomic models, experimental macroeconomics, and behavioral DSGE models. Much of this literature is still patchwork, with a focus on isolated aspects but little theoretical integration. I argue that integrating behavioral features into New Keynesian DSGE models is not convincing because of fundamental problems of the DSGE approach. A better way to use research from behavioral economics for more realistic macroeconomic models is to turn to complexity economics and agent-based modeling. Complexity economics and behavioral economics are linked in a very natural way, since both emphasize the direct interaction of heterogeneous agents that are boundedly rational. Behavioral and complexity macroeconomics is a promising new approach that might make mainstream macroeconomics more realistic and relevant again."
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