MACROECONOMICS 宏观经济学

MACROECONOMICS 宏观经济学 pdf epub mobi txt 电子书 下载 2026

出版者:清华大学出版社
作者:(美)布兰查德
出品人:
页数:623
译者:
出版时间:1997-03
价格:50.00
装帧:平装
isbn号码:9787302024934
丛书系列:
图书标签:
  • 宏观经济学
  • 经济学
  • 经济分析
  • 金融
  • 货币政策
  • 财政政策
  • 经济增长
  • 通货膨胀
  • 失业
  • 国际经济学
想要找书就要到 图书目录大全
立刻按 ctrl+D收藏本页
你会得到大惊喜!!

具体描述

内容提要

作者写作本书的目的在于和读者分享他本人过去20年在宏观经济

学研究工作中的收获,并帮助读者建立起关于宏观经济学的观念和意

识。和其他宏观经济学教科书相比,本书包含了一些其他教科书未论

及的问题,如预期理论、现代经济学的开放性等。而且本书经常在多

个层面上进行理论和实际的比较,引用了较多熔深度和趣味性于一炉

的实例。

作者以一个重要模型贯穿全书,其核心是商品市场、金融市场和

劳动市场的均衡条件。本书首先介绍IS-LM短期经济模型,讨论商品

市场和金融市场的均衡,并把对经济的预期在宏观经济决策方面的作

用和增强现代经济开放性的重要性作为其中的两个主题。接着在中长

期理论中,介绍劳动市场均衡、总供给与总需求模型,分析高失业率

和高通货膨胀率时期的特点,以及经济增长中资本积累和技术进步的

作用。最后,读者可用前面章节中学到的方法去分析当今世界最重要

的几个经济问题,回顾宏观经济学在过去50年中的演进过程,宏观

经济政策的作用及其所受到的限制,以及当前的研究方向。

本书既可作为经济管理专业本科生和研究生的教学用书,也可供

其他经济工作者参考。

《看不见的市场:现代经济运作的隐秘力量》 图书简介 在这个瞬息万变的全球经济图景中,我们常常被宏观经济学的庞大叙事所包围——GDP的起伏、失业率的波动、央行的政策转向。然而,在这些宏大叙事之下,潜藏着无数由个体决策、信息不对称、以及复杂社会互动所驱动的微观力量,它们共同塑造着我们日常生活的经济现实。 《看不见的市场:现代经济运作的隐秘力量》并非一本传统的宏观经济学教科书,它避开了教科书中标准的供需模型推导和复杂的数学公式,而是选择深入剖析那些在经济学家笔下常被“简化”或“外化”的现实因素。本书旨在揭示支撑现代经济体系的那些“看不见的支柱”——那些由人类行为、制度设计和技术变革共同编织而成的复杂网络。 第一部分:决策的非理性与有限理性 经济学理论的基石之一是个体经济人的理性假设,即消费者和生产者总是追求效用最大化或利润最大化。然而,现实世界远比这复杂。《看不见的市场》首先挑战了这一假设,转而聚焦于行为经济学和心理学如何渗透到市场决策中。 锚定效应与价格感知: 我们将探讨零售商如何利用锚定效应设置初始价格,以及消费者如何对这些锚定价格产生非理性的依从性。书中详细分析了“原价”与“折扣价”之间的心理博弈,以及这些策略如何影响消费者的感知价值,而非单纯的边际成本。 损失厌恶与投资行为: 股票市场的波动不仅仅是基本面驱动的,很大程度上也源于投资者对损失的恐惧。本书深入研究了损失厌恶如何导致投资者在熊市中持有亏损股票过久,以及这种群体行为如何加剧市场恐慌,形成自我实现的预言。 信任与契约的成本: 在任何市场交易中,信任都是一种稀缺资源。本书探讨了在信息高度不对称的环境下,社会资本和制度信任如何降低了交易成本。例如,一个高信任度的商业环境,其合同执行的隐性成本远低于一个充斥着欺诈和诉讼的社会。我们对比了不同司法体系下,无形资产(如声誉)的市场价值差异。 第二部分:信息不对称与市场的“柠檬”效应 市场运作的效率高度依赖于信息的对称性。当信息不对称出现时,市场机制往往会失灵。《看不见的市场》用生动的案例揭示了信息不对称如何扭曲资源配置。 信贷市场的“逆向选择”: 在银行贷款市场,银行无法完全区分高风险和低风险的借款人。本书详细阐述了逆向选择如何导致银行提高利率,从而将低风险的优质借款人挤出市场,最终只剩下高风险借款人。这种机制如何导致信贷紧缩,即使在经济基本面良好的情况下也是如此。 信号发送与筛选机制: 面对信息不对称,市场参与者会发展出复杂的“信号发送”(Signaling)和“筛选”(Screening)机制。例如,大学文凭(作为人力资本的信号)、产品保修期(作为产品质量的信号)。本书分析了这些信号本身的成本和可信度,以及它们如何被滥用。 二手市场的“道德风险”: 在保险和二手车市场,购买者和销售者之间的信息鸿沟是永恒的主题。我们探讨了“道德风险”——即在合同签订后,一方的行为会因另一方无法完全观察而改变。这不仅仅是保险赔付的问题,也延伸到了知识产权保护和劳动力市场中员工努力程度的监督难题。 第三部分:网络效应、路径依赖与经济的锁定 现代数字经济的显著特征是网络效应。一旦某个产品或技术获得了初步优势,它会自我强化,形成难以撼动的市场主导地位。《看不见的市场》关注这些非线性的增长模式。 赢家通吃(Winner-Take-All)的市场结构: 社交媒体平台、操作系统、支付系统等,其价值随着用户数量的增加而呈指数级增长。本书剖析了网络效应如何导致市场从分散竞争迅速转向少数巨头垄断,以及这种结构对创新和消费者选择带来的长期影响。 路径依赖与技术锁定: 为什么某些次优的技术标准(如QWERTY键盘布局)能够持续存在数十年?答案在于路径依赖。本书阐释了初始选择的随机性如何被后续的规模经济和学习成本所固化,使得经济系统难以转向更优选择。我们研究了这种锁定效应在基础设施、行业标准乃至金融监管领域的体现。 外部性的“内化”与“外化”: 污染、交通拥堵是典型的负外部性。本书深入研究了科斯定理的实践局限性,以及政府、社区和企业如何通过税收、补贴、产权界定等方式尝试“内化”这些外部成本。特别关注了数字平台产生的间接网络外部性,如数据隐私和注意力经济对社会福利的影响。 第四部分:制度的演化与经济的韧性 经济绩效不仅取决于资源配置,更取决于支撑资源配置的制度框架——法律、惯例、文化规范。《看不见的市场》将制度经济学的视角引入日常观察。 产权的模糊性与寻租行为: 在产权定义不清晰的领域,资源往往被用于政治游说而非生产性活动。本书探讨了寻租(Rent-Seeking)如何成为一种“合法的”经济活动,以及它如何系统性地侵蚀一个经济体的创新能力和长期增长潜力。 法律工具箱与契约的演进: 现代商业依赖于一套复杂的法律工具箱。本书超越了简单的合同法,考察了知识产权、担保法和破产法在促进风险承担和资本流动中的关键作用。我们分析了这些法律制度的进化如何与经济活动同步发展,以适应新的商业模式。 文化资本与经济绩效: 探讨了社会文化因素(如对失败的容忍度、企业家精神的社会认可度)如何通过影响个体激励和组织结构,最终体现为宏观经济绩效的差异。这种“软性”制度力量,往往比硬性的法律条文更具决定性。 结语:超越模型,理解世界 《看不见的市场:现代经济运作的隐秘力量》提供了一种“去模型化”的视角。它邀请读者放下对完美均衡的追求,转而欣赏经济世界中固有的摩擦、不确定性和人为构建的复杂性。通过对个体心理、信息结构、网络动力学和制度演化的细致剖析,本书旨在培养读者对市场运作的直觉深度和批判性思维,使我们能够更深刻地理解日常经济新闻背后的真实驱动力。这不是关于经济的理论,而是关于经济的现实。

作者简介

目录信息

PREFACE
PART ONE - INTRODUCTION 1
CHAPTER 1 - A TOUR OF THE WORLD
1 -1 WHAT IS MACROECONOMICS?
The Simplifications of Macroeconomics
1 Why Macroeconomists Sometimes
Disagree
1-2 LOOKING AT THE WORLD
The United States ?The European
Union ?Japan 11
1-3 LOOKINGAHEAD
CHAPTER 2 - A TOUR OF THE BOOK
2-1 AGGREGATE OUTPUT
GDP, Value Added, and Income ? Nominal and Real GDP
2-2 THE OTHER MAJOR MACROECONOMIC
VARIABLES
The Unemployment Rate ?The
Inflation Rate ?Budget Deficits and
Trade Deficits
2-3 A ROAD MAP
PART TWO - THE BASICS
CHAPTER 3 - TME GOODS MARKET
3-1 THE COMPOSITION OF GDP
3-2 THE DETERMINATION OF DEMAND
Consumption (C) ?Investment (I)
?Government Spending (G)
3-3 THE DETERMINATION OF
EQUILIBRIUM OUTPUT
The Algebra ?A Graph ?In
Words
3-4 INVESTMENT EQUALS SAVING: AN
ALTERNATIVE WAY OF THINKING ABOUT
GOODS-MARKET EQUILIBRIUM
3-5 THE PARADOX OF SAVING
3-6 IS THE GOVERNMENT REALLY
OMNIPOTENT? A WARNING
CHAPTER 4 - THE GOODS MARKET:
DYNAMICS
4-1 PRODUCTION, SALES, AND
INVENTORY INVESTMENT
Dividing Time ?Production and Sales
?Equilibrium in the Goods Market
Revisited ?The Dynamic Effects of
an Increase in Government Spending
?Using a Graph
4-2 GOING EMPIRICAL
Estimating the Marginal Propensity to
Consume ?Allowing for Lags ? Correlation Versus Causality
4-3 SlMULATING THE ESTIMATED
MODEL
A-A CONCLUSIONS
CHAPTER 5 - FlNANCIAL MARKETS
5-1 MONEY VERSUS BONDS
The Basic Choice ?The Demand for
Money ?The Demand for Bonds
?Money Demand and the Interest Rate:
The Evidence
5-2 THE DETERMINATION OF THE
INTEREST RATE: 1
Money Demand, Money Supply, and the
Equilibrium Interest Rate ?Monetary
Policy and Open Market Operations ? Monetary Policy and the Interest Rate
5-3 THE DETERMINATION OF THE
INTEREST RATE: 11
The Role of Banks ?The Determination
of the Money Supply ?The Effects of
an Open Market Operation ? Conclusions: Money Demand and Money
Supply
CHAPTER 6 - GOODS AND FlNANCIAL
MARKETS: THE IS-LM
6-1 THE GOODS MARKET AND THE IS
RELATION
Investment, Sales, and the Interest Rate
?The IS Curve ?Shifts in the IS
Curve
6-2 FlNANCIAL MARKETS AND THE LM
RELATION
Real Money, Real Income, and the Interest
Rate ?The LM Curve ?Shifts in
the LM Curve
6-3 THE IS-LM MODEL: EXERCISES
Fiscal Policy, Activity, and the Interest Rate
?Mohetary Policy, Activity, and the
Interest Rate ?Using a Policy Mix
6-4 ADDING DYNAMICS
6-5 DOES THE IS-LM MODEL ACTUALLY
CAPTURE WHAT HAPPENS IN THE
ECONOMY?
PART THREE - EXPECTATIONS
CHAPTER 7 - EXPECTATIONS: THE BASIC
TOOLS
7-1 NOMINAL VERSUS REAL INTEREST
RATES
Computing the Real Interest Rate ? Nominal and Rfeal Interest Rates in the
United States Since 1978
7-2 EXPECTED PRESENT DlSCOUNTED
VALUES
Computing Expected Present Discounted
Values ?Applications ?Nominal
Versus Real Interest Rates, and Present
Values
7-3 NOMINAL AND REAL INTEREST
RATES, AND THE IS-LM MODEL
APPENDIX: DERIVING THE PRESENT
DlSCOUNTED VALUE USING REAL OR
NOMINAL INTEREST RATES
CHAPTER 8 - EXPECTATIONS,
CONSUMPTION, AND INVESTMENT
8-1 CONSUMPTION
The Very Foresighted Consumer ?An
Example ?Toward a More Realistic
Description ?Putting Things
Together: Current Income, Expectations,
and Consumption
8-2 INVESTMENT
Investment and Expectations ofProfit
?A Convenient Special Case ? Current Versus Expected Profit ? Profit and Sales
8-3 THE VOLATILITY OF CONSUMPTION
AND INVESTMENT
APPENDIX: DERIVATION OF THE EXPECTED
PRESENT VALUE OF PROFITS WHEN
FUTURE PROFITS AND INTEREST
RATES ARE EXPECTED TO BE THE
SAME AS TODAY
CHAPTER 9 - FlNANCIAL MARKETS AND
EXPECTATIONS
9-1 BONDPRICESANDTHEYIELDCURVE
Bond Prices as Present Values ? Arbitrage and Bond Prices ?From
Bond Prices to Bond Yields ?The
Yield Curve and Economic Activity
9-2 THE STOCK MARKET AND
MOVEMENTS IN STOCK PRICES
Stock Prices as Present Values ?The
Stock Market and Economic Activity
9-3 BUBBLES, FADS, AND STOCK PRICES
APPENDIX: ARBITRAGEAND STOCK PRICES
185
CHAPTER 10- EXPECTATIONS, POLICY,
AND OUTPUT
10-1 EXPECTATIONS AND DECISIONS:
TAKING STOCK
Expectations and the IS Relation ? The LM Relation Revisited
10-2 A FlRST EXERCISE: MONETARY
POLICY, EXPECTATIONS, AND OUTPUT
10-3 DEFICIT REDUCTION, EXPECTATIONS,
AND ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
10-4 THE CLINTON DEFICIT REDUCTION
PACKAGE
The Design of a Program ?The
Outcome
10-5 ON TO THE OPEN ECONOMY
PART FOUR - OPENNESS
CHAPTER 1 1 - OPENNESS IN GOODS AND
FlNANCIAL MARKETS
11-1 OPENNESS IN GOODS MARKETS
Nominal Exchange Rates ?Real
Exchange Rates
11-2 OPENNESS IN FlNANCIAL MARKETS
The Balance of Payments ?The
Choice Between Domestic and Foreign
Assets
11-3 CONCLUSIONS AND A LOOK AHEAD
CHAPTER 12 - THE GOODS MARKET IN AN
OPEN ECONOMY
12-1 THE IS RELATION IN THE OPEN
ECONOMY
The Demand for Domestic Goods ? The Determinants of the Demand for
Domestic Goods
12-2 EQUILIBRIUM OUTPUT AND THE
TRADE BALANCE
12-3 INCREASES IN DEMAND, DOMESTIC
OR FOREIGN
Increases in Government Spending ? Increases in Foreign Demand ? Games That Countries Play
12-4 DEPRECIATION, THE TRADE BALANCE,
AND OUTPUT
Depreciation and the Trade Balance: The
Marshall-Lerner Condition ?The
Effects of a Depreciation ? Combining Exchange-Rate and Fiscal
Policies
12-5 LOOKING AT DYNAMICS: THE
J-CURVE
12-6 SAVING,INVESTMENT, AND TRADE
DEFICITS
APPENDIX: DERIVATION OF THE MARSHALL-
LERNER CONDITION
CHAPTER 13 - OUTPLJT, THE INTEREST
RATE, AND THE EXCHANGE RATE
13-1 EQUILIBRIUM IN THE GOODS MARKET
13-2 EQUILIBRIUM IN FlNANCIAL
MARKETS
Money Versus Bonds ?Domestic
Bonds Versus Foreign Bonds
13-3 PUTTING GOODS AND FlNANCIAL
MARKETS TOGETHER
13-4 THE EFFECTS OF POLICY IN AN OPEN
ECONOMY
The Effects of Fiscal Policy in an Open
Economy ?The Effects of Monetary
Policy in an Open Economy
13-5 FlXED EXCHANGE RATES
Pegs, Crawling Pegs, Bands, and the EMS
?Pegging the Exchange Rate, and
Monetary Control ?Fiscal Policy
Under Fixed Exchange Rates
APPENDIX: FlXED EXCHANGE RATES,
INTEREST RATES, AND CAPITAL
MOBILITY
CHAPTER 14 - EXPECTATIONS,
EXCHANGE-RATE MOVEMENTS, AND
EXCHANGE-RATE CRISES
14-1 THE DETERMINANTS OF THE REAL
EXCHANGE RATE
Real Interest Rates and the Real Exchange
Rate ?Long-Term Real Interest Rates
and the Real Exchange Rate ?The
Real Exchange Rate, Trade, and Interest
Rate Differentials
14-2 THE DANCE OF THE DOLLAR IN THE
1980s
14-3 THE APPRECIATION OF THE YEN IN
THE 1990s
14-4 EXCHANGE RATES, MONETARY
POLICY, AND NEWS
Monetary Policy, Interest Rates, and
Exchange Rates Policy and
Expectations
14-5 FlXED EXCHANGE RATES AND
EXCHANGE-RATE CRISES
Crises in the European Monetary System
APPENDIX: FROM NOMINAL TO REAL
INTEREST PARITY
PART FIVE - THE SUPPLY SIDE
CHAPTER 15 - THE LABOR MARKET
15-1 A TOUR OF THE LABOR MARKET
The Large Flows of Workers ? Differences Across Workers ? Movements in Unemployment
15-2 WAGE DETERMINATION
Bargaining ?Efficiency Wages ? Wages and Unemployment
15-3 PRICE DETERMINATION
15-4 THE NATURAL RATE OF
UNEMPLOYMENT
The Wage-Setting Relation ?The
Price-Setting Relation ?Equilibrium
Real Wages, Employment, and
Unemployment ?From
Unemployment to Output
15-5 WHERE WE GO FROM HERE
APPENDTX: WAGE- AND PRICE-SETTING
RELATIONS VERSUS LABOR SUPPLY
AND LABOR DEMAND
CHAPTER 16 - PLITTING ALL MARKETS
TOGETHER
16-1
AGGREGATE SUPPLY
The Derivation of the Aggregate Supply
Relation ?The Aggregate Supply
Relation and the Natural Level of Output
16-2
16-3
16-4
AGGREGATE DEMAND
MOVEMENTS IN OUTPUT AND PRICES
THE EFFECTS OF A MONETARY
EXPANSION
The Dynamics of Adjustment ? Looking Behind the Scene ?The
Neutrality of Money
16-5 A DECREASE IN THE BUIDGET DEFICIT
The Budget Deficit, Output, and the
Interest Rate ?Budget Deficits,
Output, and Investment
16-6 MOVEMENTS IN THE PRICE OF OlL
Effects on the Natural Rate of
Unemployment ?The Dynarnics of
Adjustment
16-7 CONCLUSIONS
The Short Run Versus the Long Run
?Shocks and Propagation Mechanisms
?Output, Unemployment, and
Inflation
CHAPTER 17 - THE PHILLIPS CURVE
17-1 INFLATION, EXPECTED INFLATION,
AND UNEMPLOYMENT
17-2 THE PHILLIPS CURVE
The Early Incarnation ?Mutations
?Back to the Natural Rate of
Unemployment
17-3 A SUMMARY AND MANY WARNINGS
The Inflation Process and the Phillips Curve
?Differences in the Natural Rate
Across Countries ?Variations in Ihe
Natural Rate over Time ?The Limits
of Our Understanding
APPENOIX: FROM THE. AGGREGATE SUPPLY
RELATION TO THE PHILLIPS CURVE
CHAPTER 18- INFLATION, DlSINFLATION,
AND UNEMPLOYMENT
18-1 INFLATION, OUTPUT, AND
UNEMPLOYMENT
The Phillips Curve: Unemployment and the
Change in Inflation ?Okun's Law:
Output Growth and Changes in
Unemployment ?The Aggregate
Demand Relation: Output Growth, Money
Growth, and Inflation
18-2 THELONGRUN
18-3 DlSINFLATION: THE ISSUES
A First Pass ?Expectations and
Credibility: The Lucas Critique ? Nominal Rigidities and Contracts
18-4 THE U.S. DISINFLATION, 1979-1985
CHAPTER 19 - INFLATION, INTEREST
RATES, AND EXCHANGE RATES
19-1 MONEY GROWTH, INFLATION, AND
INTEREST RATES
Real and Nominal Interest Rates ? The Short Run ?The Long Run
?Dynamics ?Evidence on the Fisher
Hypothesis
19-2 FlXED EXCHANGE RATES AND
DEVALLJATIONS
Aggregate Demand Under Fixed Exchange
Rates ?Aggregate Demand and
Aggregate Supply ?What
Devaluations Can Do ?Whether and
When to Devalue
PART SIX - PATHOLOGIES
CHAPTER 20 - PATHOLOGIES 1: HlGH
U N EM PLOYMENT
20-1 THEGREAT DEPRESSION
The Fall in Spending ?The
Contraction in Nominal Money ?The
Adverse Eftects of Deflation ?Thc
Recovery
20-2 UNEMPLOYMENT IN EUROPE
Labor Market Rigidities ?Hysteresis
20-3 CONCLUSIONS
CHAPTER 21 - PATHOLOGIES 11: HlGH
INFLATION
21-1 BUDGET DEFICITS AND MONEY
CREATION
21-2 INFLATION AND REAL MONEY
BALANCES
21-3 DEFICITS, SEIGNORAGE, AND
INFLATION
The Case of Constant Money Growth ? Dynamics and Increasing Inflation ? Hyperinflations and Economic Activity
21-4 HOW Do HYPERINFLATIONS END?
The Elements of a Stabilization Program
?Can Stabilization Programs Fail?
?The Costs of Stabilization
21-5 CONCLUSIONS
PART SEVEN - THE LONG RUN
CHAPTER 22 - THK FACTS OF GROWTH
22-1 GROWTH IN RlCH COUNTRIES SlNCE
1950 ?
22-2 A BROADER LOOK ACROSS TlME AND
SPACE
Looking Across Two Millennia ? Looking Across Countries
22-3 THINKING ABOUT GROWTH: A
PRIMER
The Aggregate Production Function ? The Sources of Growth
CHAPTER 23 - SAVING, CAPITAL
ACCUMULATION, AND OUTPUT
23-1 INTERACTIONS BETWEEN OUTPUT
AND CAPITAL
The Effects of Capital on Output ? The Effects of Output on Capital
Accumulation
23-2 IMPLICATIONS OF ALTERNATIVE
SAVING RATES
Dynamics of Capital and Output ? Steady-State Capital and Output ? The Saving Rate and Output ?The
Saving Rate and the Golden Rule
23-3 GETTING A SENSE OF MAGNITUDES
23-4 PHYSICAL VERSUS HUMAN CAPITAL
Extending the Production Function ? Human Capital, Physical Capital, and
Output ?Endogenous Growth
CHAPTER 24 - TECHNOLOGICAL
PROGRESS AND GROWTH
24-1 THE DETERMINANTS OF
TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS
R&D Spending Decisions ?R&D,
Ideas, and Patent Laws ?R&D
Spending and Technological Progress
2-4-2 TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS AND THE
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
24-3 TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS AND THE
RATE OF GROWTH
Interactions Between Output and Capital
?Dynamics of Capital and Output
?The Effects of the Saving Rate
24-4 THE FACTS OF GROWTH REVISITED
Capital Accumulation Versus Technological
Progress ?Why Has Technological
Progress Slowed Since the Mid-1970s?
24-5 EPILOGUE: THE SECRETS OF GROWTH
APPENDIX: CONSTRUCTING A MEASURE OF
TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS
PART EIGHT - CHANGE AND
TRANSITION 509
CHAPTER 25 - TECHNOLOGICAL
PROGRESS, UNEMPLOYMENT, AND
WAGES
25-1 PRODUCTIVITY, OUTPUT, AND
UNEMPLOYMENT IN THE SHORT RUN
511
Technological Progress, Aggregate Supply,
and Aggregate Demand ?The
Empirical Evidence
25-2 PRODUCTIVITY AND THE NATURAL
RATE OF UNEMPLOYMENT
Price and Wage Setting Revisited ? The Natural Rate of Unemployment ? The Empirical Evidence
25-3 TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS AND
DlSTRIBUTION EFFECTS
The Increase in Wage Inequality ?The
Causes of Increased Wage Inequality
CHAPTER 26 - TRANSITION IN EASTERN
KUROPE
26-1 AN OVERVIEW
26-2 ECONOMIC GROWTH UNDER
CENTRAL PLANNING
26-3 EXPLAINING THE DECLINE IN
OUTPUT
Measurement, Stabilization, and Structural
Change ?Shifts in Relative Demand
and Aggregate Employment ? Transition and the Decrease in
Employment
26-4 SCENARIOS FOR THE FUTURE
A Scenario of Sustained Transition and
Growth ?The Dangers Ahead
PART NINE - POLICY
CHAPTER 27 - SHOULD POLICY MAKERS
BE RESTRAINED?
27-1 UNCERTAINTY AND POLICY
How Much Do Macroeconomists Actually
Know? ?Should LJncertainty Lead
Policy Makers to Do Less? ? Uncertainty and Restraints on Policy
Makers
27-2 EXPECTATIONS AND POLICY
Hijackings and Negotiations ? Inflation and Unemployment Revisited
554 ?Establishing Credibility ?Time
Consistency and Restraints on Policy
Makers
27-3 POLITICS AND POLICY
Games Between Policy Makers and Voters
559 ?Games Between Policy Makers
?Back to the Balanced-Budget
Amendment
CHAPTER 28 - MONETARY POLICY: A
SUMMING UP
28-1
TTHE OPTIMAL INFLATION RATE
The Costs of Inflation ?The Benefits
of Inflation ?The Optimal Inflation
Rate: The Current Debate
28-2
MONEY VERSUS LlQUIDlTY
Money and Other Liquid Assets. ?The
Demand for Money Revisited ? Implications for Monetary Policy
THE FED IN ACTION
The Fed's Mandate ?The
Organization of the Fed ?The
Instruments of Monetarv Policy ?The
Current Versus Future Taxes ?Debt
and Primary Surpluscs ?The
Evolution of the Debt-to-GDP Ratio
29-2 FOUR ISSUES IN FlSCAL POLICY
Ricardian Equivalence ?Defidts.
Output Stabilization, and the Cyclically
Adjusted Deficit ?Wars and Deficits
?The Dangers of Very High Deht
29-3 THEU.S. BUDGETDEFICIT
PART TEN - EPILOGUE
CHAPTER 30 - THE STORY OF
MACROECONOM 1 CS
30-1 KEYNES AND THE GREAT
DEPRESSION
30-2 THE NEOCLASSICAL SYNTHESIS
Progress on All Fronts ?Keynesians
Versus Monetarists
30-3 THE RATIONAL-EXPECTATIONS
CRITIQUE
The Three Implications of Rational
Expectations ?The Integration of
Rational Expectations
30-4 CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS
· · · · · · (收起)

读后感

评分

高年级本科,凯恩斯主义经典教材之二。针对第3版,应选读以下章节: CH6—9,与多恩布什(1994,第六版)重在讨论AD曲线不同,该书这四章讨论了AS曲线的基础构造,即凯恩斯主义的就业理论。并在此基础上出色的讨论了物价水平变动对宏观经济体系中实际变量的影响。 CH14—17,主...  

评分

小结于博客: http://www.dimensionmind.com/?p=243 宏观这门课,教材用的是奥利维尔·布兰查德写的《宏观经济学》,这边教材和“曼昆”的“萨缪尔森”的宏观经济学号称宏观的三大教材巨头,几乎所有的高校都用这三本教材,选择布兰查德的版本作为MBA教材,是考虑其更适合管理...  

评分

我读的是法语版第7版,布兰查德是法国人,此书法语版和英文版简直是两个版本,法语版的内容资料例子上更多地使用法国或者欧盟,货币以欧元为主,感兴趣的可以参阅,英文版的貌似更多地用美国作例子 ,货币以美元为主。 中文版的貌似是在英文翻译的基础上加减料? 随便举个例子...  

评分

高年级本科,凯恩斯主义经典教材之二。针对第3版,应选读以下章节: CH6—9,与多恩布什(1994,第六版)重在讨论AD曲线不同,该书这四章讨论了AS曲线的基础构造,即凯恩斯主义的就业理论。并在此基础上出色的讨论了物价水平变动对宏观经济体系中实际变量的影响。 CH14—17,主...  

评分

我读的是法语版第7版,布兰查德是法国人,此书法语版和英文版简直是两个版本,法语版的内容资料例子上更多地使用法国或者欧盟,货币以欧元为主,感兴趣的可以参阅,英文版的貌似更多地用美国作例子 ,货币以美元为主。 中文版的貌似是在英文翻译的基础上加减料? 随便举个例子...  

用户评价

评分

这本书的叙事逻辑和章节递进方式,简直是一场精心编排的智力探险。作者似乎深谙初学者和有一定基础的读者在面对宏观经济学时的不同困惑点。开篇并没有直接抛出晦涩的定义,而是从一个引人入胜的现实案例——比如某次全球性的经济衰退或复苏的景象——切入,像剥洋葱一样,层层深入地揭示背后的宏观机制。每一章的结尾,都设置了一个“思辨角”或者“政策沙盘”,巧妙地将理论与现实的政策选择进行碰撞,这种设计极大地激发了读者的批判性思维,让我不再是被动的知识接收者,而是一个积极的参与者。尤其欣赏它处理不同学派观点时的平衡术:无论是凯恩斯主义的财政刺激,还是货币学派的稳定主义,作者都给予了足够的篇幅去解释其理论基础和历史背景,随后才进行建设性的比较分析,避免了任何倾向性的说教,保证了客观性。这种行文风格,使得原本可能显得僵硬的经济理论,变得生动、具有生命力,充满了动态的张力。

评分

阅读体验上,这本书提供了一种非常流畅且深入的沉浸感,这很大程度上归功于其对术语和例证的精妙处理。在第一次引入一个新概念,比如“有效需求”或“自然失业率”时,作者总会先用一段贴近日常生活的比喻进行类比解释,确保读者在概念的“骨架”搭建之前,已经对其实质有了直观的把握。紧接着,才会引用更严格的数学或经济学定义。这种“先体验,后定义”的策略,极大地降低了初期阅读的门槛。更令人称赞的是,书中对历史背景的穿插运用达到了教科书级别的精准。每当讨论到某个理论的成熟期,比如滞胀现象的出现如何挑战了早期的菲利普斯曲线,作者都能非常自然地将时间轴拉伸,引用当时的政策文件或经济学家的通信片段,让读者仿佛置身于那个理论形成的关键时刻。这种历史纵深感,让枯燥的理论学习变成了对经济思想演变史的追溯,极大地丰富了知识的层次感。

评分

我必须强调本书在构建知识体系上的严谨性与连贯性。与其他教材常有的“碎片化”倾向不同,这本书成功地将一个复杂到近乎无边无际的宏观经济学领域,梳理成了一个结构清晰、前后呼应的有机整体。例如,对“通货膨胀的预期”的讨论,并不仅仅局限于货币政策那一章,而是贯穿于总供给曲线的推导、理性预期模型的建立,甚至在讨论长期经济增长时,也会回溯性地引用早期对通胀粘性的分析。这种反复交叉引用和概念的回归,如同在宏观经济学的地图上建立起无数条相互连接的路径,使得知识点不再是孤立的岛屿,而是相互支撑的板块。读者在学习后期回顾初期内容时,总能发现新的联系和更深层的含义,这体现了作者深厚的学科功底和卓越的教学设计能力,确保了知识的“留存率”远高于一般的读物。

评分

这本书最大的亮点,在于它对“模型”与“现实”之间张力的细腻捕捉。许多宏观经济学的书往往在介绍完复杂的模型后便戛然而止,留给读者一个“理想世界”的幻影。然而,此书则非常坦诚地指出了每一个标准模型的内在局限性:它假设了什么,排除了什么因素,以及在何种市场环境下会失效。它会明确指出,诸如理性人假设在危机时期可能崩溃,或者跨国资本流动对本国货币政策的制约。这种“批判性地学习模型”的引导,避免了读者陷入教条主义的泥潭。阅读完后,我感觉自己不仅学会了如何运用这些模型进行分析,更重要的是,学会了如何质疑这些模型的适用范围。这是一种更高层次的教育,它培养的不是理论的背诵者,而是能够在复杂、多变的真实世界中,审慎地应用工具的思考者。这使得这本书的价值远远超出了课堂学习的范畴,更像是为未来的政策制定或深度研究打下了坚实且批判性的基础。

评分

这本书的排版设计实在令人眼前一亮。初次翻开时,就被它那种兼具古典主义的稳重与现代简约的清新感所吸引。字体选择非常考究,主文字部分采用了清晰易读的衬线体,确保了长时间阅读的舒适度,而那些重要的公式和图表则巧妙地使用了无衬线字体进行突出,这种对比既维持了页面的和谐感,又极大地提升了信息的可提取性。装帧上,采用了一种略带磨砂质感的硬壳封面,拿在手里沉甸甸的,给人一种专业且可靠的印象。最值得称赞的是其对图表的处理——那些复杂的经济模型,如IS-LM曲线、AS-AD模型,不再是枯燥的线条堆砌,而是通过精妙的色彩搭配和三维立体感的阴影处理,仿佛跃然纸上,让抽象的概念具象化了。边距的留白恰到好处,既不显得空洞,又能给读者留下充足的批注空间,这一点对于需要深度研读的经济学著作来说至关重要。整体感觉,这本书的物理形态本身就是一种对知识的尊重和对读者的体贴,让人愿意把它陈列在书架上,并且在需要时随时取阅,而不是仅仅把它当作一本工具书来对待。这种对细节的极致追求,无疑为学习过程增添了一份仪式感。

评分

强过曼昆那本

评分

强过曼昆那本

评分

强过曼昆那本

评分

强过曼昆那本

评分

强过曼昆那本

本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度google,bing,sogou

© 2026 book.wenda123.org All Rights Reserved. 图书目录大全 版权所有