
Using the general equilibrium growth model to study great depressions
About this book
The reply by Kehoe and Prescott restates their position but does not answer the criticism made in my review of their book (Temin 2008). I argued that the general equilibrium model of economic growth to study income fluctuations does not lead to a useful research program; the use of closed-economy models to understand the world problems of the 1930s and the Latin-American problems of the 1980s is not helpful; and the authors using Kehoe and Prescott's recommended approach do not use data with the care standard in other branches of economics. I stand by those criticisms. Keywords: Depressions, economic fluctuations, general equilibrium models. JEL Classifications: E32, N10.
Subjects
DepressionsEconometric modelsEquilibrium (Economics)