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Article
Real Business Cycle Theory and the Great Depression: The Abandonment of the Abstentionist Viewpoint
Contributions to Macroeconomics (2006)
  • Michel R De Vroey
  • Luca Pensieroso, UniversitĂ© catholique de Louvain
Abstract
Is the Great Depression amenable to real business cycle theory? In the 1970s and 1980s Lucas and Prescott took an abstentionist stance. They maintained that, because of its exceptional character, an explanation of the Great Depression was beyond the grasp of the equilibrium approach to the business cycle. However, while Lucas stuck to this view, Prescott changed his mind at the end of the 1990s, breaking his earlier self-imposed restraint. In this paper we document this evolution of opinion and produce a first assessment of real business cycle models of the Great Depression. We claim that the fact of having constructed an equilibrium model of the Great Depression constitutes a methodological breakthrough. However, as far as substance is concerned, we argue that the contribution of real business cycle literature on the Great Depression is slim, and does not gain the upper hand over the work of economic historians.
Keywords
  • great depression,
  • new classical macroeconomics,
  • real business cycle theory,
  • equilibrium,
  • unemployment
Disciplines
Publication Date
December, 2006
Citation Information
Michel R De Vroey and Luca Pensieroso. "Real Business Cycle Theory and the Great Depression: The Abandonment of the Abstentionist Viewpoint" Contributions to Macroeconomics Vol. 6 Iss. 1 (2006)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/luca_pensieroso/1/