Using the general equilibrium growth model to study great depressions
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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.
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Peter Temin
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