Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword by Robert M. Solow
- Preface
- Introduction
- PART ONE THE HISTORY, THEORY, AND MEASUREMENT OF PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
- PART TWO INTERPRETING PRODUCTIVITY FLUCTUATIONS OVER THE BUSINESS CYCLE
- PART THREE THE THEORY OF THE INFLATION-UNEMPLOYMENT TRADEOFF
- PART FOUR EMPIRICAL STUDIES OF INFLATION DYNAMICS IN THE UNITED STATES
- Subject Index
- Author Index
Foreword by Robert M. Solow
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword by Robert M. Solow
- Preface
- Introduction
- PART ONE THE HISTORY, THEORY, AND MEASUREMENT OF PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
- PART TWO INTERPRETING PRODUCTIVITY FLUCTUATIONS OVER THE BUSINESS CYCLE
- PART THREE THE THEORY OF THE INFLATION-UNEMPLOYMENT TRADEOFF
- PART FOUR EMPIRICAL STUDIES OF INFLATION DYNAMICS IN THE UNITED STATES
- Subject Index
- Author Index
Summary
An Attentive and Thoughtful Reader (called ATR from now on) will learn an enormous amount from this book about the interactions among productivity, unemployment, and inflation in the contemporary American economy. There are no more important topics within economics and not many outside of economics either. These seventeen chapters do not contain sweet nothings.
On many of today's (and tomorrow's) headline issues, ATR will have been brought to the exploratory frontier of active research. By definition, nothing at the research frontier is settled. Every conclusion is debatable (and in macroeconomics, where a lot is at stake, every conclusion is debated).
As early as Chapter One, for instance, ATR will learn many of the ins and outs involved in evaluating the belief that we now live in a “new economy,” with a dramatically faster sustainable rate of increase of (total factor) productivity than before, mostly induced by the advent of the computer and information technology. Bob Gordon counts as a skeptic on the new economy. I do not mean a skeptic as compared with the hype that suffuses the trade press and the media. Any reasonable person would be a skeptic in that context. I mean that his estimate of the sustainable long-run growth rate of productivity, net of important cyclical and temporary factors, is near the low end among serious students of the theory and data of productivity growth.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Productivity Growth, Inflation, and UnemploymentThe Collected Essays of Robert J. Gordon, pp. ix - xPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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