Nonlinear Economic Dynamics için kapak resmi
Nonlinear Economic Dynamics
Başlık:
Nonlinear Economic Dynamics
ISBN:
9783642972911
Personal Author:
Edition:
2nd ed. 1991.
Yayın Bilgileri:
Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 1991.
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
X, 151 p. online resource.
Contents:
1: Nonlinear Economic Dynamics -- 1 Dynamics Versus Equilibrium Analysis -- 2 Linear Versus Nonlinear Modelling -- 3 The Tools of Analysis -- 4 The Choice of Models -- 2: Spatial Pattern Formation -- 1 Scientific Explanations -- 2 Optimal Patterns -- 3 Structurally Stable Patterns -- 4 Conclusion -- 3: Population Dynamics -- 1 The Original Hotelling Model -- 2 Growth -- 3 Diffusion -- 4 Growth and Diffusion -- 5 Structural Stability -- 6 Conclusion -- 7 Appendix: Model with Endogenous Capital -- 4: Business Cycles -- 1 The Multiplier-Accelerator Model -- 2 Spatial Models -- 3 The Two-Region Model -- 4 The Forced Oscillator -- 5 Chaos -- 6 Conclusion -- 5: Chaotic Cycles -- 1 First Discrete Model -- 2 The Cubic Iterative Map -- 3 Brownian Random Walk -- 4 Digression on Order and Disorder -- 5 The General Model -- 6 Conclusion -- 7 Appendix: Digression on the Rationale of the Cubic -- References.
Abstract:
The present study is a preliminary draft on nonlinear economic dynamics, with which the author has been concerned the last years. It grew out from the joint work by Professor Martin Beckmann and the present author on nonlinear statics in spatial economics, Beckmann and Puu, "Spatial Economics" (North-Holland 1985). The monograph mentioned contains sections on price waves and business cycles, but in a linear format. The rest is static theory. The author has finally come to the conviction that linear dynamic modelling has very little to yield. This is due to the poor set of alternatives -decay or explosion of motion -pertinent to linear models. Therefore, the present work centres on non-linearity. Another distinction is that only purely causal models are dealt with, as those formatted as inter-temporal equilibria hardly belong to the more restricted field of dynamics. The spatial origin is visible in the choice of models. Chapter 2 summarizes the work by the author on the structural stability of continuous spatial market equilibrium models. Chapter 3 deals with a re-fonnulation of the ingenious population growth and diffusion model invented by the young Hotelling in 1921. Chapter 4 is a detailed digression on business cycle models in a continuous spatial format with inter-regional trade.
Dil:
English