The Economics of Inaction: Stochastic Control Models with Fixed Costs
By (Author) Nancy L. Stokey
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
19th January 2009
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
330.01519233
Hardback
320
Width 152mm, Height 235mm
567g
In economic situations where action entails a fixed cost, inaction is the norm. Action is taken infrequently, and adjustments are large when they occur. Interest in economic models that exhibit "lumpy" behavior of this kind has exploded in recent years, spurred by growing evidence that it is typical in many important economic decisions, including price setting, investment, hiring, durable goods purchases, and portfolio management. In The Economics of Inaction, leading economist Nancy Stokey shows how the tools of stochastic control can be applied to dynamic problems of decision making under uncertainty when fixed costs are present. Stokey provides a self-contained, rigorous, and clear treatment of two types of models, impulse and instantaneous control. She presents the relevant results about Brownian motion and other diffusion processes, develops methods for analyzing each type of problem, and discusses applications to price setting, investment, and durable goods purchases. This authoritative book will be essential reading for graduate students and researchers in macroeconomics.
"The presentation of all these problems and solutions is impeccably precise, perfectly appropriate for textbook use in a taught course, and suitable for independent reading by readers with standard mathematical and economic background."--Giuseppe Bertola, Journal of Economic Literature
Nancy L. Stokey is the Frederick Henry Prince Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago. She is the author, with Robert Lucas and Edward Prescott, of" Recursive Methods in Economic Dynamics".