Business Cycles in the United States of America, 1919–1932

E200962

"Business Cycles in the United States of America, 1919–1932" is an influential econometric study by Jan Tinbergen that analyzes and models U.S. economic fluctuations during the interwar period.

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Predicate Object
instanceOf econometric study
economic monograph
academicDiscipline economics
statistics
aimsTo explain causes of business cycles
quantify relationships between macroeconomic variables
analyzes U.S. economic fluctuations
interwar period business cycles
associatedWith early econometric tradition
quantitative business cycle analysis
author Jan Tinbergen
chronologicallyFollows World War I
chronologicallyPrecedes Great Depression policy responses literature
contributedTo recognition of Jan Tinbergen as a pioneer of econometrics
countryOfFocus United States of America
describes patterns of expansion and contraction in U.S. economy
examines consumption fluctuations in the United States
employment fluctuations in the United States
investment fluctuations in the United States
output fluctuations in the United States
price level movements in the United States
fieldOfStudy business cycle theory
econometrics
macroeconomics
focusesOn interwar period
hasAuthor Jan Tinbergen
hasGenre academic economics book
influenced development of macroeconometric modeling
empirical business cycle research
influencedBy statistical economics tradition
languageOfWork English
mainSubject United States economy
business cycles
macroeconomic fluctuations
notableFor early application of econometrics to macroeconomic time series
quantitative modeling of business cycles
relatedWork Statistical Testing of Business-Cycle Theories
timePeriodCovered 1919–1932
topic dynamic relationships among macroeconomic variables
measurement of economic activity
statistical indicators of business cycles
typeOfWork empirical study
quantitative analysis
usesMethod econometric modeling
statistical analysis

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Jan Tinbergen notableWork Business Cycles in the United States of America, 1919–1932