Nonlinear Dynamics, Psychology, and Life Sciences, Vol. 21, Iss. 3, Jul, 2017, pp. 359-386 @2017 Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology & Life Sciences Nonlinearities in Behavioral Macroeconomics Abstract: This article undertakes a journey across the literature on behavioral macroeconomics,
with attention concentrated on the nonlinearities that the behavioral approach typically
suggests or implies. The emphasis is placed on thinking the macro economy as a living organism,
composed of many interacting parts, each one having a will of its own, which is in
sharp contrast with the mechanism of the orthodox view (well represented by the neoclassical
or new Keynesian dynamic stochastic general equilibrium - DSGE - model). The paper advocates
that a thorough understanding of individual behavior in collective contexts is the only
possible avenue to further explore macroeconomic phenomena and the often observed anomalies
that the benchmark DSGE macro framework is unable to explain or justify. After a reflection on
the role of behavioral traits as a fundamental component of a new way of thinking the economy,
the article proceeds with a debate on some of the most relevant frameworks in the literature that
somehow link macro behavior and nonlinearities; covered subjects include macro models with
disequilibrium rules, agent-based models that highlight interaction and complexity,
evolutionary switching frameworks, and inattention based decision problems. These subjects have,
as a fundamental point in common, the use of behavioral elements to
transform existing interpretations of the economic reality, making it more evident
how irregular fluctuations emerge and unfold on the aggregate. Keywords: behavioral macroeconomics, nonlinear dynamics, complex systems, local interaction |