Macroeconomics

Minimize Regulations to Regulate - Extending the Lucas Critique

January 1, 2005

Sugata Marjit

Amit K. Biswas

Hamid Beladi

Abstract

Lucas (1976) argued that interventionist policies in macroeconomics may fail because the policies themselves affect the optimal behavior of private agents and hence the associated response parameters. We extend Lucas's argument and propose that a highly controlled and regulated environment leads to misinterpretation of official statistics and therefore distorts policy predictions based on such information. In a way policies will have predictability in a more open and less regulated environment.

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