The Great Recession, including the preceding events and the subsequent recovery period, has been the dominant feature of US capitalism in the 21st century. But what can we learn about economic behavior, policies, and relationships by studying this period of marked general decline? Understanding the Great Recession seeks to answer this question by facilitating an advanced theoretical and practical understanding of the Great Recession, using multiple approaches to economic analysis.
This textbook uses the Great Recession as a case study for understanding economic concepts, the conduct of policymaking, and competing schools of economic thought. It introduces readers to multiple perspectives on the crisis, including feminist, institutionalist, Marxian, monetarist, neoclassical, post-Keynesian, and stratification economics, amongst others. Divided into four sections, the first part introduces readers to the headline events of the crisis, and the major differences between neoclassical and heterodox economics. The second section investigates the lead-up to the crisis, beginning with the long-term restructuring of capitalism following the Great Depression, the housing market bubble, and the transmission of the 2008 financial crisis. The third section investigates the policy responses to the crisis, such as financial reform, monetary policy, and fiscal policy. In the final section, economic performance, the shift towards populism, and policy developments during the recovery are all analysed.
Providing the basis for understanding the long-term trajectory of capitalism today, this book will be an invaluable resource for students of economics, public policy, and other related fields.
About the Author: Jared M. Ragusett, Associate Professor of Economics, Central Connecticut State University, USA.