→ AkerlofGeorge, Behavioral Macroeconomics and Macroeconomic Behavior, American Economic Review, June 2002.
2.
DrèzeJacquesPolemarchakisHeracles, “Money and Monetary Policy in General Equilibrium,” in KirmanA.Gérard-VaretL.-A. (Eds.), Economics Beyond the Millennium, pp. 55–77, Oxford University Press, 1999.
3.
FriedmanMilton, A Theory of the Consumption Function, Princeton University Press, 1957.
4.
HicksJ. R., “Mr. Keynes and the ‘Classics’: A Suggested Interpretation,”Econometrica, 5, 1937.
5.
KeynesMaynardJohn, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, Harcourt and Brace, New York, 1936.
6.
ModiglianiFranco, “The Shameful Rate of Unemployment in the EMS: Causes and Cures,” in CollignonStefan, ed., European Monetary Policy, pp. 242–270, London: Pinter Press, 1997.
7.
→ ModiglianiF., “Liquidity Preference and the Theory of Interest and Money,”Econometrica, 12, pp. 45–88, 1944.
8.
ModiglianiF.CepriniMarialuisa, “A Mis-guided Monetary Policy Bears the Main Responsibility for European Unemployment,”(testimony presented in April 2000 to the Monetary Commission of the European Parliament).
9.
ModiglianiF., “Utility Analysis and the Consumption Function: An Interpretation of Cross-Section Data,” (with Richard Brumberg), in KuriharaK.K., ed., Post-Keynesian Economics, Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick NJ, pp. 388–36, 1954.
10.
ModiglianiF., “Utility Analysis and Aggregate Consumption Functions: An Attempt at Integration,” (with Richard Brumberg), (from a 1954 MS), AbelA., ed., The Collected Papers of Franco Modigliani, Volume 2, MIT Press, Cambridge MA, pp. 128–197, 1980.
11.
TobinJames, “Keynesian Models of Recession and Depression,”American Economic Review, Volume 75, 1975.