Intertemporal Macroeconomics Costas Azariadis , first published in 1993 by
: It addresses advanced topics such as rational expectations, least squares learning, and multiple equilibria. Money and Asset Prices
Physical Details: The text is approximately 504–528 pages and was originally published by Blackwell in 1993.
Intertemporal Macroeconomics by Costas Azariadis, published in 1993 by Wiley-Blackwell, is a seminal graduate-level textbook that provided the first unified exposition of dynamic macroeconomics based on neoclassical growth theory. Core Themes and Approach
4.3. Sunspot equilibria
Intertemporal Macroeconomics — Overview and Long-Form Exposition
This long piece explains intertemporal macroeconomics (theory, models, applications, and extensions) with emphasis on themes associated with Costas Azariadis’s work (notably on self-fulfilling prophecies, indeterminacy, sunspots, and credibility) and pointers for further reading. I assume the user is seeking a deep, self-contained exposition suitable for study or teaching. Sections: motivation, basic tools, representative models, indeterminacy and sunspots (Azariadis’s core contributions), policy implications, empirical evidence and testing, extensions and recent developments, and a suggested reading list (including how to locate relevant PDFs).