Macroeconometric Modeling and the SSRC's Committee on Economic Stability, 1959-1963

The Center for the History of Political Economy Working Paper Series, Duke University, No. 2018-08

37 Pages Posted: 23 May 2018 Last revised: 9 Jun 2018

See all articles by Juan Acosta

Juan Acosta

LEM, University of Lille I; University of Lille I, Faculty of Economic and Social Sciences, Department of Economics and Management

Erich Pinzón-Fuchs

Universidad Nacional de Colombia

Date Written: May 9, 2018

Abstract

We study the construction of the macroeconometric model of the Committee on Economic Stability (CES) of the Social Science Research Council (SSRC) in the early 1960s using the CES’s archival records. Building this model was central not only to set the bases for the subsequent construction of other models such as the Brookings Model (1963-1972) and the FRB-MIT-Penn model (1966-1974) but also to consolidating large-scale macroeconometric modeling as a scientific practice at the frontier of macroeconomics in the 1960s. We provide a detailed account of the complex establishment of the Committee and argue that the organization of the CES was the response of an important group of economists concerned about the instability of the US economy and wanting to develop new methods with the “widest possible degree of acceptance” to understand concrete fluctuations of the economy and to act upon them to maintain stability. As the first model-building enterprise of this size, the project’s many challenges in terms of logistics, data, and computing capacity, evidence the importance of configuring a specific institutional and material context necessary to develop this new scientific practice. In this sense, we discuss the functioning and management of this ambitious project and, in particular, the structure and organization of the team in charge of the model (or “federation of research projects”), which was structured around more than 20 researchers based in different locations. We argue that the CES was successful in bringing together academics and people from government agencies and in the very practical purpose of producing, collecting, centralizing, and managing data for the purpose of generating quantitative policy analysis.

Keywords: History of Macroeconomics; Macroeconometric Modeling; Committee on Economic Stability; Social Science Research Council; Large-Scale Macroeconometric Models; Brookings Model

JEL Classification: B22, B23, B4

Suggested Citation

Acosta, Juan and Acosta, Juan and Pinzón-Fuchs, Erich, Macroeconometric Modeling and the SSRC's Committee on Economic Stability, 1959-1963 (May 9, 2018). The Center for the History of Political Economy Working Paper Series, Duke University, No. 2018-08, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3175933 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3175933

Juan Acosta (Contact Author)

LEM, University of Lille I ( email )

Cité Scientifique
SH1 Bat
Villeneuve D'Ascq, Nord 27705
France

University of Lille I, Faculty of Economic and Social Sciences, Department of Economics and Management ( email )

Villeneuve D'Ascq Cedex, 59655
France

Erich Pinzón-Fuchs

Universidad Nacional de Colombia ( email )

Carrera 30 45-03
Bogota, None
Colombia

HOME PAGE: http://https://erichpinzonfuchs.wordpress.com/

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