Nearly every long economic expansion in the United States generates intellectual currents claiming that the boom-bust business cycle is over, that there is a “new economy.” The expansion of the 1920s led econo- mists to hope that the new Federal Reserve had learned how to stabilize output— that the decade truly had seen a “New Era”—and to Irving Fisher’s claim on the eve of the 1929 crash that stock prices had reached a “permanent and high plateau” (Galbraith, 1955). The expansion of the 1960s led the Department of Commerce to change the name of its Business Cycle Digest to the Business Conditions Digest, for the New Dimensions of Political Economy (Heller, 1966) opened up by the Keynesian revolution had led to substantial “Progress Toward Economic Stability” (Burns, 1960). Only the long expansion of the 1980s—under the shadow of the just-past Volcker disinflation, the deepest recession of the post-World War II period—failed to generate a large and vocal faction of economists claiming that the business cycle was at an end.
CITATION STYLE
De Long, J. B. (1999). Introduction to the Symposium on Business Cycles. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 13(2), 19–22. https://doi.org/10.1257/jep.13.2.19
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