Abstract
We do not yet know whether the global nancial and economic crisis of 2008 will go down in history as a momentous or even uniquely catastrophic event. Unwritten history is full of events that contemporaries thought were epochal and are today long forgotten. And on the other side of the scale, there were many in the early stages of the Great Depression that belittled its import. Though it is too soon to tell how the second half of 2008 will feature in history books, there should be no doubt that it signi es a critical opportunity for the discipline of economics. It is an opportunity for us and here I mean the majority of the economics profession, unfortunately myself included to be disabused of certain notions that we should not have so accepted in the rst place. It is also an opportunity for us to step back and consider what the most important lessons we have learned from our theoretical and empirical investigations that remain untarnished by recent events are and ask whether they can provide us with guidance in current policy debates. This short essay rst provides my views on what intellectual errors we have made and what lessons these errors o¤er us moving forward. My main
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