Real business cycle theory (Kydland and Prescott, ~1980) explains business cycles as driven by exogenous productivity changes—from regulation, tax rates, oil prices, or innovation—where people work more hours when productivity is high ('make hay while the sun shines') and fewer when it is low, generating procyclical productivity, wages, and investment.

definitionpending

Speaker

Garrett Jones

Evidence Quote

we think we can explain everything else that goes on in a business cycle... just by believing that productivity is going up and going down because of changes in government regulation changes in tax rates changes in oil prices

Source

Garett Jones on Macro and Twitter 02/22/2010EconTalk
Created: 6/17/2026, 10:31:36 AM

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