An Interview with Thomas J. Sargent



“Acknowledging Misspecification in Macroeconomic Theory,” (with Lars Hansen),
Review of Economic Dynamics, Vol. 4, No. 3, July 2001, pp. 519—535.

2002

The Big Problem of Small Change, with François Velde, Princeton University
Press, 2002.

“Optimal Taxation without State Contingent Debt,” (with Rao Aiyagari, Albert
Marcet and Juha Seppala), Journal of Political Economy, December 2002.

“Robust and Pricing with Uncertain Growth,” (with Marco Cagetti, Lars Peter
Hansen, and Noah Williams), Review of Financial Studies, 15(2): pp. 363-404,
March 2002.

“Robust Permanent Income and Pricing with Filtering,” (with Lars Peter Hansen
and Neng Wang), Macroeconomic Dynamics, 6, pp. 40—84, February 2002.

“Escaping Nash Inflation,” (with In-Koo Cho and Noah Williams), Review of
Economic Studies, 69: 1-40, January 2002.

2003

“European Unemployment: From a Worker’s Perspective,” (with Lars Ljungqvist),
in Know ledge, Information, and Expectations, in Modern Macroeconomics in
Honor of Edmund S. Phelps, edited by Philippe Aghion, Roman Frydman,
Joseph Stiglitz, and Michael Woodford, Princeton University Press, 2003.

“Robust Control of Forward Looking Models,” (2003), (with Lars Peter Hansen),
Journal of Monetary Economics, April, 50(3): 581-604.

“A Quartet of Semigroups for Model Specification, Robustness, Prices of Risk,
and Model Detection, ” (with Evan Anderson and Lars Peter Hansen), Journal
of the European Economic-Association. March 2003; 1(1): 68-123.

2004

Recursive Macroeconomic Theory, Second Edition, MIT press.

“Lotteries for consumers versus lotteries for firms,” (2004) (with Lars Ljungqvist),
Frontiers in Applied General Equilibrium Modeling, edited by Timothy J. Ke-
hoe, T. N. Srinivasan and John Whalley. Cambridge University Press.

“European Unemployment and Turbulence Revisited in a Matching Model,”
(2004), (with Lars Ljungqvist), Journal of the European Economic-Association,
April-May, 2(2-3), pp. 456-468.

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7. NVESTIGATING LEXICAL ACQUISITION PATTERNS: CONTEXT AND COGNITION
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