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Macroeconomia (2026)



Macroeconomia (2026)

The Elusive Equilibrium: Inflation, Unemployment, and the Evolution of Macroeconomic Policy

The journey from the Phillips Curve to modern inflation targeting reveals a fundamental evolution in macroeconomic thought. The early Keynesian belief in a stable, exploitable trade-off gave way to the sobering realization that expectations, not just statistical relationships, are the primary drivers of inflation. The stagflation of the 1970s demonstrated the cost of ignoring expectations; the Volcker disinflation showed the painful necessity of building credibility; and the Great Moderation highlighted the benefits of an explicit, rules-based policy framework. Macroeconomia

The stagflation era paved the way for an even more radical critique led by Robert Lucas and Thomas Sargent: Rational Expectations. They argued that people do not simply extrapolate the past (adaptive expectations); they use all available information, including their understanding of the policy regime itself, to form forecasts. This implied that even the short-run trade-off could disappear if a policy change is anticipated. The stagflation era paved the way for an

For much of the 20th century, macroeconomists believed they had discovered a stable, predictable menu for policymakers: the Phillips Curve. This empirical relationship, which suggested an inverse link between unemployment and wage inflation, offered a seemingly simple trade-off. Societies could choose to tolerate higher inflation in exchange for lower unemployment, or accept a recessionary level of joblessness to keep prices stable. However, the tumultuous economic events of the 1970s—the era of stagflation, where high unemployment and high inflation coexisted—shattered this consensus. This essay argues that the relationship between inflation and unemployment is not a stable, exploitable trade-off but a dynamic, expectation-driven phenomenon. By tracing the evolution of this idea from A.W. Phillips to the Rational Expectations Revolution and into the era of modern inflation targeting, we will see how the failure to manage aggregate demand and supply shocks, alongside the critical role of central bank credibility, has shaped the macroeconomic history of the last seventy years. Ultimately, the quest for macroeconomic stability has shifted from exploiting a mythical trade-off to the more difficult task of anchoring inflation expectations. For much of the 20th century, macroeconomists believed

The 1970s illustrated the dynamics of "adaptive expectations." As the central bank repeatedly tried to boost demand, workers and firms learned to expect higher inflation. The Phillips Curve shifted upward, creating a high-inflation, high-unemployment equilibrium. The key lesson was that the trade-off is only a short-run phenomenon, and it vanishes entirely if policymakers attempt to exploit it systematically.