The 1978 conference that reshaped macroeconomics and our understanding of stagflation.
The article looks at a conference in 1978 where economists debated different ways to understand stagflation. Lucas and Sargent argued against traditional macroeconometric models, but didn't directly address stagflation. The debate wasn't just about using microfounded models, but how to build them. The conference shows how economists in the 1970s interpreted stagflation and how it influenced their methods.