Dynamic Macroeconomics with Multiple Regimes
Abstract
Macroeconomic dynamics is typically modeled under the assumption that the economy evolves according to a single invariant law of motion. This paper shows that this assumption imposes a structural restriction. We develop Dynamic Macroeconomics with Multiple Regimes (DMR), a framework in which economic evolution is governed by multiple regime-specific propagation operators. As a result, trajectories arise from ordered compositions of heterogeneous operators rather than from the iteration of a single mapping. We establish three structural results. First, invariant-law and regime-dependent systems are not topologically equivalent. Second, regime dependence is dynamically irreducible: it cannot be eliminated through any injective transformation of the state space. Third, whenever regime operators fail to commute, there exists no map F:Rnn whose iterates reproduce all regime-admissible trajectories. These results establish a structural separation between invariant-law macroeconomics and regime-dependent dynamics, implying that stability, policy evaluation, and structural characterization must be conducted at the level of interacting propagation operators rather than within a single invariant mapping.
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