See
also: List of Economic Topics 
STOCKHOLM
SCHOOL - macroeconomics
The
Stockholm School, or Stockholmsskolan, is a school of economic thought. It refers
to a loosely organized group of Swedish economists that worked together, in Stockholm,
Sweden primarily in the 1930s.
They
arguably developed Keynesian economics before Keynes. The main members were Gunnar
Myrdal and Bertil Ohlin, who both received the Nobel Prize for Economics. Although
their ideas were novel in the 1930s, the school never focused on publicizing their
work and the members were later scattered. Myrdal spent many years in the U.S.
working on what eventually led to the book An American Dilemma, a major investigation
of the situation of African Americans. Ohlin became the Swedish opposition leader
for over twenty years, battling the incumbent Social Democrat government. Other
members, such as Erik Lundberg, continued as business cycle oriented economists.
See
also
Stockholm School of Economics (Business School)