Results 251 to 260 of about 206,749 (287)
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A Neo-classical Approach to the Determination of Prices and Wages.

Economica, 1972
In most macro-economic models of Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States, prices and wages are determined in a Phillips-curve framework. In the original formulation the rate of change of wages is dependent on the rate of unemployment only. In subsequent formulations effects of rate of change of consumer prices and of productivity have been ...
R. Agarwala   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Economic growth and technological change: A comparison of insights from a neo-classical and an evolutionary perspective

open access: yesTechnological Forecasting and Social Change, 2001
Over the last two decades, dissatisfaction with the traditional Solow-Swan model of economic growth resulted in two new classes of models of economic growth and technological change: neo-classical endogenous growth models, and evolutionary growth models.
Peter Mulder   +2 more
exaly   +2 more sources

Neo-classical growth reconsidered : Professor Solterer’s approach

Économie appliquée, 1980
Briefs Henry W.,Poirier J. Eugène. Neo-classical growth reconsidered : Professor Solterer’s approach. In: Économie appliquée, tome 33 n°3-4,1980. pp. 601-624.
Briefs, Henry W., Poirier, J. Eugène
openaire   +2 more sources

A neo-classical education transitions approach: A corrected tale for three cohorts

Research in Social Stratification and Mobility, 2011
Abstract Analysts have regarded education transitions research as revealing late stage educational egalitarianism in the United States (e.g., Stolzenberg, 1994 ) and as sufficiently robust to guide policymakers (e.g., Hout, 2007 ). However, critics suggest parameter estimates are contaminated by selection bias (e.g., De Graaf & Ganzeboom, 1993 ...
Samuel R. Lucas   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Keynesian and neo-classical growth models: A sequential analytical approach

De Economist, 1981
By means of Marshall's method of analysing complex dynamic processes an attempt has been made to position Keynesian and neo-classical growth theories. Three periods have been distinguished: the short period, the medium period and the long period. By extending disequilibrium theory to the medium and the long run, models have been developed for each of ...
openaire   +2 more sources

A neo-classical approach to sphere parallelisability

2020
The 1950’s are often considered as the “golden age” of topology, seeing a vast number of results and new theories appear. One such result is that the n-sphere Sn is parallelisable (that is, its tangent bundle is trivial) if and only if n = 0, 1, 3, or 7.
openaire   +1 more source

A Neo-Classical Supply-Based Approach to Land Prices

Urban Studies, 1981
Current interest in land-price theory is dominated by attempts to explain the structure of land prices and land uses in urban areas. Those theories, however, do not enable certain important political issues to be elucidated, in particular the relationship between produce price and land price. A different approach is therefore suggested, which considers
openaire   +1 more source

U.S. Strategy toward Africa and Trump's Rivalry Competition: A Neo-Classical Approach

2020
This article illustrates the fact that the U.S. administration's behavior toward Africa has always been shaped by the conception of rivalries' presence, rather than the potentials of the continent. In recent years, with the emergence of America’s rivals, such as China and Russia in Africa in the continent, who have invested not only in the African ...
Toghyani, Atefeh, Arabahmadi, Amir
openaire   +1 more source

Is management accounting theory breaking free from the shackles of neo‐classical economics? A South African perspective [PDF]

open access: yesMeditari: Accountancy Research, 2001
To the extent that management accounting is based on neo-classical economics, all decision-making is assumed to be rational, aimed at utility or profit maximisation and all circumstances influencing decisions are accepted as stationary.
M. Shotter, Shotter, Magdalena
exaly   +2 more sources

Fixed versus Variable Coefficients — The Neo-classical Approach

1979
Two characteristic features of most neo-classical growth models are some form of production function relating output to factor inputs and the absence of an investment function so that investment is determined passively by saving. Harrod’s model — set out in Chapter 1 — possesses neither of these features (though it could be argued that a production ...
openaire   +1 more source

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