Results 231 to 240 of about 120,147 (274)
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Capital in Economic Theory: Neo-Classical, Cambridge and Chaos

The Canadian Journal of Economics, 1993
This major book presents a comprehensive treatment of modern capital theory. It brings together in a balanced and systematic way, the various approaches to capital theory which have emerged or re-emerged in the most recent controversies on the subject.
Thomas K. Rymes, Syed Ahmad
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A Neo-Classical Economic Theory: Leveraging Underground Economy

Cognizance Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies
Increasing underground economies, an emerging disruptive behaviour in the economy, employment, and human development, reaches more than $10 trillion, and close to 2 billion people currently employed. Traditionally, the legal economy is the formal economy, the White Market; the illegal economy is the underground economy, the Black Market. Over time, the
Demetria May T. Saniel   +2 more
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Neo‐Classical Economics: Relevance, Irrelevance and Rugina's Methodology

International Journal of Social Economics, 1987
Today much of economic theory, particularly microeconomic theory, rests on neo‐classical foundations. Through a consideration of neo‐classical concepts, one can reassess current economic thought. This may support the view that relevant advances in economic thought have taken place or (in the light of Professor Anghel Rugina's research and observations)
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Neo-classical Economics and Evolutionary Theory: Strange Bedfellows?

PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, 1992
On the surface and to a first approximation, economic theory and evolutionary theory share salient features: a commitment to optimality and maximizing, a consequent similarity in mathematical formalism, an appeal to equilibrium as the preferred explanatory strategy. Moreover, both have at various times been stigmatized as empirically empty.
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Neo-classical economic models

2021
Keith Bassett, John Short
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Values and Preferences in Neo-Classical Environmental Economics

1997
For many environmental economists, working within the framework of neo-classical theory, environmental problems are best conceived as cases ofmarket failure' - the failure of actual markets to display the efficiency of resource allocation whichideal' markets can be demonstrated to achieve.
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Neo-classical Economics and the Case for Antitrust

1973
The tradition of analysing the welfare effects of market power by reference to the concept of economic surplus as represented in the previously defined social welfare function is quite ancient, encompassing J. Dupuit (1844) and (certainly) Alfred Marshall. More recently this method has been used by Harberger [30], who was the first economist to use the
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Fron Neo-classical Entrepreneur to Socio-economic Organization [PDF]

open access: possible, 2004
Despite the growing role that business has played in the development of capitalism, the neo-classical paradigm has largely ignored the concept of organization. This paper illustrates the neo-classical concept of the firm and the entrepreneur. Analyzing both, the moral and economic thought of Adam Smith, this paper explains why, in the heart of ...
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A Neo-Classical Theory of Economic Growth (Routledge Revivals)

2013
First published in 1960, this seminal work illuminates the interrelations of the various approaches to the theory of economic growth. Professor Meade seeks to understand the factors which determine the speed of economic growth and outlines the ways in which classical economic analysis may be developed for application to the problem of economic growth.
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Advocacy and Neo Classical Economics [PDF]

open access: possibleEastern Economic Journal, 1986
Michael D. Bordo, Daniel Landau
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