The last essay demonstrates the results of applying tychism and exchangeability to agricultural economics. |
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She walked straight into a business analyst position with a major consulting firm after graduating in economics and government. |
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Many economics textbooks fail to mention QE, suggesting that this is a new and extreme form of monetary policy. |
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Forgive the caveman economics, but keeping the lights and heating on comes a long way ahead of saving the planet, in my book. |
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Schumpeter explicitly credits the equilibrium-based Walrasian system as a scientific foundation for economics. |
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But when he decided to make a brash stab at the sports-car market, economics drove him to Canada. |
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At A-level, he hopes to take English literature, economics, drama and sports studies. |
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Far from holding the intellectual high ground, economics rests on foundations of quicksand. |
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It is all very well for Tariq Ali to gibe at India's neo-liberal economics, but this, alas, is the only show in town. |
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Christopher M. Meissner is a lecturer in economics at the University of Cambridge and a fellow of King's College. |
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Two became fellows at All Souls and the other got the best economics first at Cambridge since the war. |
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Let managers and shareholders make their own choices, based on sound business judgment, not on fear, jingoism or just bad economics. |
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From there he was packed off to Carmel College and then he went to London University to study economics. |
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Thus, there is going to be an adjudication to this that will have to address the economics. |
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This individual has a bachelor of arts degree in economics and a master of business administration degree. |
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The narrative, livened by a selection of Argentinian political cartoons, demonstrates the power of applied economics. |
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The family creates a social sphere beyond the reach of either politics or economics. |
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During the early '80s, the United States entered another recession, and Reaganite economics took hold. |
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This is definitely a flash back to Reaganomics, when supply-side economics policy was probably at its best. |
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The son of a grocery store owner in southern Sweden, Petersson studied economics and then went into selling financial products. |
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Dr. Cramer pioneered the integration of agribusiness into agricultural economics. |
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My major areas of emphasis were in agricultural marketing, policy, international trade, agribusiness, and general economics. |
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Probably the biggest benefit of variable-rate technology is that it lets us sell in terms of agronomics rather than just economics. |
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Agronomics and economics have been as important, if not more so, than politics when it comes to making corn decisions. |
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These publications discuss subjects including soil, agronomy, nutrition, plant protection, agricultural economics and statistics. |
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They also need to read some economics books to understand how Keynesian economics works. |
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He may have recanted on the hard-line economics, but people here still regard him as one of the leaders of the English party. |
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America's economic recovery and its likely strength have been and remain the central preoccupation in economics around the world. |
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The lab will be available to the departments of political science, economics, sociology, women's studies and possibly others, Robinson says. |
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Rigorous and data intensive, ecological economics builds on the idea that natural resources are as valid a form of capital as oil rigs. |
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Turner pens a column in a weekend paper which, often as not, is given over to lacerating New Right economics and philosophies. |
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Another area where the 1990s have proved supportive of progressive economics concerns supply-side economics and the Laffer curve. |
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Hoffman lays the main responsibility on historians who, as I mentioned, are so wary of economics. |
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Repackaging economics courses can also reinvigorate them and stimulate student interest. |
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He had known Maynard Keynes, though he took no interest in economics, and Henry Moore, a fellow Yorkshireman still unknown as a sculptor. |
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We need to end the fossil fuel addiction anyway, and only higher oil prices will tilt the economics in favor of solar, wind and other renewables. |
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The British attitude to immigration and immigrants has always been grudging, a mixture of xenophobia and socialist zero-sum economics. |
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He launched a frenzied personal attack on the economist, criticising everything from his economics to his politics. |
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There aren't many Hollywood blockbusters about Nobel laureates in economics. |
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They have been educated to think analytically and apply science, history, and economics to food writing. |
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In his most prominent works, he dismissed much of the American individualist tradition in economics. |
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I had learned a little about Marxism in a course on the economics of health care. |
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Cycling to college, Singh taught agriculture economics and macro economics but he soon took leave to go to Cambridge on scholarship. |
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Giocoli claims that Nash's interpretation of game theory was beset by other difficulties retarding its acceptance by mainstream economics. |
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Basic laws of market economics require that lenders make their own estimates of risk. |
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I mean, globalism and the accompanying economics were supposed to bring debt free governments. |
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Through the establishment of courses in humanities, management and economics, we expect to permeate liberal arts into the sciences. |
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There is a discernible pattern in Indian politics and economics which shows that change has tended to take place only very slowly and gradually. |
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In his eyes George is a more faithful developer of Ricardian economics than even J. S. Mill. |
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Meanwhile, Poland remains mired in nationalist politics and socialist economics. |
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But his brand of economics is by, for and about a Western culture, which is only one facet of Aotearoa New Zealand. |
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The book will appeal broadly to scholars interested in colonial agriculture and economics. |
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If you remember back to an economics class you might have taken, much time was spent on the intersection of lines in those graphs. |
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I guess economists can be a bit specialized but I was once a High School economics teacher so I speak the lingo, as it were. |
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Over the past few decades there have been rumblings within the field of economics. |
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I went to graduate school at one point, and stopped 12 hours shy of getting a masters of science in economics. |
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In the past, colleges of agriculture placed a low priority on agricultural economics. |
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Joining the single currency when the economics were not right would foster a backlash when things went wrong, as they assuredly would. |
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Above all, it is precisely the Atlanticist, Blairite kind of economics that French voters rejected on Sunday. |
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At New York University and Columbia, Greenspan honed his economics skills and earned a reputation as a tireless data hound. |
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A native Austrian, he took his place as a representative of the Austrian school of economics. |
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A group of three papers and three comments considers Fisherian themes in monetary economics and macroeconomics. |
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His research interests include the history of macroeconomics, the history of game theory, and the history of women in economics. |
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Dr. Fontana's interests include macroeconomics, monetary economics, history of economic thought, and methodology. |
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An autodidact and a polymath, he studied economics, meteorology, history, genetics, and many other subjects. |
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Lin is a respected corporate leader who has long been tapped for the economics portfolio, but declined to serve in past KMT cabinets. |
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Many of today's young, virulent anticapitalists experienced their social awakenings on campuses, in fields other than economics. |
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Economic theories have been axiomatized, and articles and books of economics are full of theorems. |
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Janos' argument convincingly explains the mainsprings of politics and economics in modern times. |
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Goldberg graduated from Brandeis University with a bachelor's degree in economics and received an MBA from the University of Chicago. |
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Minton earned a bachelors degree from the University of Maryland, where he studied economics, chemistry, and mathematics. |
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Mitchell will graduate this spring from Tufts University with a bachelor's degree in political science with a minor in economics. |
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And so much unlike his younger brother, Eric was maladroit at handling simple home economics tasks. |
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The lack of scalability means that to achieve his optimistic economics one must jump from nothing to an incredibly large colony. |
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His research interests are the economics of science and technical changes, and the theory of diffusion of new technologies. |
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I start from the basic supposition that economics is the study of allocating scarce resources and not simply the study of money. |
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If you major in business and managerial economics, you'll learn how to answer questions like these. |
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I reason that university presidents with business or economics backgrounds should be more likely than others to embrace managerialism. |
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These realisations are as old as Keynes, and have a heritage in the Austrian school of economics as well. |
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Not surprisingly, Weber was deeply influenced by the Austrian school of economics. |
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They're really trying to drill you to see if you're schooled in Internet economics. |
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The would-be tax terminator has chosen as his chief economics adviser a tax perpetuator. |
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In the U.S., with economics as the focal social institution, last words and testaments will deal with the disposition of goods. |
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This may lead to a decision based on economics or potential crop marketability. |
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Despite the official ban on direct trade with China, cross-strait trade soared into record territory, economics officials said yesterday. |
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In 1944 a mathematician von Neumann and an economist Morgernstern introduced the theory of games to economics. |
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In the end, truth is no match for economics and a misguided vision of self-preservation. |
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The Scottish Executive wants to set an example by tightening the purse strings and understanding some economics. |
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There flashed upon the minds of some thinkers the idea that here, in economics, was to be found the key to a real science of man. |
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The Old America had been one of black and white forcibly kept apart by segregation, economics, and prejudice. |
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They suspected his culture, distrusted his politics and opposed his economics. |
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This approach rejects the autonomy and self-sufficiency of neoclassical economics. |
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Economics and politics are not synchronized very well and that is working to the disadvantage of economics. |
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Kerry has pledged to reverse the tide of modern economics by doing exactly this. |
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What Orwell offers by way of contrast to all this is a meliorist localism in politics and economics. |
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That's like trying to talk about the history of free market economics and not mention the name Adam Smith. |
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It does not require a doctorate in economics to assess the relative merits of the Yes and No positions in the referendum campaign. |
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Other commonalities in law, language and economics bind England to America. |
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Upon these axioms the whole structure of microeconomics is based, and the rest of economics generally follows. |
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This is a concept bequeathed by the President, describing how to combine state planning with today's market economics. |
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Well, for what it's worth, missus, the Last Post suggests home economics for an easier life. |
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In the first three decades of the twentieth century the discipline of economics assumed its present shape. |
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To get to the bottom of the issue, we should note that economics is little more than the study of human interactions or transactions. |
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I especially like the discussions of behavioral economics, transitivity, endowment effects, and the like. |
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In doing so, he subjects central tenets of modern economics to trenchant criticism. |
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This scenario asks us to believe in trickle-down economics theory on a global scale, even though so far it has not worked in any single country. |
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What is often confused with a trickle-down theory is supply-side economics, such as that advocated by Arthur Laffer. |
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He emphasises a code of ethics for economics, rejects abstract free trade theory, and loathes the trickle-down effect. |
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It has applications outside of the realm of biology, in fields like genetic algorithms and economics. |
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But he mistrusted Marxist economics which he saw as a mechanistic and limiting view of the human story. |
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This is also the standard modus operandi of academic or conventional economics. |
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Our sick society and stupid economics are dragging the planet to the edge of apocalypse. |
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Naturally, the question we're supposed to consider is framed in terms of Chicago School economics, the same people who gave us monetarism. |
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At school I had learned Keynsian theory and now I was being taught monetarism and supply side economics. |
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The governor is the steward of the monetary principles and economics of the country. |
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He also takes his swings at the greedy northeastern moneybags' who exploit the South for its cheap labor plantation economics. |
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I follow the Microsoft case with interest, of course, given my twin interests in economics and technology. |
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She is in her early thirties now and back when she was at school the girls were all directed into home economics and the boys to the technical drawing. |
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My old boss has produced a highly readable, engaging, lucid book on practical economics. |
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Some time during her earlier years, Ellen went to Alta to perfect her knowledge of the Norwegian language, and to learn home economics and sewing. |
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In the pursuit of pseudo-scientific tractability, neoclassical economics neglects the dynamic aspects of the social realm and delivers a static utilitarian calculus. |
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This is certainly not in any sense a refutation of free market economics. |
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Other beings have independent desires that are shaped and influenced by all manner of things from peer pressure to economics to physics to biology. |
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And Arthur Laffer, the creator of supply-side economics, may have fathered six children. |
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And they are absolutely scathing of the quantitive approach, pointing out that economics cannot make quantitive predictions, only qualitative ones. |
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Ronald Reagan could get away with sunny generalizations about supply-side economics because in 1980, it was just a theory. |
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Countries that share the United Kingdom's Atlanticism and market-oriented approach to economics would also think twice before ostracizing the British. |
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A slightly less daunting local monument is the Jesuitical college, built at much the same time and now occupied by the university's economics faculty. |
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It is no wonder the Malthusians want to get rid of economics. |
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Created more jobs than any modern president, in the process showing people that trickle-down economics was hoodoo. |
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They guffawed that the EU might get the peace prize, but never the Nobel for economics or, indeed, for chemistry. |
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Tribal governments are, very often, collectivist in their economics, allowing little space for internal pluralism of news media or business enterprises. |
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The large food retailers are going global, and as barriers to trade come down, the economics ate determining where the investment and trade take place. |
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When it comes to policy making, applications of social or cognitive psychology are now routinely labeled behavioral economics. |
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Again, it was the strong imprint of utilitarian thought patterns in economics that kept so many economists sliding down through the railway embankments of eugenic reasoning. |
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His chapter on Paris art focuses almost exclusively on economics, resulting in what must be one of the least scintillating treatments of the Impressionists ever written. |
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For a man who was often lionized on the right, Sharon had a tin ear on economics. |
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James Langenfeld is a director at LECG, an economics and finance consulting firm, and an adjunct professor at Loyola University Law School, Chicago. |
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A man fully steeped in the niceties of Austrian economics might still reject these ends, and not be forced to endure the pain of self-contradiction. |
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First-time candidate and full-time economics professor Dave Brat decisively defeated the consummate pol by a 55 to 45 margin. |
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An evaluation of the economics of heifer development revealed that the pregnancy rate for yearling heifers may not be as important as the pregnancy rate of the 2-year old. |
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His principal teaching and research interests include monetary economics, macroeconomics, the history of economic thought, and development economics. |
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The economics of small-time pig keeping were simple and profitable. |
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His interests include labor economics, macroeconomics, and finance. |
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The conservative helped popularize Reaganite supply-side economics. |
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Someone from a humbler background selling essentially those same voodoo economics will do only marginally better. |
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This is the beginning of the real and true economics of information. |
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The individualist anarchists saw land economics differently. |
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In fact, the divergence in the family patterns of the affluent and the disadvantaged is more a matter of economics than culture. |
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He is professor of economics at Columbia University and a Nobel laureate. |
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Historical and institutional economics, on the other hand, are value laden, at least in origin, and the model of scientificity they intended to attain was somehow different. |
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Experienced farmers will blend science, agronomics, economics and field histories with that indefinable intuitive sense and then will decide which crop will do best this year. |
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A particularly intriguing segment of the story deals with how he came to change his opinion on Keynesian economics. |
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In short, modern mainstream economics is in a state of total confusion. |
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In economics it listens to the advice of the International Monetary Fund. |
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About those, he says that three quarters of all Nobel laureates in science, medicine, and economics have lived and worked in the U.S. in recent decades. |
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It makes sense as a matter of economics only when several conditions hold. |
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The aid agency airfreighted the books, which I then handed over to concerned teachers in two schools where home economics featured on the curriculum. |
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Conservatives deride Bruce Bartlett, a supply-side economics inventor, as a Keynesian for criticizing their devotion to tax cuts. |
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Work must be scaled to fit the economics of each commission, even if that means having another income source to pay the bills until one hits the big time. |
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It seems to me that we are dealing with more than bottom-line economics and bottom-squeezing ergonomics. |
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Compare Inside Job with Capitalism, Michael Moore's entertaining polemic on the broader sins of laissez-faire economics. |
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In Lost in the Meritocracy, kirn charts how the economics of privilege taunt him at every turn in Princeton. |
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He questioned the general application of statistical methods to economics. |
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We're not going to subscribe to the terrible trickle-down economics, the unfair trickle-down theories of the age-old, ideological approach used by this administration. |
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Conservatives were reassured when at the end of 1921 Fascism became an organized party, the Partito Nazionale Fascista, and embraced monarchism and liberal economics. |
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On the other hand, home economics was virtually empty, with Miss Orton teaching a small knot of girls made to do the cookery class by their parents. |
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Here are some numbers that suggest to me that we need more emphasis on home economics in high school. |
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Today many in the economics and urban planning professions consider such factors close to irrelevant. |
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But, as any proselytiser of right-wing economics worth their salt will tell you, free trade agreements don't work, either ideologically or practically. |
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Because of rising gas prices, economics will dictate growing food closer to the consumer year round. |
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Dylan returned to upstate New York to study political economics at Union College in Schenectady. |
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We do not have to look far for the proof that growth-centered economics is pushing the regenerative capacities of the planet's ecosystems to the brink. |
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A home economics class with a focus on finance and budgeting would have been one of the most useful classes I can imagine. |
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Or to assume that he believes in the addled and simplistic economics of austerity that would drive the nation back into recession. |
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Jazz is linked in the mind of marketers with affluence, but the economics of jazz have never been worse. |
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The Ohio native was fresh out of the University of Akron, where he earned a B.A. in economics. |
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Students are thus invited to follow the royal road into neoclassical economics and, in the process, forced to pay a substantial toll to the authors of the chosen textbook. |
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He sees, in the anarchic Wall Street encampment, a sign of a grassroots revolt against austerity economics. |
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None of Denes's issues, in art or politics or economics or ecology, are any less worth addressing today than 30 years ago. |
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Second, the Nobel Prize for economics went to Jean Tirole, who studies how to regulate politically powerful companies. |
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Standard courses in economics talk about the law of demand and supply, where prices are determined to equate the two. |
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After graduating high school, he attending the University of Virginia, double-majoring in economics and foreign relations. |
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The laws of economics are on the side of the liberalisers, and whatever drawbacks the dictates of the dismal science may have, moral outrage is not one of them. |
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Same for free market economics, religious fanaticism, and a survivalist outlook. |
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Even though she had a high school diploma in economics she did not have much confidence about doing the job because it was terra incognita for her. |
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Her coded critique of Ricardian economics, with its adherence to Say's Law and obsession with saving, I will argue, forms the philosophical armature of The Mill on the Floss. |
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But that era is ending, a casualty of newspaper economics and a changing society. |
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But since it is rare in any book aimed at children to see a discussion of economics, let alone imperialism and militarism, that criticism might be held in abeyance. |
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Urbanization is relevant to a range of disciplines, including geography, sociology, economics, urban planning, and public health. |
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Yunus received his PhD in economics from Vanderbilt University, United States. |
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Trade is the voluntary exchange of goods and services, and is a form of economics. |
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Aspects receiving particular attention in economics are resource allocation, production, distribution, trade, and competition. |
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It has a complex relationship with the discipline of economics, of which it is highly critical. |
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New forms of trade and expanding horizons made new forms of government, law and economics necessary. |
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Many historians have rejected the idea, while others promote it as an invaluable insight into the warfare, politics, economics, and even art. |
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Germany in particular increasingly dominated the continent in terms of economics and political power. |
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In business, economics, and finance, double entry bookkeeping, credit card, and the charge card were all first used in the West. |
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To a certain extent, mercantilist doctrine itself made a general theory of economics impossible. |
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This book outlines the basics of what is today known as classical economics. |
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These result as much from geography and history as from culture and economics. |
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Due to the changing economics of farming, much of the land is now reforested in Loblolly pine for the lumber industry. |
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The Yakuts are divided into two basic groups based on geography and economics. |
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Each of these processes significantly changed the forms, level, and economics of slavery in Africa. |
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The spread of a language depends on economics, global politics, and a good support system backed with state support. |
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These views endeared Holmes to the later advocates of legal realism, and made him one of the early founders of law and economics jurisprudence. |
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This can be applied in many different ways, such as, economics, politics, a person's appearance, or laws. |
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The economics of imposing or removing regulations relating to markets is analysed in regulatory economics. |
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In contemporary legal theory, the utilitarian approach is frequently championed by scholars who work in the law and economics tradition. |
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Liberal professors have claimed that there is conservative bias in law schools, particularly within law and economics and business law fields. |
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His understanding of economics was primitive, and he gave his Chancellor, Reginald Maudling, free rein to handle financial affairs. |
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In economics, capital consists of anything that can enhance a person's power to perform economically useful work. |
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All other inputs to production are called intangibles in classical economics. |
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In industrial economics, innovations are created and found empirically from services to meet the growing consumer demand. |
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In Marxist economics these owners of the means of production and suppliers of capital are generally called capitalists. |
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According to Toynbee, applying the historical method in economics would reveal how supposedly universal economic laws were, in fact, relative. |
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After the war, the economics of the industry had changed, and a new larger mill was required. |
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It was necessary for them to rediscover fire, to relearn the basic laws of economics and rebuild civilization out of the ashes of ruin. |
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This improved somewhat later as processes were more heavily mechanised to improve economics and uniformity of product. |
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Learning economics from the Marquis de Condorcet, he became an assistant to Earl Gower, who would later become the Marquess of Stafford. |
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The introduction of the steam turbine fundamentally changed the economics of central station operations. |
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In economics, the efficiency of electrical generation has been shown to correlate with technological progress. |
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Minerals often occur in mountains, with mining being an important component of the economics of some montane societies. |
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The development was originally planned in the 1980s but was delayed due to the economics at the time. |
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Drawing from classical economics, Rubinomics mistakenly asserts that saving drives investment. |
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In short, modern Conservative economics produces very unconservative people. |
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But asymmetrical information is also a term of art in economics. |
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Contemporary economics rooted in the Classical school tended to absolutize the economic aspect. |
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More recent behavioral studies in economics complicate the idea that individuals act rationally, acquisitively, or consistently. |
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Agronomics and economics of plant population density on processing sweet corn. |
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A concept from economics called the median voter theorem provides one explanation for this wobbliness. |
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It was the mercantilists who bridged the gap and, later on, Adam Smith built the whole edifice of economics. |
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As an economics graduate with a successful VFX company, it is likely SRK will give a lecture on the economy of filmmaking. |
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The empirical finding of Zipf's law for the size distribution of cities is one of the most celebrated in all of urban economics. |
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Jones has more than 20 years of experience in research, survey methodology and applied economics. |
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The President asked me to advise on the economics, particularly the plan by Kohl to exchange one deutsche mark for one ostmark. |
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This Millian approach to doctrinal diversity resonates with Stilwell's 'Open Society' argument for pluralism in economics. |
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Thus economics really does constitute the universal grammar of social science. |
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Lewis writes in a direct, lucid style, with none of the obfuscatory terminology so often found in economics literature. |
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Last time we suffered slash and burn economics we had riots in the streets here in Liverpool. |
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In this article, which later earned him Nobel Laureate in economics, he analyzed the consequences of information asymmetry in certain markets. |
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The existing industry is built on crime and under-the-table economics. |
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That is decidedly not to say that politics and economics are irrelevant. |
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The early back of the napkin version of the Laffer curve would go on to become the basis for Reaganomics and supply-side economics. |
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Chapters 1-5 add 128 pages to a coursepack and can be profitably read by senior economics majors. |
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Even while he was lecturing in economics at Coventry Technical College he still found time to play the odd fool or baddy. |
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After 1689 came an alternative understanding of economics, which saw Britain as a commercial rather than an agrarian society. |
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Adam Smith developed and published The Wealth of Nations, the starting point of modern economics. |
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The economics books Marx was reading at the time can be seen in the library, as can the window seat where Marx and Engels would meet. |
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In Europe, before the outbreak of the war, the Allies had significant advantages in both population and economics. |
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Thatcher herself claimed philosophical inspiration from the works of Burke and Friedrich Hayek for her defence of liberal economics. |
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Historically, influenced by Keynesian economics, the party favoured government intervention in the economy, and the redistribution of wealth. |
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The 2004 rankings acknowledged several new indicators while continuing to rank city economics more heavily than political or cultural factors. |
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The contemporary transition from Keynesian economics to Chicago economics was analysed by Kaldor in The Scourge of Monetarism. |
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Welcome to economics 101 with Limpeh. Allow me to break down the concept of round-tripping to you in the most simple way in my kitchen. |
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The significantly better economics of diesel operation triggered a dash to diesel power, a process known as Dieselization. |
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This tide has ebbed and flowed in response to politics, economics and social conditions of both places. |
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Through coalition building, like the ACS and CARICOM, regionalism has become an undeniable part of the politics and economics of the Caribbean. |
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At the turn of the 21st century, the expanding domain of economics in the social sciences has been described as economic imperialism. |
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The ultimate goal of economics is to improve the living conditions of people in their everyday life. |
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But he said that economics can be used to study other things, such as war, that are outside its usual focus. |
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Much applied economics in public policy is concerned with determining how the efficiency of an economy can be improved. |
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Managerial economics applies microeconomic analysis to specific decisions in business firms or other management units. |
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Uncertainty in economics is an unknown prospect of gain or loss, whether quantifiable as risk or not. |
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Financial economics or simply finance describes the allocation of financial resources. |
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Some specialized fields of economics deal in market failure more than others. |
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Public finance is the field of economics that deals with budgeting the revenues and expenditures of a public sector entity, usually government. |
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Much of economics is positive, seeking to describe and predict economic phenomena. |
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However, the field of experimental economics is growing, and increasing use is being made of natural experiments. |
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Approaches in development economics frequently incorporate social and political factors. |
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Law and economics, or economic analysis of law, is an approach to legal theory that applies methods of economics to law. |
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Energy economics is a broad scientific subject area which includes topics related to energy supply and energy demand. |
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His work contributed significantly to thermoeconomics and to ecological economics. |
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He also did foundational work which later developed into evolutionary economics. |
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In microeconomics, neoclassical economics represents incentives and costs as playing a pervasive role in shaping decision making. |
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Neoclassical economics is occasionally referred as orthodox economics whether by its critics or sympathizers. |
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The Chicago School of economics is best known for its free market advocacy and monetarist ideas. |
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Notwithstanding, economics legitimately has a role in informing government policy. |
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In recent years, feminist critiques of neoclassical economic models gained prominence, leading to the formation of feminist economics. |
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Nassim Nicholas Taleb and Michael Perelman are two additional scholars who criticized conventional or mainstream economics. |
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Mervyn King, the former Governor of the Bank of England, is also a former professor of economics. |
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As Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations had during an earlier period, Mill's Principles dominated economics teaching. |
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Diocletian's Price Edict can give us a glimpse of the economics of transporting wood. |
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They are to be sought, not in the philosophy, but in the economics of each particular epoch. |
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The economics of research is, so far as logic is concerned, the leading doctrine with reference to the art of discovery. |
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As a consequence, the prose literature of dissent, political theory, and economics increased in Charles II's reign. |
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His work is considered to be an early precursor of modern welfare economics. |
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He employed paradox, while making serious comments on the world, government, politics, economics, philosophy, theology and many other topics. |
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Mill's Principles, first published in 1848, was one of the most widely read of all books on economics in the period. |
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Catlin had moved to New York to study economics at Columbia University on a Fulbright scholarship. |
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Wilhelm allowed politician Walther Rathenau to tutor him in European economics and industrial and financial realities in Europe. |
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Until 1991, all Indian governments followed protectionist policies that were influenced by socialist economics. |
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Issues with command economics, oil price decreases and large military expenditures gradually brought the Soviet economy to stagnation. |
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The Austrian School of economics argues that central banks create the business cycle. |
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These airliners would have a significant impact on global society, economics, and politics. |
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By 1921, it was becoming apparent that aircraft capacity needed to be larger for the economics to remain favourable. |
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In economics, inflation is a sustained increase in the general price level of goods and services in an economy over a period of time. |
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In Marxian economics, the unemployed serve as a reserve army of labor, which restrain wage inflation. |
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Neoclassical economics views inequalities in the distribution of income as arising from differences in value added by labor, capital and land. |
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Marxian economics attributes rising inequality to job automation and capital deepening within capitalism. |
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