EconPedia - EconSciences
    EconPedia - EconSciences
    • Home
    • Pages
      • About Us
      • Help & Support
      • All Categories
      • Content Archives
    • Featured Contents
    • Random Content
    • Blog
    • EconSciences

      Archives

      • January 2023

      Categories

      • Events
      • FAQ
      • News
      • Other Publications
      • Supporting
      Ads
      • Home
      • Pages
        • About Us
        • Help & Support
        • All Categories
        • Content Archives
      • Featured Contents
      • Random Content
      • Blog
      • EconSciences
      EconPedia - EconSciences
      EconPedia - EconSciences
      • Home
      • Pages
        • About Us
        • Help & Support
        • All Categories
        • Content Archives
      • Featured Contents
      • Random Content
      • Blog
      • EconSciences
        All Contents
        Contents
        Survival Analysis
        Survival Analysis
        Survival analysis or duration modelling is a widely applied statistical method for estimating the expected time until a specific event of interest occurs.
        • EconSciences
        Read More
        New Institutional Economics
        New Institutional Economics
        New Institutional Economics is a field of economics which expands the neoclassical concept. Its main representatives are Ronald Coase and Oliver Williamson. In 1937 Ronald Coase describes the firm as a result of relationships which arise when the role of the market is undertaken by the manager-entrepreneur.
        • EconSciences
        • B55 Social Economics
        Read More
        Market Anomalies
        Market Anomalies
        There are many market anomalies observed in financial markets that efficient-market hypothesis (EMH) and standard asset-pricing models cannot explain.
        • EconSciences
        Read More
        Rationality and Institutions
        Rationality and Institutions
        Individual rationality is a model of personal choice behaviour, whoever he or she may be. It sets out from a perspective on life as a decision between action or no action, i.e.
        • EconSciences
        Read More
        Trade, Deglobalisation and the New Mercantilism
        Trade, Deglobalisation and the New Mercantilism
        The COVID-19 pandemic is accelerating changes underway since the global financial crisis (GFC) in 2008. It is ushering in a new era of deglobalisation and protectionism — a new mercantilist world order.
        • EconSciences
        Read More
        Market Failures
        Market Failures
        Market failures represent the inability of the market to allocate resources optimally. In the absence of transaction costs optimal allocation would be at the Pareto optimum, that is, where supply and demand meet.
        • EconSciences
        Read More
        Uzawa two-sector growth model. The dead end
        Uzawa two-sector growth model. The dead end
        The issues, which Uzawa (1961, 1963) examined, emerged as an extension of the seminal Solow-Swan neoclassical growth model.
        • EconSciences
        • B29 Other
        Read More
        Market Efficiency
        Market Efficiency
        The idea of market efficiency is used to describe a market in which relevant information is rapidly incorporated into the asset prices so that investors cannot expect to earn abnormal profits from their investment strategies.
        • EconSciences
        Read More
        Concept of Productivity
        Concept of Productivity
        Many people use the word 'productivity' because it is a household word. However, for different people it means different things. The definition of productivity is complex and it has been defined in a number of ways, but all have in common the feature of relating an output measure to an
        • EconSciences
        Read More
        Behavioral Finance
        Behavioral Finance
        Behavioral finance studies the effect of psychological factors on human behavior, which further affects asset price movements. Standard financial models assume that individuals are rational and risk-averse.
        • EconSciences
        • B55 Social Economics
        Read More
        • Previous
        • Page 2 of 2
        Newsletter

        Latest Posts
        Would you like to write an article?
        • January 1, 2023
        Why EconPedia?
        • January 1, 2023
        Discover Books
        • January 1, 2023
        Discover Journals
        • January 1, 2023
        Welcome to EconPedia!
        • January 1, 2023
        Categories
        • Events
        • FAQ
        • News
        • Other Publications
        • Supporting

        New Books

        Recent Posts

        • Would you like to write an article?
        • Why EconPedia?
        • Discover Books
        • Discover Journals
        • Welcome to EconPedia!
        • Welcome to EconPedia!
        • Would you like to write an article?
        • Why EconPedia?
        • About Us
        • EconSciences
        EconPedia - EconSciences

        WhatsApp us