Search

Search Funnelback University

Search powered by Funnelback
11 - 20 of 25 search results for Economics
  1. Fully-matching results

  2. Post Keynesian Macroeconomics

    https://www.robinson.cam.ac.uk/postkeynesian/downloads/Jespersen/Jespersen%20260110.ppt
    26 Jan 2010: Post-Keynesian economics is when uncertainty and money are taken seriously. It penetrates economic decision making and behaviour at all levels – micro/macro and short or long run. ... This is the nature of economic thinking (Keynes, 1936: 297).
  3. Scandinavian Countries

    https://www.robinson.cam.ac.uk/postkeynesian/downloads/Jespersen/Jespersennotalk.pps
    23 Dec 2010: 2009. Source: OECD, Economic Outlook, 2010. 2005=100. Competitiveness (Consumer prices). 92.9572652893. ... 2009. 2009. 2010. 2010. 2010. Sweden. Denmark. Germany. Source: OECD, Economic Outlook, 2010.
  4. How types of market differ, and why it matters

    https://www.robinson.cam.ac.uk/postkeynesian/downloads/Joffe/MJ011111.pps
    3 Jan 2012: observation: not all economic phenomena can readily be explained using this framework – most recently bubbles/crises; but also the specific property of capitalism, that it grows. ... it is difficult to distinguish between “behavioral theories built
  5. Slide 1

    https://www.robinson.cam.ac.uk/postkeynesian/downloads/Littleboy/BL070611.ppt
    9 Jun 2011: 197, n1). John Pheby: Spot the most nihilistic quote in Epistemics and Economics. ... flows through his life’s work. In A Scheme of Economic Theory he seeks to.
  6. The Importance of Keynes

    https://www.robinson.cam.ac.uk/postkeynesian/downloads/Marcuzzo/MCM181011.pps
    18 Oct 2011: Return to another Keynes. Financial crisis has forced us to take on board Keynes’s division of economics between:. ... To acknowledge the failure of economics to take uncertainty seriously. Notion of Uncertainty.
  7. PowerPoint Presentation

    https://www.robinson.cam.ac.uk/postkeynesian/downloads/Osborne/Osborne150211.pps
    16 Feb 2011: or imaginary, in which case they will have no economic significance.’.
  8. The General Theory as the gateway to the re-unification of Political …

    https://www.robinson.cam.ac.uk/postkeynesian/downloads/Reading%20Group%201/Reading%20Group%201%20with%20talk.pps
    30 Nov 2008: Since Keynesian economics is derived, by definition, from the work of John Maynard Keynes, one might suppose that reading Keynes is an important part of Keynesian theorizing. ... In fact, quite the opposite is the case.” [European Economic Review, 1992]
  9. The General Theory as the gateway to the re-unification of Political …

    https://www.robinson.cam.ac.uk/postkeynesian/downloads/Reading%20Group%201/Reading%20Group%201%20without%20talk.pps
    20 Dec 2008: Since Keynesian economics is derived, by definition, from the work of John Maynard Keynes, one might suppose that reading Keynes is an important part of Keynesian theorizing. ... In fact, quite the opposite is the case.” [European Economic Review, 1992]
  10. Keynes on Individual Behaviour and the Possibility of Involuntary…

    https://www.robinson.cam.ac.uk/postkeynesian/downloads/Rotheim/RJR150311.pps
    19 Mar 2011: T]he mathematization of economics … formalized the system as a series of markets each described by a demand function and a supply function. ... Concluding Remarks. On the Impossibility of Involuntary Unemployment Equilibrium in Mainstream Economic
  11. Short period and long period in macroeconomics: an awkward distinction

    https://www.robinson.cam.ac.uk/postkeynesian/downloads/Sanfilippo/ES050612.pps
    23 Jul 2012: change variables, like the wage level, kept ‘in the pound’ in the short period, the economic system necessarily tends in historical time towards an optimal long-period equilibrium, by means of ... as an application of the ceteris paribus method, as a

Refine your results

clear all

Format

Date

Related searches for Economics

Search history

Recently clicked results

Recently clicked results

Your click history is empty.

Recent searches

Recent searches

Your search history is empty.