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Research Papers in Economics (RePEc) is a collaborative effort of hundreds of volunteers in many countries to enhance the dissemination of research in economics. The heart of the project is a decentralized database of working papers, preprints, journal articles, and software components. [1] The project started in 1997. [2]
Marxian economics, or the Marxian school of economics, is a heterodox school of political economic thought. Its foundations can be traced back to Karl Marx's critique of political economy . However, unlike critics of political economy , Marxian economists tend to accept the concept of the economy prima facie .
In mathematical economics, the Arrow–Debreu model is a theoretical general equilibrium model. It posits that under certain economic assumptions (convex preferences, perfect competition, and demand independence), there must be a set of prices such that aggregate supplies will equal aggregate demands for every commodity in the economy.
Description: In this paper, Becker demonstrates that neoclassical economic demand curves follow simply from the fact that compensated price changes in the goods available to consumers with fixed budget sets cause corresponding shifts in the consumption opportunity sets of those consumers and thus do not require any assumptions about the ...
Selected papers highlighted for their historical significance (older papers) or GoogleScholar citation impact (most recent papers). Jannasch, Robert (1868). "Die Statistik als wissenschaftliche Methodik und Zustandsdynamik" ["Statistics as a scientific methodology and state dynamics"] (PDF). Swiss J. Econ. Stat. (in German). VII (4) – via ...
The paper was written in 1970 by George Akerlof and published in the Quarterly Journal of Economics. The paper's findings have since been applied to many other types of markets. However, Akerlof's research focused solely on the market for used cars. Akerlof's paper uses the market for used cars as an example of the problem of quality ...
The AEA maintains EconLit, a searchable data base of citations for articles, books, reviews, dissertations, and working papers classified by JEL codes for the years from 1969. A recent addition to EconLit is indexing of economics journal articles from 1886 to 1968 [1] parallel to the print series Index of Economic Articles. [2]
The paper did not directly measure the outcome on consumer spending because it did not include actual consumer expenditure on branded or unbranded products. [12] It further acknowledged there is the potential consumer spending deviates from visiting behaviour. [ 13 ]