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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Economics: Terms And Concepts > economics
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economics, Economics: Terms And Concepts

Related Category: Economics: Terms And Concepts

After World War II, emphasis was placed on the analysis of economic growth and development. Western economists notable for their contributions to the economics of growth and development include Gunnar Myrdal of Sweden, Sir Arthur Lewis of Great Britain, and Joseph Schumpeter of the United States.

In recent years, economic theory has been broadly separated into two major fields: macroeconomics, which studies entire economic systems; and microeconomics, which observes the workings of the market on an individual or group within an economic system. The use of complex mathematical techniques and statistical data in economic forecasting has resulted in a new branch of economics known as econometrics. British economist Arthur Pigou was influential in the development of welfare economics, an important branch of the discipline that suggested that an economic system was better if even one person's satisfaction was increased while no one else's was decreased.

In the 1980s supply-side economics (which sees economic growth as essential for improving the material health of society) was used as a policy tool by the Reagan administration. Another modern economic school that was influential in the Reagan years is monetarism; monetarists, such as Milton Friedman, believe that the money supply exerts a dominant influence on the economy. In the 1990s, Nobel laureate Gary Becker extended the scope of macroeconomic analysis by applying economic reasoning to human behavior, including the use of sociology, anthropology, and other disciplines. Game theory has also been appied to economics (see games, theory of).



The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.



Topics that might be of interest to you:

Gary Becker
capitalism
Henry Charles Carey
John Bates Clark
depression, in economics
distribution
division of labor
econometrics
economic planning
feudalism
free trade
Milton Friedman
games, theory of
David Hume
Industrial Revolution
William Stanley Jevons
Keynes, John Maynard, Baron Keynes of Tilton
laissez-faire
Sir Arthur Lewis
Thomas Robert Malthus
Alfred Marshall
Karl Marx
Carl Menger
mercantilism
John Millar
John Stuart Mill
Gunnar Myrdal
physiocrats
Arthur Cecil Pigou
Ronald Wilson Reagan
David Ricardo
Joseph Alois Schumpeter
Adam Smith
socialism
social science
supply-side economics
value, in economics

Related Categories:

Social Sciences and the Law > Economics, Business, and Labor
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