| Título : |
Economic Ideas You Should Forget |
| Tipo de documento: |
documento electrónico |
| Autores: |
Frey, Bruno S., ; Iselin, David, |
| Mención de edición: |
1 ed. |
| Editorial: |
[s.l.] : Springer |
| Fecha de publicación: |
2017 |
| Número de páginas: |
XIII, 166 p. |
| ISBN/ISSN/DL: |
978-3-319-47458-8 |
| Nota general: |
Libro disponible en la plataforma SpringerLink. Descarga y lectura en formatos PDF, HTML y ePub. Descarga completa o por capítulos. |
| Palabras clave: |
Ciencias económicas Económicas Historia del Pensamiento y Metodología Económica |
| Índice Dewey: |
330 Economía (sistemas, escuelas, teorías) |
| Resumen: |
Este libro, que informa sobre los avances económicos más vanguardistas, presenta una selección de comentarios que revelan las debilidades de varios conceptos económicos fundamentales. La economía es una ciencia vigorosa y progresista que no pierde su fuerza cuando se invalidan empíricamente partes particulares de su teoría; por el contrario, contribuyen a la acumulación de conocimientos. Al analizar supuestos teóricos problemáticos y recurrir a las últimas investigaciones empíricas, los autores cuestionan hipótesis específicas y rechazan ideas económicas importantes, desde el "teorema de Coase" hasta la "ley de Say" y el "bayesianismo". Muchas de estas ideas siguen siendo importantes entre políticos, economistas y el público en general. Sin embargo, a la luz de la crisis financiera, han perdido tanto su relevancia como la evidencia empírica que las respalda. Esta fascinante y estimulante colección de 71 ensayos breves escritos por economistas y científicos sociales respetados de todo el mundo atraerá a cualquier persona interesada en el progreso científico y el desarrollo ulterior de la economía. |
| Nota de contenido: |
Introduction -- Capitalism -- Sola-Protestantism in Economics.-Economics Has Hothing to Do with Religion -- More Choice Is Always Better.-People Are Outcome-Oriented -- Deriving Peopls's Trade Policy Preferences from Macro-Economic Trade Theory -- Size (of Government) Doesn't Matter -- Byesianism -- The Return on Equity -- Peak Oil Theory -- More Choice Is Always Better -- (Un-)Productive Labor -- Volatility Is Risk -- Robots Will Take All Our Jobs -- Economic Growth Increase People's Well-Being -- Big Data Predictions Devoid of Theory -- Government Debts Are a Burden on Future Generations -- Public Spending Reduces Unemployment -- The Capital Asset Pricing Model -- Innovation Programs Lead to Innovation -- Factors of Production Are Homogenous Within Categories -- Individual Utility Depends Only on Absolut Consumption -- The Relative Price Effect Explains Behavior -- The Precedence of Exchange Over Production -- Inequality Reduces Growth -- Contingent Valuation, Willingness to Pay and Willingness to Accept.-Governments Must Reduce Budget Deficits -- Reach for Your Dream -- The EU's Competiveness Authority -- Say's Law -- Boundedness of Rationality -- Rational Expectations -- Letting Insolvent Banks Fail -- Pleasantville Politics - Selecting Politicians According to Ability -- The Axioms of Revealed Preference -- The Myth of Expansionary Consolidations -- Government Hurts the Economy More Than It Helps -- The Motivated Armchair Approach to Preferences -- Economics Is Based on Scientific Methods -- The Death of Distance -- Concept of Rationality -- Pay for Performance Raises Performance -- Home Ownership Is Good -- Coase Theorem -- Poverty Is Good for Development -- Markets Are Efficient -- CEOs Are Paid for Talent -- The Efficiency-Equity Tradeoff -- Deterministic Trend of Inequality -- Quantitative Easing -- Hosting the Olympic Games -- Abolishing Cash as Solution Against the Evil -- Receiving Money and Hot Having to work Raises Happiness -- Saints in Public Office -- Helicopter Money -- Decisions are Deterministic.-Politicians Systematically Converge to the Median Voter -- Artists Are Poor and Thus Unhappy -- Returns on Educational Investments Are Highest for Early Childhood Interventions -- EU Centralization -- The Alleged Asymmetry in Maintaining a Fixed Exchange Rate -- Governments Should Maximize the Happiness of the Population -- Okun's Equality-Efficiency Tradeoff -- A Rising Tide Raises all Boats -- Social Cost Analysis -- Natural Resources Make Rich -- The Natural Rate of Interest Is Positive -- Europe's "Skill Shortage" -- Taxes are Paid Because of Expected Punishment -- Better safe than Sorry -- The End of Work -- Postscript . |
| En línea: |
https://link-springer-com.biblioproxy.umanizales.edu.co/referencework/10.1007/97 [...] |
| Link: |
https://biblioteca.umanizales.edu.co/ils/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&i |
Economic Ideas You Should Forget [documento electrónico] / Frey, Bruno S., ; Iselin, David, . - 1 ed. . - [s.l.] : Springer, 2017 . - XIII, 166 p. ISBN : 978-3-319-47458-8 Libro disponible en la plataforma SpringerLink. Descarga y lectura en formatos PDF, HTML y ePub. Descarga completa o por capítulos.
| Palabras clave: |
Ciencias económicas Económicas Historia del Pensamiento y Metodología Económica |
| Índice Dewey: |
330 Economía (sistemas, escuelas, teorías) |
| Resumen: |
Este libro, que informa sobre los avances económicos más vanguardistas, presenta una selección de comentarios que revelan las debilidades de varios conceptos económicos fundamentales. La economía es una ciencia vigorosa y progresista que no pierde su fuerza cuando se invalidan empíricamente partes particulares de su teoría; por el contrario, contribuyen a la acumulación de conocimientos. Al analizar supuestos teóricos problemáticos y recurrir a las últimas investigaciones empíricas, los autores cuestionan hipótesis específicas y rechazan ideas económicas importantes, desde el "teorema de Coase" hasta la "ley de Say" y el "bayesianismo". Muchas de estas ideas siguen siendo importantes entre políticos, economistas y el público en general. Sin embargo, a la luz de la crisis financiera, han perdido tanto su relevancia como la evidencia empírica que las respalda. Esta fascinante y estimulante colección de 71 ensayos breves escritos por economistas y científicos sociales respetados de todo el mundo atraerá a cualquier persona interesada en el progreso científico y el desarrollo ulterior de la economía. |
| Nota de contenido: |
Introduction -- Capitalism -- Sola-Protestantism in Economics.-Economics Has Hothing to Do with Religion -- More Choice Is Always Better.-People Are Outcome-Oriented -- Deriving Peopls's Trade Policy Preferences from Macro-Economic Trade Theory -- Size (of Government) Doesn't Matter -- Byesianism -- The Return on Equity -- Peak Oil Theory -- More Choice Is Always Better -- (Un-)Productive Labor -- Volatility Is Risk -- Robots Will Take All Our Jobs -- Economic Growth Increase People's Well-Being -- Big Data Predictions Devoid of Theory -- Government Debts Are a Burden on Future Generations -- Public Spending Reduces Unemployment -- The Capital Asset Pricing Model -- Innovation Programs Lead to Innovation -- Factors of Production Are Homogenous Within Categories -- Individual Utility Depends Only on Absolut Consumption -- The Relative Price Effect Explains Behavior -- The Precedence of Exchange Over Production -- Inequality Reduces Growth -- Contingent Valuation, Willingness to Pay and Willingness to Accept.-Governments Must Reduce Budget Deficits -- Reach for Your Dream -- The EU's Competiveness Authority -- Say's Law -- Boundedness of Rationality -- Rational Expectations -- Letting Insolvent Banks Fail -- Pleasantville Politics - Selecting Politicians According to Ability -- The Axioms of Revealed Preference -- The Myth of Expansionary Consolidations -- Government Hurts the Economy More Than It Helps -- The Motivated Armchair Approach to Preferences -- Economics Is Based on Scientific Methods -- The Death of Distance -- Concept of Rationality -- Pay for Performance Raises Performance -- Home Ownership Is Good -- Coase Theorem -- Poverty Is Good for Development -- Markets Are Efficient -- CEOs Are Paid for Talent -- The Efficiency-Equity Tradeoff -- Deterministic Trend of Inequality -- Quantitative Easing -- Hosting the Olympic Games -- Abolishing Cash as Solution Against the Evil -- Receiving Money and Hot Having to work Raises Happiness -- Saints in Public Office -- Helicopter Money -- Decisions are Deterministic.-Politicians Systematically Converge to the Median Voter -- Artists Are Poor and Thus Unhappy -- Returns on Educational Investments Are Highest for Early Childhood Interventions -- EU Centralization -- The Alleged Asymmetry in Maintaining a Fixed Exchange Rate -- Governments Should Maximize the Happiness of the Population -- Okun's Equality-Efficiency Tradeoff -- A Rising Tide Raises all Boats -- Social Cost Analysis -- Natural Resources Make Rich -- The Natural Rate of Interest Is Positive -- Europe's "Skill Shortage" -- Taxes are Paid Because of Expected Punishment -- Better safe than Sorry -- The End of Work -- Postscript . |
| En línea: |
https://link-springer-com.biblioproxy.umanizales.edu.co/referencework/10.1007/97 [...] |
| Link: |
https://biblioteca.umanizales.edu.co/ils/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&i |
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