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37 More Theories 1. Washington Consensus 2. Financial Accelerator 3. Theory of Independent Central Banks 4. Bagehot Theory of Central Bank Lending 5. Creative Destruction (Schumpeter) 6. Ricardian Equivalence 7. Dynamic Consistency 8. Diversification and Investment Portfolio Design 9. Capital Asset Pricing Model 10. Option Valuation (Black-Scholes et al.) 11. Austrian Economics 12. Speculative Bubbles (e.g., Minsky) 13. Liquidationist View of
37 More Theories 1. Washington Consensus 2. Financial Accelerator 3. Theory of Independent Central Banks 4. Bagehot Theory of Central Bank Lending 5. Creative Destruction (Schumpeter) 6. Ricardian Equivalence 7. Dynamic Consistency 8. Diversification and Investment Portfolio Design 9. Capital Asset Pricing Model 10. Option Valuation (Black-Scholes et al.) 11. Austrian Economics 12. Speculative Bubbles (e.g., Minsky) 13. Liquidationist View of
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37 More Theories 1. Washington Consensus 2. Financial Accelerator 3. Theory of Independent Central Banks 4. Bagehot Theory of Central Bank Lending 5. Creative Destruction (Schumpeter) 6. Ricardian Equivalence 7. Dynamic Consistency 8. Diversification and Investment Portfolio Design 9. Capital Asset Pricing Model 10. Option Valuation (Black-Scholes et al.) 11. Austrian Economics 12. Speculative Bubbles (e.g., Minsky) 13. Liquidationist View of
Hak Cipta:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Format Tersedia
Unduh sebagai DOC, PDF, TXT atau baca online dari Scribd
2. Classical Economics 3. Keynesian Economics 4. Neoclassical Synthesis (Keynesian for near-term macro; Classical for micro and long-term macro) 5. Neo-Malthusian (Resource Scarcity) 6. Marxism 7. Laissez Faire Capitalism 8. Market Socialism 9. Monetarism 10. Solow Model (growth comes from capital, labor, and technology) 11. New Growth Theory (Romer & endogenous growth) 12. Institutions and Growth (rule of law, property rights, etc.) 13. Efficient Markets Hypothesis 14. Permanent Income / Life Cycle Hypothesis 15. Rational Expectations 16. Rational Choice Theory 17. Something Behavioral (e.g., Prospect Theory) 18. Adverse Selection and the Lemons Problem 19. Moral Hazard 20. Tragedy of the Commons 21. Property Rights as a solution to the Tragedy of the Commons 22. Game Theory (e.g., Prisoner’s Dilemma) 23. Comparative Advantage 24. New Trade Theory 25. The Trilemma (exchange rates, capital flows, and monetary policy) 37 More Theories 1. Washington Consensus 2. Financial Accelerator 3. Theory of Independent Central Banks 4. Bagehot Theory of Central Bank Lending 5. Creative Destruction (Schumpeter) 6. Ricardian Equivalence 7. Dynamic Consistency 8. Diversification and Investment Portfolio Design 9. Capital Asset Pricing Model 10. Option Valuation (Black-Scholes et al.) 11. Austrian Economics 12. Speculative Bubbles (e.g., Minsky) 13. Liquidationist View of Downturns 14. Time Value of Money (incredibly important but very old) 15. Public Choice / Economic Theory of Regulation (politicians and government workers as self-interested maximizers) 16. Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem 17. Welfare Theorems 18. Veblen and Conspicuous Consumption 19. Polluter Pays Principle (e.g., Piouvian Taxes) 20. Offsetting Behavior (e.g., people drive safe cars more aggressively) 21. Heckscher-Ohlin Trade Theory 22. Optimal currency areas 23. Exchange Rates and Purchasing Power Parity 24. Mercantilism 25. Rubinomics 26. Supply-side Economics 27. Laffer Curve 28. Phillips Curve 29. Theories of Economic Geography 30. Fisher Theory of Interest Rates 31. Liquidity Traps 32. Resource Curse (Dutch Disease) 33. Exchange Rate Overshooting (Dornbusch) 34. Auctions 35. Mechanism Design 36. Principal-Agent Theory (e.g., separation of management and ownership) 37. Theory of Optimal Taxation (e.g., broad base, low rate, tax less-elastic activities)
University of Cambridge International Examinations International General Certificate of Secondary Education Economics Paper 3 Multiple Choice May/June 2005 1 Hour