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Books > Business & Economics > Economics > Microeconomics
Using Microsoft Excel, the market leading spreadsheet package, this
book combines theory with modelling aspects and spreadsheet
analysis. Microeconomics Using Excel provides students with the
tools with which to better understand microeconomic analysis. It
focuses on solving microeconomic problems by integrating economic
theory, policy analysis and spreadsheet modelling. This unique
approach facilitates a more comprehensive understanding of the link
between theory and problem solving. It is divided into four core
parts: analysis of price policies analysis of structural policies
multi-market models budget policy and priority settings. The theory
behind each problem is explained and each model is solved using
Excel. Microeconomics using Excel will be of great interest to
students studying economics as well as to professionals in economic
and policy analysis. Publisher's Note The publisher has gone to
great lengths to ensure the quality of this book but regrets to
inform the customer that previously available online resources are
no longer available with this title.
A comprehensive presentation of the use of economics in judicial
decisions, the book is structured to provide all the foundational
concepts that are important for the application of economics to the
development and interpretation of statutes that emanate from
economic conditions. The diversity of the economic field defines
the scope of the book and its relevance to the study of law and
rule adjudication. Beyond the positive dimensions of law and
economics, the book evaluates the normative aspects of law and
economics when laws are imprecise, and markets are inefficient. The
ethical scope of transactions and rule adjudication are further
considered in the context of professional ethics and the rationale
for ethical considerations in the practice of law and economics. It
presents a unique analysis of law, finance, and economics, by
taking a look at the intricate quantitative requirements that are
essential for scientific knowledge in the courtroom and the
international dimensions of the practice of law and economics
beyond municipal frontiers. It alerts entrepreneurs to risk
exposures in the global economy and provides foundational
information for readers who are also interested in international
law and economics, and the essence and interpretations of
international conventions appertaining to money, expropriation, the
environment, and investments in international financial markets.
This book is a useful reference for both undergraduate and graduate
students who are interested in law and economics, forensic
economics, corporate white-collar crime, and legal studies. It is
also valuable for certificate programs for paralegals who wish to
have a basic understanding of economic and financial concepts.
The Informal Economy: Measures, Causes, and Consequences provides a
comprehensive account of the economics of informality through the
lenses of various economic perspectives. Although informal economic
activity is widespread all around the world, many issues around its
nature and consequences remain largely under-explored or
unresolved. Most importantly, the evidence presented in the
existing literature on informality has failed to generate a
consensus on the measurements, causes, and effects of the informal
sector among researchers. Most, if not all, of the empirical
results are inconclusive or dependent on the nature of the dataset
used in the analysis. This book aims to address that gap by
exploring different definitions and measures of the informal
economy, including different perspectives, then subjecting these
measures to a battery of empirical tests to examine the
determinants and effects of informality. Through this analysis and
an extensive review of the literature, the book explores many of
the economic, political, and social factors of the informal economy
including the relationship between informality and the tax burden,
tax enforcement, and institutional quality. This key text makes for
compulsive reading to scholars and students interested in the
informal or shadow economy.
A comprehensive presentation of the use of economics in judicial
decisions, the book is structured to provide all the foundational
concepts that are important for the application of economics to the
development and interpretation of statutes that emanate from
economic conditions. The diversity of the economic field defines
the scope of the book and its relevance to the study of law and
rule adjudication. Beyond the positive dimensions of law and
economics, the book evaluates the normative aspects of law and
economics when laws are imprecise, and markets are inefficient. The
ethical scope of transactions and rule adjudication are further
considered in the context of professional ethics and the rationale
for ethical considerations in the practice of law and economics. It
presents a unique analysis of law, finance, and economics, by
taking a look at the intricate quantitative requirements that are
essential for scientific knowledge in the courtroom and the
international dimensions of the practice of law and economics
beyond municipal frontiers. It alerts entrepreneurs to risk
exposures in the global economy and provides foundational
information for readers who are also interested in international
law and economics, and the essence and interpretations of
international conventions appertaining to money, expropriation, the
environment, and investments in international financial markets.
This book is a useful reference for both undergraduate and graduate
students who are interested in law and economics, forensic
economics, corporate white-collar crime, and legal studies. It is
also valuable for certificate programs for paralegals who wish to
have a basic understanding of economic and financial concepts.
Competition may not function well where technology calls for large
and complex investments, as in the electrivity industry where
public utilities often provide service. This book presents economic
welfare foundations for the purpose of evaluating how well, from a
social point of view, an enterprise performs when competition is
unable to function. Problems with existing institutions are
emphasized. Topics treated include welfare measures and their uses
in peak-load pricing, second-best pricing, and income distribution.
Professor Sherman covers public choice difficulties of government
intervention, and describes problems with incentives in statutory
monopolies and efforts to overcome them through the study of
principal-agent relationships. Contestability and sustainable
prices are also discussed, as well as effects of uncertainty and
imperfect information.
This book provides a systematic presentation of new microeconomic
theories of imperfect information. Each chapter explores a
particular type of informational asymmetry and reviews major
papers. Wherever possible the theories are compared with
experimental evidence. An extensive bibliography is included. Part
I, statics, begins with an examination of how imperfect price or
quantity information on the buyer's side provides new explanations
of phenomena such as price dispersion and sales or resale price
maintenance. A thorough discussion of private value auctions and
common value auctions follows. Subsequent chapters investigate the
links between uncertainty about personal characteristics and job
signaling, incomplete insurance coverage, and credit rationing by
banks. Part II, dynamics, relates the dynamics of collusion,
predation, and market efficiency to the transmission, pooling, and
aggregation of private information. Game theoretic findings and
their implications for antitrust policy are included.
After 25 years of expansion and liberalisation in the post-war
period, social security policies in industrial countries have been
encountering stresses and strains in the 1970s and 1980s in an
environment of slower economic growth, concern over inflation and
high unemployment. This has led to intensified controversy between
conservatives, who blame economic instability on the generosity of
the welfare state and liberals who defend the role of social
security programmes in contributing to economic stability and
preventing people from falling into poverty. The discussion focuses
on questions such as the relative merits of earnings-related,
income-tested and universal benefits; who bears the financial
burden; and the impact of social security benefits on incentives to
work. Among the controversial issues receiving considerable
attention are the arguments over the persistence of high
unemployment in Western Europe, the attacks on 'entitlements' that
benefit the middle class and the growing problem of disadvantaged
youth, especially in the ghetto areas of large cities in some of
the Western European countries and in the United States.
The book discusses, elaborates on and answers questions to the
following points: Firstly, what has changed through the information
technology represented by software, Internet and big data? How do
these changes effect the production relationships, the production
mode and the industrial development model? Can China realize a
"great-leap-forward" in economic development by promoting such a
new Internet economy? Secondly, what is the format shown by the
Internet economy? Is the Internet economy a market economy, or a
planned economy, or is it an economic complex format which combines
the planned economy and the market economy? What is the structure
of the future economy? Which entities will compete with each other
throughout the industries? What is the format of the future
financial investment industry? Why does the Internet economy have a
revolutionary impact on the economic base and the superstructure?
Thirdly, let us look back on the traditional manufacturing
industry. What on earth is the core value of the manufacturing
industry? How is the core technology and core value of
manufacturing realized? Why can it be that the industrial Internet
will become a rare historical opportunity for China's manufacturing
industry and economy to achieve a "great-leap-forward" development?
Finally, in the big economic tide of Internet and big data, what
are the future variables of China's economy? What is the
established economic policy of the United States for the global
economy and industries? How should the economic variables of the
United States be best dealt with, those that are determined as "US
priority" and "the return of manufacturing industry" strongly
promoted by the U.S. President Trump?
For one semester MBA Managerial Economics courses Economics for
Managers presents the fundamental ideas of microeconomics and
macroeconomics and integrates them from a managerial
decision-making perspective in a framework that can be used in a
single-semester course. To be competitive in today's business
environment, managers must understand how economic forces affect
their business and the factors that must be considered when making
business decisions. This is the only book that provides business
students and MBAs with a thorough and applied understanding of both
micro- and macroeconomic concepts in a way non-economics majors can
understand. The third edition retains all the same core concepts
and straightforward material on micro- and macroeconomics while
incorporating new case material and real-world examples that relate
to today's managerial student.
War Movies and Economics: Lessons from Hollywood's Adaptations of
Military Conflict applies ongoing research in the relatively new
genre of economics in popular media to Hollywood's war movies.
Whether inadvertently or purposefully, these movies provide
numerous examples of how economic principles often play an
important role in military conflict. The authors of the chapters
included in this edited collection work to illustrate economics
lessons portrayed in adaptations such as Band of Brothers,
Conspiracy, The Dirty Dozen, Dunkirk, Memphis Belle, Saving Private
Ryan, Schindler's List, Spartacus, Stalag 17, and Valkyrie. Aspects
of these stories show how key economic principles of scarcity,
limited resources, and incentives play important roles in military
conflict. The movies also provide an avenue for discussion of the
economics of public goods provision, the modern economic theory of
bureaucracy, and various game-theoretic concepts such as strategic
moves and commitment devices. Where applicable, lessons from
closely related fields such as management are also provided. This
book is ideal reading for students of economics looking for an
approachable route to understanding basic principles of economics
and game theory. It is also accessible to amateur and professional
historians, and any reader interested in popular culture as it
relates to television, movies, and military history.
Motivated people are crucial to create a sustainable competitive advantage for your company. Successful Management by Motivation shows that in a knowledge-based society, this goal cannot be achieved by extrinsic motivation alone. Pay for performance often even hurts because it crowds out intrinsic motivation like work morale. To succeed, companies have to find ways of fostering and sustaining intrinsic motivation. With the help of in-depth case studies, representative surveys, and analyses based on a large number of firms and employees, this joint work of business researchers and economists identifies the various aspects of motivation in companies and shows how the right combination of intrinsic and extrinsic motivation can be achieved.
People regularly multitask, though we have been warned about the
mental costs of "task-switching" in psychology and the popular
press. Meanwhile, economists have remained silent on the possible
economic ramifications - both good and bad - of producers and/or
consumers doing more than one thing at once. This first-of-its-kind
volume explores the frequency, patterns, and economic implications
of multitasking, with a particular focus on the multitasking of
non-market activities such as child care, housework, eating, and
studying. Using data sets from around the world and best-practice
empirical and experimental techniques, the contributors to this
volume explore the association of multitasking with output and
welfare in a range of settings of interest to economists.
Contributions in theory, empirical work, data management, and
concepts are combined to yield the discipline's first holistic view
of multitasking and to identify where the research frontiers lie in
this area.
In the last three decades since the fall of the Berlin Wall, there
has been a vast amount of study looking at transforming the planned
economy to a market economy from both theoretical and empirical
aspects. This book provides an overview and insight into transition
economies in the recent decades and looks at key economics topics
from the so-called "transition strategy debate" to environmental
reform. The book also includes an analytical review and
meta-analysis of the existing literature. By integrating
theoretical discussions and synthesizing empirical findings in a
systematic manner, this book may help to enlighten the debate on
the timing, speed, and policy sequence of economic transition. The
book will particularly appeal to researchers, policy makers, other
practitioners, and under- and post-graduate students who are
interested in transition economies in Eastern Europe, the former
Soviet Union, Southeast Asia, and China. It aims to be read as an
advanced reader.
The chapters of this book provide a better understanding of wine
economics, by addressing new issues such as sustainable
development, food authenticity, financial expectations and
consumption economics. Many of the discussed topics have been
recently developed by economists (e.g. global warming and wine
tourism) despite having been mostly covered by specialists in
management, marketing and geography. Other fields correspond to new
investigations of traditional topics, such as ranking wines or
consumer behaviour, and new analyses in strategic choice (for
example how to bottle wine or to sell bulk wine, to select grape
varieties at replanting, to distinguish attitudes, intentions and
behaviour in exporting). "Wine Economics" draws attention to the
positioning of different market players and explores alternative
regulations for public policy.
This book is concerned with one of the major contemporary issues of
industrial organization: the role of small business enterprise in a
mature market economy. Key issues covered are start-up and its
financial features; static and dynamic scale economies; enterprise
case histories; small business strategy; competitive forces;
strategic pricing policy; determinants of growth and survivial; and
the political economy of fair trade and enterprise. The treatment
is analytical and empirical, well grounded in business reality, and
set within the context of the political economy of small business.
It is based on a unique and extensive database of small business
enterprise, containing over 40,000 data points gathered by field
work within the firm. The book starts with a section on the
database and then applies diverse methods; statistical analysis;
enterprise and case histories; econometrics; and political economy.
In this way, a particularly rich picture of the modern small
business emerges, because it is viewed from different perspectives.
By the importation of contemporary ideas from industrial economics,
allied to the use of statistical, econometric and qualitative
techniques on a relational database, this book brings new standards
of rigour and insight into the study of small business enterprise,
without losing touch with either the reality of the small business
or the milieu within which it functions. The author brings to this
work his long-standing research experience in industrial economics,
and an established publication record in small business economics.
Profits in the Long Run asks two questions: Are there persistent
differences in profitability across firms? If so, what accounts for
them? This book answers these questions using data for the 1000
largest US manufacturing firms in 1950 and 1972. It finds that
there are persistent differences in profitability and market power
across large US companies. Companies with persistently high profits
are found to have high market shares and sell differentiated
products. Mergers do not result in synergistic increases in
profitability, but they do have an averaging effect. Companies with
above normal profits have their profits lowered by mergers.
Companies with initially below normal profits have them raised. In
addition, the influence of other variables on long-run
profitability, including risk, sales, diversification, growth and
managerial control, is explored. The implications of antitrust
policy are likewise addressed.
The spectacular economic growth experienced by China since 1978 has
often been hailed as the "China Miracle". Many economists have
tried to understand the forces behind China's phenomenal growth and
the explanations can be divided into two broad schools of economic
thought - one school of thought which includes Nobel Laureate Paul
Krugman explains that market mechanism and deregulation led to
China's success, while the other school of thought which include
Justin Yifu Lin, the former Chief Economist and Senior
Vice-President of the World Bank, explains that China's growth
miracle is a unique model to itself defined by the Chinese
government's prominent role. The Chinese government has been
responsible in identifying and investing in industries that have
contributed to economic growth. Some economists in the latter
school even claim that the China Miracle cannot be explained by
mainstream economics. This book examines both schools of thought
and attempts to provide a synthesis of the two schools to explain
the China Miracle. It looks at the Solow-Swan growth model, the
Harrod-Domar model and transaction cost theory. It provides
insights into whether and how China can sustain its growth and how
developing countries may replicate China's success.
The current economic crisis has been assumed to reflect a cyclical
problem, and some
economists have asked that it be dealt with 'fiscal stimulus
packages', especially
packages associated with public spending. This action is similar to
that of giving
steroids to a patient who suffers from a serious illness. It might
make him or her feel
temporarily better, but it actually aggravates the illness.
Dollars, Euro's, and Debt suggests that an increase in public
spending is the wrong
medicine, because it was precisely the increase in public spending
that created some
of the structural problems that are now confused with, or have led
to, the cyclical
slowdowns. The book argues that, over the years, and in a growing
number of
countries, the high and increasing levels of public spending were,
first and progressively,
being financed by higher tax levels and, subsequently, by
increasing borrowing.
In the early years of the twenty-first century governments started
facing strong
taxpayers' resistance to tax increases. Thus, they relied more and
more on public
borrowing, pushing the public debts to high levels. More recently
they started facing
stronger resistance by private lenders, that led to the progressive
easing of monetary
conditions by central banks. The central banks' actions have made
it difficult to
separate fiscal from monetary actions and have hidden some of the
true deterioration
in the fiscal accounts. They have also increased future uncertainty
and potential 'time
consistency' problems. The book evaluates the effects of 'fiscal
stimulus packages',
especially when they start from precarious fiscal conditions, and
presents a novel
'law of public expenditure growth', and suggests how that law may
help in the design
of 'exit strategies' from the current crisis. It also discusses
similarities and differences
between the monetary union that the euro and the monetary union
that is the dollar.
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