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Managerial economics

About: Managerial economics is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1524 publications have been published within this topic receiving 83965 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Information and economic analysis has been a hot topic in the last decade as discussed by the authors, with the focus on the importance of information in the analysis of a wide variety of economic phenomena, such as agriculture, industry, and labor.
Abstract: Ten years ago, I delivered a paper before this group with the title, 'Information and Economic Analysis.' I chose the title deliberately: I did not call the subject on which I was speaking the 'Economics of Information' because to do so would have been to suggest that my topic, like the economics of agriculture, or the economics of industry, or the economics of labour represented another branch of specialisation within economics. I wanted to suggest that informational considerations were, in fact, central to the analysis of a wide variety of phenomena, that they constituted a central part of the Foundations of Economic Analysis. At the time, though economists had long paid lip service to the importance of information, there was little formal literature. The last decade has seen a burgeoning of the literature. It has become to the late 7O's and early 8O's what growth theory was to the early 6O's. And it has been greeted with some of the same scepticism. There seems to be a myriad ofspecial cases and few general principles. The little examples are often contrasted unfavourably with the generality of general equilibrium theory. What have we learned ? Have diminishing returns set in? Are there fruitful directions for future research, and if so, what are they? These are the questions which I wish to address here. The work of the past decade has made, I think, a fundamental and lasting contribution to economic analysis. The contributions have been both negative and positive: we have learned that much of what we believed before is of only limited validity; that the traditional competitive equilibrium analysis, though having the superficial appearance of generality in terms of superscripts and subscripts is indeed not very general; the theory is not robust to slight alterations in the informational assumptions. It is but a special and not very plausible 'example' among the possible set of informational assumptions which can be employed to characterise an economy. At the same time, the theory has been able to provide insights into phenomena about which the traditional model had nothing to say, or which seemed inconsistent or inexplicable within the competitive paradigm. It has provided some of the micro-foundations for macro-economics, it has provided the basis of a New Theory of the Firm, of a New New Welfare Economics, and of a theory of Economic Organisation (including a Comparison of Economic

314 citations

Book ChapterDOI
16 Mar 2006

307 citations

Book
01 Jan 1968
TL;DR: The Economics of Uncertainty (PSME-2) as discussed by the authors is the second edition of the PSME-1 and is the first edition of PSME2.1.
Abstract: The description for this book, The Economics of Uncertainty. (PSME-2), will be forthcoming.

307 citations

Book
01 Jan 1997
TL;DR: In this paper, the Greek alphabet is used to describe the alphabet of the Nobel Prize Winners. But the Greek Alphabet is used only for nouns and adjective-nouns.
Abstract: PREFACE DICTIONARY APPENDICES Institutional Acronyms Nobel Prize Winners The Greek Alphabet

299 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: Bergstrom as discussed by the authors explores the theory of household technology and the associated possibilities for distributing utility among household members, and explores decision theory within the household, drawing on standard consumer decision theory.
Abstract: Author(s): Bergstrom, Ted | Abstract: This review explores the theory of household technology and the associated possibilities for distributing utility among household members. It also explores decision theory within the household, drawing on standard consumer decision theory. The review discusses models of equilbrium in which families are formed by persons voluntarily choosing mates. This theory is analogous to ``Tiebout theory'' in urban economics, where the objects of choice include not only the amount of public goods supplied in each city, but also which individuals live in each place. An aspect of family life that has fewer parallels in the economics of market economies is intrafamilial affection. The final section of this paper reviews a growing theoretical literature on love, altruism and the family.

296 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20231
20226
20215
20201
201911
20187