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This paper will reveal how a household can use economic theories of supply and demand to generate a series of information inputs and outputs that the family creates in a fiscal year. By understanding this financial and labor based information, we can learn how gasoline prices would affect this family's income in the overall economic scope of the labors incurred.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 2 source(s) listed
Filename: 16477 Household Labor Finances.doc
Price: US$26.85
303.16584 The Theory of Individual Labor Supply
The following is a summary of the material contained in Chapter 2. The main goal of this chapter is to develop and apply a basic theory of individual labor supply that will help answer the following questions:
1. How are diverse labor supply decisions made?
2. How do individuals decide on the number of hours, if any, to supply in the labor market?
Pages: 5
Bibliography: 0 source(s) listed
Filename: 16584 labor economics Indifference.doc
Price: US$44.75
304.16610 David Ricardo's "Theory of Value"
This paper discusses David Ricardo's theory of value and what it owes to Adam Smith's version of the theory, as well as how the theory evolved in Ricardo's thinking over time, based generally on the view that value should be seen primarily as exchange value rather than use value, and considering the role of labor in determining value and in changing value.
Pages: 4
Bibliography: 4 source(s) listed
Filename: 16610 theory value labor.doc
Price: US$35.80
305.16614 Competitive Oligolpoly
This five page essay looks at an example of a competitive oligopolic market, the American SUVs, and how that has changed to become one of monopolistic competitiveness. It then looks at how some oligopoly strategists deal with non-pricing comptetition, (Cournot and Bertrand) and also the views of the Structuralists in determining market policy in a competitive market.
306.16716 The ?Great Depression? of the Late Middle Ages: Economic Slump or Economic Growth
When one speaks of the ?Great Depression? typically images of America during the troubling period of 1929 to 1933 come to mind, however, Europe experienced a much more devastating ?Depression? during the late middle ages. Surely, those four years of American history must have felt as if they were endless by those who lived it, however the ?Great Depression? of the late middle ages in Europe didn?t simply last years, it lasted generations. For nearly 150 years, Europeans were subjected to a tumultuous life of instability and rising death toll. The question is, was this time of economic slump or economic growth? To answer this question several items need to be considered, including a firm understanding of life pre-1320, life during this period and the ramifications of the devastation.
Pages: 10
Bibliography: 5 source(s) listed
Filename: 16716 14th century economics.doc
Price: US$89.50
307.16765 Working Within a Global System, working Outside Foreign Influence: The Complexities of Japanese Economic Development during the Tokugawa and Meiji Periods and the Post World War II Era
This 9-page graduate paper considers the role of foreign influence at key moment?s of Japan?s economic development, and concludes that government intervention and a desire to adopt and appropriate ideas and theories have over the years developed a unique style of Japanese capitalism while keeping Japan from being too influenced or overwhelmed by foreign influence. This paper considers the roles of the government and roles of foreign powers in three key incidents of Japanese history: the Tokugawa period, the Meiji period, and U.S. occupation of Japan following World War II. In the Tokugawa period, two events occurred simultaneously - the Tokugawa family rose to power and European missionaries and traders arrived in Japan. At first, the missionaries and traders were welcomed, and the Japanese adopted their ideas for their own good. However, the Tokugawa felt threatened by foreign encroachment, and policies reduced outside influence to a small tickle of texts obtained through traders. In the Meiji period, Japan realized the power of other nations when it was forced to open trade through force. In an attempt to establish economic power, the new government carefully studied foreign nations - and allowed those nations access to Japan - in order to learn from them and in order to gain back power which unjust treaties had taken from Japan. During the foreign occupation of Japan in 1945, the Japanese government found that it was forced to make some economic changes. At the same time, the government used the power it had remaining to establish a system which protected core industries and which allowed for the creation of powerful private companies such as Sony and Honda. This paper considers economic development from a historical perspective, and suggests the ways that Japanese development was part of greater movements - such as colonization, rebuilding after war, and nineteenth century economic downturns - and thus affected by these global trends.
Pages: 9
Bibliography: 7 source(s) listed
Filename: 16765 Japanese Economic Development.doc
Price: US$80.55
308.16802 U.S. Latin American Investment Projects
This paper considers the nature of U.S. supoprt for development and for other proejcts in Latin America, considering the nature of such investment, why the U.S. undertakes it, how decisions are made, what sorts of returns are expected,a nd other data on this practice and what it means to the U.S. and to the countries of Latin America today, emphasizing Uruguay and Brazil.