Economic Sciences
E42233
Economic Sciences is the academic discipline that studies how individuals, businesses, governments, and societies allocate scarce resources and make decisions about production, distribution, and consumption.
Statements (54)
| Predicate | Object |
|---|---|
| instanceOf |
academic discipline
→
field of study → social science → |
| appliesTo |
business strategy
→
economic development → financial markets → public policy design → |
| concerns |
businesses
→
governments → households → individuals → societies → |
| hasSubdiscipline |
agricultural economics
→
behavioral economics → development economics → econometrics → environmental economics → financial economics → game theory → health economics → industrial organization → international economics → labor economics → macroeconomics → microeconomics → monetary economics → public economics → regional economics → urban economics → |
| relatedTo |
mathematics
→
political science → psychology → sociology → statistics → |
| studies |
allocation of scarce resources
→
consumption → decision-making under scarcity → distribution → economic growth → economic welfare → incentives → inflation → international trade → markets → prices → production → public policy → unemployment → |
| usesMethod |
computational modeling
→
econometric methods → experimental methods → mathematical modeling → statistical analysis → theoretical analysis → |
Referenced by (6)
| Subject (surface form when different) | Predicate |
|---|---|
|
Finn E. Kydland
→
Jean Tirole → Robert Fogel → |
nobelPrizeDiscipline |
|
Gunnar Myrdal
→
Joseph Stiglitz → |
NobelPrizeField |
|
Nobel Prize laureates
→
|
recognizedInField |