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Cho, Dongchul; Shin, Sukha – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2012
All of the authors seem to share the perception that one can no longer expect much from macroeconomic policies. The authors of this paper share this opinion, but this should not be interpreted as the skeptical view that macroeconomic policies are ineffective on employment. They saw from the Korea's two crises how contrasting outcomes could result…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Labor Market, Unemployment, Macroeconomics
Angrist, Joshua; Pischke, Jorn-Steffen – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2010
This essay reviews progress in empirical economics since Leamer'rs (1983) critique. Leamer highlighted the benefits of sensitivity analysis, a procedure in which researchers show how their results change with changes in specification or functional form. Sensitivity analysis has had a salutary but not a revolutionary effect on econometric practice.…
Descriptors: Research Design, Macroeconomics, Credibility, Essays
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Pecorino, Paul – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
The author argues that the college textbook market provides a clear example of monopoly seeking as described by Tullock (1967, 1980). This behavior is also known as rent seeking. Because this market is important to students, this example of rent seeking will be of particular interest to them. (Contains 24 notes.)
Descriptors: Textbooks, Microeconomics, Competition, Economics Education
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DesJardins, Stephen L.; Bell, Allison – New Directions for Institutional Research, 2006
This chapter demonstrates how institutional researchers at institutions of higher education can use economic theory for enrollment management. (Contains 4 figures.)
Descriptors: Institutional Research, Enrollment Management, Microeconomics, Higher Education
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Tchibozo, Guy – Journal of Education and Work, 2002
Uses a microeconomic model to explain behavior of actors in school-to-work transition that proposes optimal strategies and explains causes of failure. Suggests that metafunctional criteria (personality, behavior, employment stability, productivity, adaptability, social involvement) are crucial factors in recruitment decisions. (Contains 56…
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Employment Practices, Microeconomics, Personnel Selection
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Hey, John D. – Journal of Economic Education, 2005
Most people learn to drive without knowing how the engine works. In a similar vein, the author believes that students can learn economics without knowing the algebra and calculus underlying the results. If instructors follow the philosophy of other economics courses in using graphs to illustrate the results, and draw the graphs accurately, then…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Microeconomics, Computer Software, Graphs
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Colander, David – Journal of Economic Education, 2005
Fifty years ago what was taught in the principles of economics course reflected reasonably well what economists did in their research. That, however, is no longer the case; today what economists teach has a more nuanced relation to what they do. The reason is that the economics profession and the textbooks have evolved differently. The author…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Microeconomics, Economic Research, Teaching Methods
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Cheung, Stephen L. – Journal of Economic Education, 2005
The author describes a classroom game demonstrating the process of adjustment to long-run equilibrium in a market consisting of price-taking firms. This game unites and extends key insights from several simpler games in a framework more consistent with the standard textbook model of a competitive industry. Because firms have increasing marginal…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Economics Education, Teaching Methods, Class Activities
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Dittmer, Timothy – Journal of Economic Education, 2005
Many introductory microeconomics textbook authors derive the law of demand from the assumption of diminishing marginal utility. Authors of intermediate and graduate textbooks derive demand from diminishing marginal rate of substitution and ordinal preferences. These approaches are not interchangeable; diminishing marginal utility for all goods is…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Microeconomics, Economics Education, Supply and Demand
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Correa, Hector – International Journal of Educational Research, 1995
A structural view of the microeconomics of education as a logically consistent whole is proposed, and research done on the subject since around 1960 is described. It is argued that the microeconomic theory of education could become an instrument for determination of appropriate forms of behavior in the classroom. (SLD)
Descriptors: Educational Economics, Educational Practices, Educational Research, Educational Theories
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Walstad, William B.; Watts, Michael – Journal of Economic Education, 2005
In Australia, the authors learned it is common to ask one or more conference participants to summarize and assess the conference in a final "closing" session. They found the experience of serving as "closers" strangely similar to what students are asked to do in providing an overall assessment of a course or instructor at the…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Conferences, Macroeconomics, Microeconomics
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Paulsen, Michael B.; Toutkoushian, Robert K. – New Directions for Institutional Research, 2006
This chapter introduces the key economic concepts, models, and methods that can help inform institutional research in higher education. (Contains 1 table and 9 figures.)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Institutional Research, Microeconomics, Economics
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Samuelson, Paul A.; McGraw, Harold W., Jr.; Nordhaus, William D.; Ashenfelter, Orley; Solow, Robert M.; Fischer, Stanley – Journal of Economic Education, 1999
Provides comments by Nobel laureate Paul A. Samuelson, Harold W. McGraw Jr., William D. Nordhaus, Orley Ashenfelter, Robert M. Solow, and Stanley Fischer on Samuelson's introductory textbook "Economics," as presented at the 1998 American Economic Association meetings in Chicago (Illinois). (CMK)
Descriptors: Authors, Economic Development, Economics Education, Higher Education