Research & Development.

Economics - Subcultures

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International Economics

in Economics

The study of how the culture or economic activity of a region influences another region in terms of productive resources and consumer preferences.

Complexity Economics

in Economics

The study of the application of complexity science to solving extensive economic problems due to much dependencies, interrelationships, or interactions between numerous parts or between a given system and its environment.

Agricultural Economics

in Economics

The study of the allocation, distribution, and utilization of resources and commodities produced by farming.

Economic Systems

in Economics

The study of the efficient production, resource allocation, and distribution of goods and services within a society or a given geographic area.

Behavioral Economics

in Economics

The study of the psychological, social, and emotional factors and mechanisms that drive public and market prices.

Human Development Theory

in Economics

The study of using improved human capability and social justice as the measurement for human progress.

Real Estate Economics

in Economics

The study of housing prices, supply, and demand of real estate markets, and the influence of business and social structures on the industry.

Welfare Economics

in Economics

The study of the capacity or impact of economic policies in creating human welfare.

Microeconomics

in Economics

The study of how consumers interact with companies or firms to establish relative prices among goods and services, and how they make decisions to accommodate the other, given the scarce resources within their allocations.

Energy Economics

in Economics

The study of the supply, demand, distribution, and use of energy in societies.

Environmental Economics

in Economics

The study of how profitable economic policies affect planetary resources, such as air and water quality, rare-earth substances, waste recycling, and global warming

Information Economics

in Economics

The study of how the creation and spread of true and fake information affect an economy and economic decisions.

Economic Sociology

in Economics

The study of using sociological concepts to analyze the cause and effect of the production, distribution, exchange, and consumption of goods and services.

Social Choice Theory

in Economics

The study of society’s collective behavior based on individual actions explained through the rationality that people make consistent economic decisions or choices according to their personal opinions, preferences, interests, or welfares.

Growth Economics

in Economics

The study of economies to understand how the production of goods and services increases over time.  

Applied Economics

in Economics

The study of applying economic theories and principles to real world situations such as in business, finance, consulting and government, in the effort to predicting potential outcomes.

Finance

in Economics

The study of investments, assets and liabilities dynamics, financial uncertainties and risks assessments, money management, banking, and expected financial investments rates of returns.

Macroeconomics

in Economics

The study of interrelations among the different sectors of an economy to determine as a whole the GDP, national income, output, consumption, inflation, savings, investment, international trade and finance, unemployment rates, national income, price indices, and the performance.

Participatory Economics

in Economics

The study of making decisions by being a participant or by being involved directly or having firsthand experience in the matter in question.

Green Economics

in Economics

The study of finding political economic solutions that offer sustainable development without degrading the ecological and social environment.

Transport Economics

in Economics

The study of transportation availability and pricing for both passengers and freight, and why governments regulate and deregulate various transportation systems.

Evolutionary Economics

in Economics

The study of how social changes in reasoning or paradigm shifts influence the employment, production, trade, distribution, and the consumption of goods and services.

Institutional Economics

in Economics

The study of how institutions work in shaping human behaviors, customs and choices.

Anarchist Economics

in Economics

The study of economic activities within the political philosophy of anarchism, which advocates self-governed societies based on voluntary institutions, arguing primarily that government is both harmful and unnecessary.

Natural Resource Economics

in Economics

The study of the supply, demand, allocation, use, and regulation of the Earth's natural resources.

Political Economy

in Economics

The study of the interrelations between the production and trade of goods and services with law, customs, and government, and the distribution of national income and wealth.

Entrepreneurial Economics

in Economics

The study of combining existing economic resources to discover new ways of productivity.

Socioeconomics

in Economics

The study of the social processes that influence the progress, stagnation, or regression of economic activities.

Econometrics

in Economics

The study of analyzing present economic data to make economic hypothesis using statistical and mathematical models.

Monetary Economics

in Economics

The study of monetary systems, the regulation of money, its associated financial institutions and its functions as a medium of exchange, a store of value, a unit of account, and acceptance and convenience as a public good.

Public Economics

in Economics

The study of government participation and interference in economic markets.

Islamic Economics

in Economics

The study of property ownership, money, employment, taxes, also the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services based on sharia law, which determines what is permissible, required, prohibited, encouraged, or discouraged.

Public Finance

in Economics

The study of government revenue and expenditure, the efficient allocation of resources, and the distribution of income.

Economic Geography

in Economics

The study of how economic conditions affect the production and utilization of raw materials and their manufacture into finished products.

Mathematical Economics

in Economics

The study of investigating economic difficulties and creating economic theories-based mathematical principles and methods, to prove, disprove and predict economic behavior.

Experimental Economics

in Economics

The study of using economic data collected in experiments to test the validity of economic theories, to answer economic questions, and to mimic real-world incentives.

Computational Economics

in Economics

The study of using computer-based economic modeling to find solutions to economic problems.

Economics - Data Collection

As an Economist, please Login and provide research data on any of the following topics.

1. Government Agencies.

In preparing each faculty of knowledge to function constitutionally as an Arm of Government, we first need to specify or outline their boundaries. Please list as many offices, agencies, ministries, institutions, or parastatals presently in your region that you think fall under the authority, leadership, jurisdiction, legislation, or administration of the faculty of Economics.

 

2. Licensing Rights.

The creation or invention of new products and services are the efforts of multiple faculties working collaboratively. However, in our new economic system design, conflicts arise as to which faculties should possess the rights of ownership to certain creations. For example. Should CELLPHONES fall under the licensing rights of Physics or Electrical Engineering? Should PLASTICS fall under the licensing rights of Chemistry or Materials Science? Should PHARMACEUTICALS fall under the licensing rights of Biology or Health Science? Please list as many services, gadgets, products, creations, or inventions that economists provide or offer presently in your region that you believe fall under the licensing rights of the faculty of Economics.

 

3. The Future.

Assuming that the faculty of Economics has just been granted ample funding and unhindered federal powers, please suggest a new idea, course of action, strategy, dream, innovation, or next-generation agency that economists could implement, establish, or research and develop towards achieving a utopia in your region.

Please visit the Culture Forums to contribute.