Introduction to Economic Theories (#unlinked)
Introduction to Economic Theories (#unlinked)#
by Erasmus University Rotterdam Learned on Coursera intro-economic-theories For: stable coin economics, AL#DEV-10
Terms and definitions#
cSC: current Stable Coin: USDT vs. USDC vs. BUSD
Question board#
- Are we strong against risk that big companies manipulating aUSD price? How does (Post Keynesian)
Week1, Economics as a Science#
-
Four theories
- Social economics
- Institutional economics
- Post Keynesian economics
- Neoclassical economics. * Rationality in the four theories | - | Open information base | Closed information base | | :---------------: | :---------------------------------------------: | :------------------------------------------------------------: | | Group-referential | social economics:strong reciprocity | institutional economics:group-dependent rationality | | Self-referential | Post Keynesian economics: intuitive rationality | neoclassical economics: individual utility maximization(wiifm) |
-
Three actor angles:
- State (state agencies)
- Market (firms)
- Civil Society = communities (community actors) * Scarcity is not a given: means, ends, scarcity>>
-
Values in economics
- Efficiency(narrow, broad), trust, freedom.
- Social economics: embeddedness
- Institutional economics: formal institution, informal institution, asymmetric.
- Post Keynesian economics: more individual, AD, market power, uncertainty(not risk).
- Neoclassical economics: Abstract theory, idealized context, mathematical market equilibrium.
-
Small things
- AD: aggregate demand
- Loss function
- Utility function: law of diminishing marginal utility
Week1: Meaning by Utility Maximization?#
- They use the blue line to show the SUM of utility function $U(A_1)+U(A_2)$. Then visualizing maximization budgets is much easier.