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Refugee Stressors
Subfields of Economics
Welfare Economics
Welfare economics is a branch of economics that uses microeconomic techniques to evaluate the overall well-being of a society based on how resources and goods are allocated. It assesses economic efficiency and income distribution by employing analytical tools such as Pareto efficiency and social welfare functions. A key figure in its development was the neoclassical economist Arthur Pigou.
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Psychology
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Social Science
Empirical Science
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CORE Econ
Ch.10 Market successes and failures: The societal effects of private decisions - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Refugees Experience Emotional Distress
William Nordhaus
Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics
Allocation as Income in the Angela-Bruno Model
Mathematical Analysis of Preferences
General Model of a Firm with Cost and Demand Functions
Arthur Pigou (1877–1959)
Michał Kalecki
Economic Fluctuations (Business Cycles)
Economic Preferences
Robert Shiller
Opportunity Cost
Welfare Economics
Cultural Homogenization
Political Interference
Technological Disruption
Connection between Globalization and Economic Inequality
Connection between Globalization and Cultural Homogenization
Globalization References
Economic Inequality
Cryptoeconomics
Econometrics
Health Economics
Labour Economics
Education economics
Environmental Economics
Development Economics
Financial Technology
Behavioral Economics
A city government observes that many residents are not signing up for a new, free public program designed to help them save for retirement, even though it is financially beneficial. An economist is hired to study how factors like procrastination, the complexity of the sign-up form, and the way information is presented are affecting residents' decisions. Which economic subfield is this economist most likely working within?
Match each economic subfield with the primary question it seeks to answer.
Advising on Foreign Investment
A city government wants to analyze the potential effects of implementing a new tax on single-use plastic bags. The analysis will focus on how the tax influences consumer purchasing habits, the financial impact on grocery stores, and the overall reduction in plastic waste. An expert in which of the following economic specializations would be most qualified to lead this comprehensive study?
Analyzing a Modern Economic Phenomenon
Analyze each research scenario and match it to the economic subfield best suited to investigate it.
Multi-Faceted Economic Policy Analysis
Economic Policy Advising for a Public Health Crisis
An economist using advanced statistical models to test a theory about the relationship between interest rates and investment levels is primarily working within the subfield of Economic History.
Differentiating Economic Subfields
Analyzing the Scope of an Economic Subfield
Evaluating Economic Perspectives on a Complex Issue
A study that analyzes why a small cash incentive is less effective at increasing public vaccination rates than a campaign framing vaccination as a social norm falls exclusively within the scope of Health Economics.
A research team is evaluating a new government policy in a low-income country. The policy provides monthly cash payments to families, but only if their children maintain a high school attendance rate and receive all recommended vaccinations. The researchers are primarily focused on measuring the policy's impact on long-term poverty rates, the formation of an educated and healthy workforce, and the nation's potential for future economic growth. This investigation is a primary example of work done in which economic subfield?
The subfield of economics that specifically studies the choices and interactions between employers and employees, focusing on outcomes like wages, employment levels, and working conditions, is known as ____ economics.
Analyzing the Gig Economy
The subfield of economics that studies the structure of markets and the strategic behavior of firms, including topics like monopolies, competition policy, and pricing strategies, is known as __________.
Applying Economic Subfields to a Real-World Scenario
A researcher is studying the long-term impact of a country's colonial history on its current patterns of income distribution and access to education. This research topic primarily falls at the intersection of which two economic subfields?
A large technology company is deciding its pricing strategy for a new software product in a market with only two other major competitors. The company is also concerned about potential government regulation if its market share becomes too dominant. Which economic subfield offers the most essential framework for analyzing the company's strategic pricing decisions in this competitive environment?
Welfare Economics
The Three Major Focuses of Economics
Learn After
Government Intervention Strategies for Externalities
Arthur Pigou (1877–1959)
Profit-Maximizing vs. Pareto-Efficient Output Conditions
Marginal Social Benefit (MSB)
Pareto Efficiency Condition (MSC = MSB)
A city is considering several policies to address severe traffic congestion. Which of the following proposals is being evaluated primarily through the lens of welfare economics, which is concerned with how the allocation of resources affects the overall wellbeing of a society?
Analyzing a Policy Decision with Welfare Economics
A policy is proposed that significantly increases the wealth of one individual without making anyone else financially worse off. From the perspective of an economist studying how resource allocation affects societal wellbeing, this policy is unequivocally a positive development.
The Core Focus of Welfare Economics
The Dam Dilemma: Evaluating Societal Impact
Match each economic objective with the statement that best describes its primary focus. This will require you to distinguish the unique perspective of welfare economics, which is concerned with how resource allocation impacts overall societal wellbeing.
The branch of economics that assesses how the allocation of resources and goods affects the overall well-being of a society is known as ______ economics.
A town is deciding whether to approve the construction of a new factory. The factory is projected to generate substantial local employment and tax revenue but will also produce air pollution that could negatively impact the health of nearby residents. An economist is asked to assess the project. Which of the following statements best reflects an analysis based on the principles of how resource allocation affects the overall wellbeing of a society?
A government is evaluating a new policy's economic impact. Four advisors offer different primary criteria for judging the policy's success. Which advisor's criterion is most aligned with the economic analysis of how resource allocation affects overall societal wellbeing?
A government implements a new tax on luxury yachts to fund improved public parks in low-income neighborhoods. A critic argues: 'From the perspective of welfare economics, which analyzes how resource allocation affects societal wellbeing, this policy cannot be deemed an improvement because it makes the buyers of yachts worse off.' Is this critic's statement a correct application of the principles of welfare economics?
Pareto Efficiency (Definition)
Social Welfare Function (Definition)
First Fundamental Theorem of Welfare Economics
Second Fundamental Theorem of Welfare Economics
Pareto Efficiency