Metaeconomics: Difference between revisions

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imported>Doug Williamson
(Replaced rendered with written as)
imported>Doug Williamson
(Connect the alternative spelling with the origin of the term and link with Sustainability page.)
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What is meant by emergent properties would be illustrated by an economy's competitiveness (for example of city-regions in nation states or of nation states in regional associations like the European Union or in the world generally) or its sustainability.
What is meant by emergent properties would be illustrated by an economy's competitiveness (for example of city-regions in nation states or of nation states in regional associations like the European Union or in the world generally) or its sustainability.


Sometimes written as meta-economics.
Sometimes written as meta-economics.


The ''meta'' part of the term suggests analysis beyond, or broader than, conventional economics.  
The ''meta'' part of the term suggests analysis beyond, or broader than, conventional economics.  
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* [[Mesoeconomics]]
* [[Mesoeconomics]]
* [[Behavioural economics]]
* [[Behavioural economics]]
* [[Sustainability]]


[[Category:Financial_management]]
[[Category:Financial_management]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]

Revision as of 11:42, 7 April 2015

A relative neologism, it is taken as the study of the emergent properties of an economy arising from its being a complex interactive set of potentially open, non-linear, dynamic, systems subject to rules or practices and, perhaps, mere habit that may be slow to change, as well as physical and biological and psychological constraints.

What is meant by emergent properties would be illustrated by an economy's competitiveness (for example of city-regions in nation states or of nation states in regional associations like the European Union or in the world generally) or its sustainability.


Sometimes written as meta-economics.

The meta part of the term suggests analysis beyond, or broader than, conventional economics.


See also