Market (economics)/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Market (economics), or pages that link to Market (economics) or to this page or whose text contains "Market (economics)".
Parent topics
- Microeconomics [r]: A branch of economics that deals with transactions between suppliers and consumers, acting individually or in groups. [e]
- Financial system [r]: The interactive system of organisations that serve as intermediaries between lenders and borrowers. [e]
- Welfare economics [r]: The study of the social desireability of alternative arrangements of economic activity and alternative allocations of resources. [e]
Related topics
- Competition policy [r]: Legislation which regulates business practices that restrict competition, and limits the ability of firms to combine in such a way as to enable them to restrict competition. [e]
- Financial economics [r]: the economics of investment choices made by individuals and corporations, and their consequences for the economy, . [e]
- Financial regulation [r]: a regime that has the purpose of promoting the stability of banks and other financial institutions and the purpose of preserving the integrity of the financial system. [e]
- Supply and demand [r]: The explanation in economic theory of the factors that influence the supply of, and the demand for, goods and services; and of the market mechanisms by which they are reconciled. [e]
- Market for lemons [r]: One in which consumers cannot distinguish products of quality from defective goods. [e]
- John Maynard Keynes [r]: 20th-century English economist who advocated using government spending and taxation to influence the economy. [e]
- Welfare economics [r]: The study of the social desireability of alternative arrangements of economic activity and alternative allocations of resources. [e]
- Competition [r]: The activity or condition of competing against others. Ecologically, the interaction between species or organisms which share a limited environmental resource. [e]
- Supply and demand [r]: The explanation in economic theory of the factors that influence the supply of, and the demand for, goods and services; and of the market mechanisms by which they are reconciled. [e]
- Monetary policy [r]: The economic policy instrument that is regularly used to stabilise the economy, and that has sometimes been used as a temporary expedient to relieve severe credit shortages. [e]