Alfred Marshall FBA (26 July 1842 – 13 July 1924) was an English economist, and was one of the most influential economists of his time. His book Principles...
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Alfred Marshall (February 28, 1919 – December 28, 2013) was an American businessman who founded Marshalls, a chain of department stores which specializes...
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Alfred Marshall (1842–1924) was an economist. Alfred Marshall may also refer to: Alfred Marshall (politician) (1797–1868), United States Representative...
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Waiting and Never Boring, Always Surprising. Marshalls traces its history to 1956, when Alfred Marshall gathered a group of entrepreneurs on the East...
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Economics is a leading political economy or economics textbook of Alfred Marshall (1842–1924), first published in 1890. It was the standard text for...
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characterised economy through how it managed troubling factors. Economist Alfred Marshall had significant effects on the popularity for the ceteris paribus clause...
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price of a good decreases (↓), quantity demanded will increase (↑)". Alfred Marshall worded this as: "When we say that a person's demand for anything increases...
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Alfred Marshall Bailey (February 18, 1894 – February 25, 1978) was an American ornithologist who was associated with the Denver Museum of Natural History...
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The Marshall–Lerner condition (after Alfred Marshall and Abba P. Lerner) is satisfied if the absolute sum of a country's export and import demand elasticities...
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The welfare definition of economics is an attempt by Alfred Marshall , a pioneer of neoclassical economics, to redefine his field of study. This definition...
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Alfred Marshall (c. 1797 – October 2, 1868) was a United States representative from Maine. He was born in New Hampshire about 1797. Marshall married Lydia...
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involved. The people who delivered Paley and Bulley's papers were Alfred Marshall, Henry Sidgwick, John Venn and Sedley Taylor. She was to pass with...
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(scale effect) The "Hicks–Marshall" is named for economists John Hicks (from The Theory of Wages, 1932) and Alfred Marshall (from Principles of Economics...
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those phenomena are not modified by the pursuit of any other object. Alfred Marshall provided a still widely cited definition in his textbook Principles...
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goods are named after Scottish economist Sir Robert Giffen, to whom Alfred Marshall attributed this idea in his book Principles of Economics, first published...
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devoted to ice cream and other desserts. Together with her husband Alfred, Marshall operated a variety of different businesses. From 1886 onward, she published...
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Arthur Cecil Pigou (redirect from Alfred Pigou)
ethics under the Moral Science Tripos. He studied economics under Alfred Marshall, whom he later succeeded as professor of political economy. His first...
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History of economic thought (section Alfred Marshall)
on market failures. Its main representatives were Stanley Jevons, Alfred Marshall, and Arthur Pigou. The Austrian School of Economics was made up of...
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Supply and Demand... of 1870. Both sorts of curve were popularised by Alfred Marshall who, in his Principles of Economics (1890), chose to represent price...
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Alfred Marshall, DFC, DFM (1915 – 27 November 1944) was a British flying ace who served with the Royal Air Force (RAF) during the Second World War. He...
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The Marshall Society is an economics society at the University of Cambridge. It was established in 1927, and is named after Alfred Marshall, the prominent...
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the product produced by the firm. The term was first introduced by Alfred Marshall in his Principles of Economics in 1890. Demand for all factors of production...
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Economic Science", in which he related marginalists in the tradition of Alfred Marshall et al. to those in the Austrian School. No attempt will here be made...
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and economists including John Locke, David Hume, Irving Fisher and Alfred Marshall. Milton Friedman made a restatement of the theory in 1956 and made...
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airport newsstand”. The name Marshall Jevons derives from the surnames of two 19th-century English economists, Alfred Marshall and William Stanley Jevons...
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apparatus of supply and demand curves developed by Fleeming Jenkin and Alfred Marshall provided a unified mathematical basis for this approach, which the...
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total welfare or total social welfare or Marshallian surplus (after Alfred Marshall), is either of two related quantities: Consumer surplus, or consumers'...
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service available for purchase in the market. In such standard works as Alfred Marshall's Principles of Economics (1920) and Léon Walras's Elements of Pure...
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the band Daughters Alfred Marshall (1842–1924), English economist Arthur Marshall (disambiguation), multiple people Barry Marshall (born 1951), Australian...
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modeling coinciding with the publication of an influential textbook by Alfred Marshall in 1890. Earlier, William Stanley Jevons, a proponent of mathematical...
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