Guidance needed
Actually I am in class 12 rn. But I love economics more than a mere academic subject. I find it it interesting and want to learn about it more than my academic scope. What would be the best way to start?
Actually I am in class 12 rn. But I love economics more than a mere academic subject. I find it it interesting and want to learn about it more than my academic scope. What would be the best way to start?
It's been kind of annoying not having a clean, easy place to just quickly check the yield curve, so I made one for myself and just keep it pinned in chrome. The thing I think I'll use most is the quick views above the chart for quarterly reporting to get a sense of where my company's insurance blocks might move (I'm at a life/annuity shop).
Was curious what people who actually watch curves (or other metrics I have on here) think. Are those the right lookback windows? Is layering 4 curves at once useful or does it just get noisy? Keeping ads off so I feel like it runs pretty smooth. Open to suggestions if something's missing or misleading.
Hey everyone,
I’ve been trying to model a common real-world relationship dilemma using behavioral economics frameworks, and I’d love to get this community's take on how to map the utility functions and strategic equilibria here.
A girl operates under a tight liquid budget constraint of £100 cash (she earns a wage of £10/hour).
Despite his constant requests—and despite the fact that the boyfriend aggressively over-supplies effort by fulfilling every single micro-request she has—she completely refuses to do it.
When the boyfriend challenges her on the math (spending 8 hours of labour equivalent on an £80 pair of jeans vs. 30 minutes on him), she uses a few classic behavioral defence mechanisms:
I have a gut feeling that creating money to buy houses is a terrible idea. I agree with the principle of expanding the money supply to accommodate a growing economy, but surely expanding the supply more than the increase in houses is just leading to inflation. It seems to me that the new creation of money should be tired more to commercial loans and infrastructure spending. I’m probably over simplifying it, but for all the discussion about how to fix productivity and reduce weather gaps, it seems one major factor is the deregulation of the mortgage market.
If the creation of new money depended on businesses trying new ideas and people starting new businesses, surely that would result in a stronger economy than just inflation house prices? It would also drive a cultural change for innovation and improvement.
Apologies if this is school level economics but it seems so obvious I feel like I’m missing something!
Anyone appearing for IIFT MA Eco interview, are you guys wearing a coat/blazer as well? Or just a formal shirt and pant would work?