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Weber, Christian E. – Journal of Economic Education, 1997
Reconsiders Uriel Spiegel's analysis of the Giffen phenomenon, a utility function that yields an inferior good with an upward-sloping demand curve. Extends this to include similar utility functions that yield inferiority. Discusses the earlier work of related theorists including Liebhafsky, Vandermeulen, and Wold and Jureen. (MJP)
Descriptors: Business Cycles, Consumer Economics, Economic Climate, Economic Factors
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Spiegel, Uriel – Journal of Economic Education, 1997
Reexamines Spiegel's analysis of the Giffen phenomenon, a utility function that yields an inferior good with an upward-sloping demand curve and incorporates Christian Weber's criticism into the model. Disagrees with Weber on some points but agrees that as income decreases the likelihood of the Giffen product decreases. (MJP)
Descriptors: Business Cycles, Consumer Economics, Economic Climate, Economic Factors
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Fulton, Murray – Journal of Economic Education, 1997
Shows how the Cournot-Nash and Stackelberg equilibria can be represented in the familiar supply-demand graphical framework, allowing a direct comparison with the monopoly, competitive, and industrial organization models. This graphical analysis is represented throughout the article. (MJP)
Descriptors: Business Cycles, Competition, Costs, Economic Climate
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Olson, Terry L. – Journal of Economic Education, 1997
Explores the consequences of textbook authors' failure to recognize that producers can acquire the good in which they lack a comparative advantage through either trade or internal production. Examines variations in the construction and graphical depiction of consumption possibility frontiers in principles of economics textbooks. (MJP)
Descriptors: Business Cycles, Consumer Economics, Economic Climate, Economic Factors
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Kyer, Ben L.; Maggs, Gary E. – Journal of Economic Education, 1995
Utilizes two-dimensional price and output graphs to demonstrate the way that the price-level elasticity of aggregate demand affects alternative monetary policy rules designed to cope with random aggregate supply shocks. Includes graphs illustrating price-level, real Gross Domestic Product (GDP), nominal GDP, and nominal money supply targeting.…
Descriptors: Business Cycles, Capitalism, Competition, Consumer Economics