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The phrase "economics thinking" is not grammatically correct.
It may be better to use "economic thinking" or "the principles of economics" instead. For example: - "Economic thinking is essential for making sound financial decisions." - "The principles of economics help us understand how markets function."
Exact(5)
But without the hardcore economics, thinking like a Freak just means being willing to think outside the box, and there are plenty of people doing that already.
Her dancing won her a scholarship to New York University, where she majored in dance but minored in economics, thinking she would become a lawyer.
The current curriculum frustrates thousands of bright young students who started studying economics thinking that they would learn something useful for making the world a better place and find themselves learning an ersatz theory of "everything" instead.
Mahmoud and the atomic mullahs Reprints Related items Aid to Africa: The $25 billion questionJun 30th 2005 The Grand Challenges in Global Health: 43 ways to save the worldJun 30th 2005 Doing business in Africa: Different skills requiredJun 30th 2005 Saving Africa, the conservative way: Right onJun 30th 2005 Development economics: Thinking bigMar 17th 2005Some say aid is useless.
Mr. Phillipson, an honorary fellow in history at the University of Edinburgh, has written an unabashedly intellectual biography in which Smith's economics thinking is only part — at times, a smallish part — of a larger, inherently philosophical story.
Similar(51)
That would involve the same kind of broken austerity-economics thinking that's shattering Europe, and it would spell political doom for Democrats.
This raises an issue exposed by the financial crisis: the shaky apotheosis of economics or economic thinking.
Economic thinking that ignores the social element is not good economics.
This week's announcement of the Nobel Prize in Economics got me thinking about the state of the subject, and my thoughts weren't very positive.
Daniel Kahneman, Nobel Memorial Prize winner in economics, writes in "Thinking, Fast and Slow" that our brains respond most decisively to those things we know for certain.
By John Cassidy October 12, 2011 This week's announcement of the Nobel Prize in Economics got me thinking about the state of the subject, and my thoughts weren't very positive.
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