[
UK
/mˌækɹəɹˌiːkənˈɒmɪks/
]
[ US /ˌmækɹoʊɛkəˈnɑmɪks, ˌmækɹoʊikəˈnɑmɪks/ ]
[ US /ˌmækɹoʊɛkəˈnɑmɪks, ˌmækɹoʊikəˈnɑmɪks/ ]
NOUN
- the branch of economics that studies the overall working of a national economy
How To Use macroeconomics In A Sentence
- The second area of current research in macroeconomics centres on a phenomenon known as hysteresis.
- One of the most elementary lessons I gathered from my macroeconomics courses in university is that the trickle-down theory and slash-and-burn approach of fiscal policy utilized by many Republicans today simply does not work. Do Conservative Fiscal Policies Fulfill Their Promise? : Law is Cool
- Finally, although this entire talk has been about microeconomics, I must close by pointing out the crucial role of macroeconomics success and failure in inducing life to imitate this particular form of art.
- You end up, frankly, with no ideas about macroeconomics and economic policy, other than that it's scary.
- When I was in college I took two intro economics courses: macroeconomics and microeconomics.
- The middle trilogy is watchable enough rot, but the recent films are joyless, plotless screeds on macroeconomics and industrial relations.
- His principal teaching and research interests include monetary economics, macroeconomics, the history of economic thought, and development economics.
- So far today we have examined the economic kaleidoscope from a perspective of macroeconomics - that's a buzzword favoured by economists looking at the big picture. Imperatives for Business Survival: Learning to Live with Less
- Few adherents to the new classical macroeconomics trouble even to question it, let alone provide an analytical basis to justify it.
- Classical Business Cycle Analysis: Market-Clearing Macroeconomics; Keynesianism: The Macroeconomics of Wage and Price Rigidity.