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microeconomics

[ UK /mˌa‍ɪkɹə‍ʊˌiːkənˈɒmɪks/ ]
[ US /ˌmaɪkɹoʊˌɛkəˈnɑmɪks/ ]
NOUN
  1. the branch of economics that studies the economy of consumers or households or individual firms

How To Use microeconomics In A Sentence

  • When I was in college I took two intro economics courses: macroeconomics and microeconomics.
  • It is unfortunate that the entrepreneur does not play much of a role in microeconomics but what about macroeconomics?
  • Even general theory itself was now compartmentalized into microeconomics and macroeconomics.
  • Our results indicate that voters do respond to economic conditions in a manner consistent with a small set of axioms drawn from microeconomics.
  • The Americans believe that the state has a role in macroeconomics, but no role in microeconomics.
  • When I was in college I took two intro economics courses: macroeconomics and microeconomics.
  • There are strong axioms of microeconomics which, adapted to this problem in a manner of analysis familiar to Public Choice students, produce the theoretical grounds for a rational economic voter model.
  • Surprisingly, Democrat presidents have, relatively speaking, become the proponents of fiscal responsibility, free trade, competitive markets and neoclassical microeconomics.
  • The introduction of microeconomics into model building has led to complex mathematical issues as far as estimations of various parameters are concerned.
  • It is unfortunate that the entrepreneur does not play much of a role in microeconomics but what about macroeconomics?
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