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<p align="center"><big>'''Behavioral Economics'''</big>
[[Image:Behavioral.JPG]]
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<p align="center">
by:
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* <p align="center">Eli Brill<br></p>
* <p align="center">Katharine Burmeister<br></p>
* <p align="center">Sharyn Foster<br></p>
* <p align="center">Ludmila Palei<br></p>
* <p align="center">Stacie Smeal
</p>
 
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Revision as of 01:07, 3 December 2007


"People tend to be happy when they live up to how they think they should be; and they are, correspondingly, unhappy when they fail to live up to those norms." George Akerlof


An Introduction to Economic Theory Before the Behavioral Approach: The Keynesian Approach


In his 2006 speech, "The Missing Motivation in Macroeconomics," George Akerlof, a Nobel Prize-winning economist, challenges some ideas about macroeconomics that were established by the well-respected John Maynard Keynes.

The five neutralities discussed by Akerlof are:


Bibliography Akerlof, George A. "The Missing Motivation in Macroeconomics". [1]