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Distribution (economics)

Index Distribution (economics)

In economics, distribution is the way total output, income, or wealth is distributed among individuals or among the factors of production (such as labour, land, and capital). [1]

138 relations: African Leaders Malaria Alliance, Aggregate income, Agnar Sandmo, Alex Falconer, Amsterdam Entrepôt, Anti-racism, Atlantic Grupa, Barna Buza, Binary economics, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Boundary (real estate), British rule in Burma, Canadian Affair, Central Bucks High School West, Christian Democratic Union (Netherlands), Clause IV, Climate change and poverty, Cloward–Piven strategy, Companies Act 2006, Constitution of Brazil, Consumer, Cultural economics, Cymru Annibynnol, Democratic Party (South Korea, 2008), Distribution, Distribution (marketing), Distribution of wealth, Distributive justice, Ecological economics, Economic efficiency, Economic history of Argentina, Economic history of Taiwan, Economic Justice, Economic policy, Economic system, Economic unit, Economics, Economy, Economy of Chicago, Economy of East Asia, Embeddedness, Emilio Frugoni, Enrico Barone, Equality of outcome, Equity (economics), FDP.The Liberals, First Czechoslovak Republic, Flipism, Food storage, Francisco de Sá Carneiro, ..., Frank Fetter, Frédéric Bastiat, Gary Chartier, Generational accounting, GK Software, Glossary of economics, Goods and services, GraceKennedy, Grundrisse, History of Hawaii, History of Moncton, In Kind Direct, Inclusive capitalism, Income distribution, Income inequality metrics, Index of law articles, Index of philosophy articles (R–Z), Instituto Nacional de Tierras, Intel PRO/Wireless, International monetary systems, Islamic economics, Jacques Nicolas Billaud-Varenne, Justice, Konohiki, Land War, Left-wing market anarchism, Left-wing politics, Lewis turning point, Liberal People's Party (Norway), Library of Congress Classification:Class H -- Social sciences, List of companies traded on the JSE, Lorenz curve, Low-carbon diet, Luigi Pasinetti, Managerial state, Market economy, Master limited partnership, Means of production, Median voter theorem, Mission Vuelta al Campo, Mission Zamora, National Finance Commission Award, Neoclassical economics, Normative economics, Ole Colbjørnsen, Outline of economics, Philip Wicksteed, Philippe-Antoine Merlin de Douai, Philosophy and economics, Political economy, Positive economics, Private equity in the 2000s, Privatization, Production (economics), Production function, Progressive Utilization Theory, Public economics, Publicly traded private equity, Raisman Program, Red-baiting, Relations of production, Rip-off Britain, Robin Boadway, Ruth Levitas, Service economy, Siamese coup d'état of 1933, Social, Social Democratic Party of Switzerland, Social Democrats (Denmark), Social inequality, Social welfare function, Socialism, Soviet anti-religious legislation, Stock trader, Subsistence economy, Synergy Health, Tax, Tertiary sector of the economy, The City of the Sun, The formalist vs substantivist debate, The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, The Theory of Wages, Thomas Nixon Carver, Unearned income, Value added, Vibratex, Welfare economics, 100 BC. Expand index (88 more) »

African Leaders Malaria Alliance

The African Leaders Malaria Alliance (ALMA) is an intergovernmental organization dedicated to ending malaria deaths which became operational during the 64th United Nations General Assembly on September 23, 2009.

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Aggregate income

Aggregate income is the total of all incomes in an economy without adjustments for inflation, taxation, or types of double counting.

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Agnar Sandmo

Agnar Sandmo (born 9 January 1938) is a Norwegian economist at the Norwegian School of Economics.

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Alex Falconer

Alex C. Falconer (1 April 1940 – 12 August 2012) was a Labour Party politician in Scotland.

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Amsterdam Entrepôt

The Amsterdam Entrepôt is the shorthand term that English-language economic historiographers use to refer to the trade system that helped the Dutch Republic achieve primacy in world trade during the 17th century.

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Anti-racism

Anti-racism includes beliefs, actions, movements, and policies adopted or developed to oppose racism.

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Atlantic Grupa

Atlantic Grupa d.d. is a Croatian multinational company whose business operations include the production, development, sales and distribution of consumer goods with simultaneous market presence in over 40 countries around the world.

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Barna Buza

Barna Buza (1 January 1873 – 2 May 1944) was a Hungarian politician and jurist, who served as Minister of Agriculture from 1918 to 1919 and as interim Minister of Justice for few days in 1918.

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Binary economics

Binary economics, also known as Two-factor Economics, is a theory of economics that endorses both private property and a free market but proposes significant reforms to the banking system.

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Bosnia and Herzegovina

Bosnia and Herzegovina (or; abbreviated B&H; Bosnian and Serbian: Bosna i Hercegovina (BiH) / Боснa и Херцеговина (БиХ), Croatian: Bosna i Hercegovina (BiH)), sometimes called Bosnia-Herzegovina, and often known informally as Bosnia, is a country in Southeastern Europe located on the Balkan Peninsula.

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Boundary (real estate)

A unit of real estate or immovable property is limited by a legal boundary (sometimes also referred to as a property line or a lot line).

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British rule in Burma

British rule in Burma, also known as British Burma, lasted from 1824 to 1948, from the Anglo-Burmese wars through the creation of Burma as a Province of British India to the establishment of an independently administered colony, and finally independence.

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Canadian Affair

Canadian Affair is the UK’s largest tour operator to Canada, providing services including scheduled passenger airlines, package holidays, cruise lines, hotels, motorhome hire and car hire.

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Central Bucks High School West

Central Bucks High School West is a public high school serving students in tenth through twelfth grades, the oldest of the three high schools in the Central Bucks School District.

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Christian Democratic Union (Netherlands)

The Christian-Democratic Union (in Dutch: Christelijk-Democratische Unie) was a minor progressive Protestant party in the Netherlands during in the interbellum.

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Clause IV

Clause IV was part of the 1918 constitution of the Labour Party in Britain which set out the aims and values of the party.

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Climate change and poverty

In an ever-progressing world with an increasing demand for energy and technology, it is difficult to avoid climate change and its impacts on societies both locally and globally.

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Cloward–Piven strategy

The Cloward–Piven strategy is a political strategy outlined in 1966 by American sociologists and political activists Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven that called for overloading the U.S. public welfare system in order to precipitate a crisis that would lead to a replacement of the welfare system with a national system of "a guaranteed annual income and thus an end to poverty".

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Companies Act 2006

The Companies Act 2006 (c 46) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which forms the primary source of UK company law.

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Constitution of Brazil

The Constitution of the Federative Republic of Brazil (Constituição da República Federativa do Brasil) is the supreme law of Brazil.

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Consumer

A consumer is a person or organization that use economic services or commodities.

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Cultural economics

Cultural economics is the branch of economics that studies the relation of culture to economic outcomes.

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Cymru Annibynnol

Cymru Annibynnol, the Independent Wales Party is a small political party operating in Wales.

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Democratic Party (South Korea, 2008)

The Democratic Party was a liberal political party in South Korea.

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Distribution

Distribution may refer to.

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Distribution (marketing)

Distribution (or place) is one of the four elements of the marketing mix.

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Distribution of wealth

--> The distribution of wealth is a comparison of the wealth of various members or groups in a society.

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Distributive justice

Distributive justice concerns the nature of a social justice allocation of goods.

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Ecological economics

Ecological economics (also called eco-economics, ecolonomy or bioeconomics of Georgescu-Roegen) is both a transdisciplinary and an interdisciplinary field of academic research addressing the interdependence and coevolution of human economies and natural ecosystems, both intertemporally and spatially.

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Economic efficiency

Economic efficiency is, roughly speaking, a situation in which nothing can be improved without something else being hurt.

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Economic history of Argentina

The economic history of Argentina is one of the most studied, owing to the "Argentine paradox", its unique condition as a country that had achieved advanced development in the early 20th century but experienced a reversal, which inspired an enormous wealth of literature and diverse analysis on the causes of this decline.

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Economic history of Taiwan

The recordkeeping and development of the economic history of Taiwan started in the Age of Discovery.

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Economic Justice

Justice in economics is a subcategory of welfare economics with models frequently representing the ethical-social requirements of a given theory, whether "in the large", as of a just social order, or "in the small", as in the equity of "how institutions distribute specific benefits and burdens".

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Economic policy

The economic policy of governments covers the systems for setting levels of taxation, government budgets, the money supply and interest rates as well as the labour market, national ownership, and many other areas of government interventions into the economy.

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Economic system

An economic system is a system of production, resource allocation and distribution of goods and services within a society or a given geographic area.

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Economic unit

In an economy, production, consumption and exchange are carried out by three basic economic units: the firm, the household, and the government.

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Economics

Economics is the social science that studies the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services.

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Economy

An economy (from Greek οίκος – "household" and νέμoμαι – "manage") is an area of the production, distribution, or trade, and consumption of goods and services by different agents.

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Economy of Chicago

Chicago and its suburbs, which together comprise the Chicago Metropolitan Area, is home to 29 Fortune 500 companies and is a transportation and distribution center.

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Economy of East Asia

The Economy of East Asia comprises more than 1.6 billion people (22% of the world population) living in 6 different countries.

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Embeddedness

In economics and economic sociology, embeddedness refers to the degree to which economic activity is constrained by non-economic institutions.

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Emilio Frugoni

Emilio Frugoni (March 30, 1880 – August 28, 1969) was a Uruguayan socialist politician, lawyer, poet, essayist, and journalist.

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Enrico Barone

Enrico Barone (December 22, 1859, Naples, Kingdom of the Two Sicilies – May 14, 1924, Rome, Italy) was a soldier, military historian, and an economist.

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Equality of outcome

Equality of outcome, equality of condition, or equality of results is a political concept which is central to some political ideologies and is used regularly in political discourse, often in contrast to the term equality of opportunity.

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Equity (economics)

Equity or economic equality is the concept or idea of fairness in economics, particularly in regard to taxation or welfare economics.

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FDP.The Liberals

FDP.The Liberals (FDP.Die Liberalen, PLR.Les Libéraux-Radicaux, PLR.I Liberali, PLD.Ils Liberals) is a liberal political party in Switzerland.

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First Czechoslovak Republic

The first Czechoslovak Republic (Czech / Československá republika) was the Czechoslovak state that existed from 1918 to 1938.

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Flipism

Flipism, sometimes written as "Flippism," is a pseudophilosophy under which all decisions are made by flipping a coin.

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Food storage

Food storage allows food to be eaten for some time (typically weeks to months) after harvest rather than solely immediately.

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Francisco de Sá Carneiro

Francisco Manuel Lumbrales de Sá Carneiro, GCTE, GCC, GCL (19 July 19344 December 1980) founded the Portuguese Social Democratic Party in 1974 (the year of the Portuguese Carnation Revolution) and became Prime Minister of Portugal in January 1980, but only held office for eleven months, dying in a plane crash with his partner, "Snu" Abecassis (born Ebba Merethe Seidenfaden), on 4 December 1980.

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Frank Fetter

Frank Albert Fetter (March 8, 1863 – March 21, 1949) was an American economist of the Austrian School.

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Frédéric Bastiat

Claude-Frédéric Bastiat (29 June 1801 – 24 December 1850) was a French economist and writer who was a prominent member of the French Liberal School.

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Gary Chartier

Gary William Chartier (born December 30, 1966) is an American legal scholar and philosopher who is currently Distinguished Professor of Law and Business Ethics and Associate Dean of the Tom and Vi Zapara School of Business at La Sierra University in Riverside, California.

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Generational accounting

Generational accounting is a method of measuring the fiscal burdens facing today's and tomorrow's children.

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GK Software

GK Software SE is a listed technology company headquartered in Schöneck/Vogtland.

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Glossary of economics

Most of the terms listed in Wikipedia glossaries are already defined and explained within Wikipedia itself.

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Goods and services

Goods are items that are tangible, such as pens, salt, apples, oganesson, and hats.

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GraceKennedy

GraceKennedy Limited is one of the Caribbean's largest conglomerates, with several diversified companies in the Caribbean, Europe and North America.

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Grundrisse

The Grundrisse der Kritik der Politischen Ökonomie (Fundamentals of Political Economy Criticism) is a lengthy, unfinished manuscript by the German philosopher Karl Marx.

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History of Hawaii

The history of Hawaii describes the era of human settlements in the Hawaiian Islands.

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History of Moncton

See also Timeline of Moncton history or List of entertainment events in Greater Moncton This article details the history of Moncton, a city in the Canadian province of New Brunswick.

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In Kind Direct

In Kind Direct is a charity in the United Kingdom founded in 1996 by The Prince of Wales.

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Inclusive capitalism

Inclusive capitalism is a term composed of two complementary meanings: (1) poverty is a significant, systemic problem in countries which have already embraced or are transitioning towards capitalistic economies, and (2) companies and non-governmental organizations can sell goods and services to low-income people, which may lead to targeted poverty alleviation strategies, including improving people’s nutrition, health care, education, employment and environment, but not their political power.

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Income distribution

In economics, income distribution is how a nation’s total GDP is distributed amongst its population.

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Income inequality metrics

Income inequality metrics or income distribution metrics are used by social scientists to measure the distribution of income, and economic inequality among the participants in a particular economy, such as that of a specific country or of the world in general.

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Index of law articles

This collection of lists of law topics collects the names of topics related to law.

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Index of philosophy articles (R–Z)

No description.

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Instituto Nacional de Tierras

Instituto Nacional de Tierras (INTI, National Land Institute) is one of the Venezuelan governmental organizations overseeing the land distribution program (Mission Zamora).

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Intel PRO/Wireless

Intel PRO/Wireless is a series of Intel wireless products.

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International monetary systems

International monetary systems are sets of internationally agreed rules, conventions and supporting institutions, that facilitate international trade, cross border investment and generally the reallocation of capital between nation states.

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Islamic economics

Islamic economics (الاقتصاد الإسلامي) is a term used to refer to Islamic commercial jurisprudence (فقه المعاملات, fiqh al-mu'āmalāt).

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Jacques Nicolas Billaud-Varenne

Jacques Nicolas Billaud-Varenne (23 April 17563 June 1819), also known as Jean Nicolas, was a French personality of the Revolutionary period.

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Justice

Justice is the legal or philosophical theory by which fairness is administered.

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Konohiki

A konohiki is a headman of a land division or ahupua`a of the Kingdom of Hawaii who administered the land ruled by an ali'i chief.

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Land War

The Land War (Cogadh na Talún) in Irish history was a period of agrarian agitation in rural Ireland in the 1870s, 1880s, and 1890s.

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Left-wing market anarchism

Left-wing market anarchism, a form of left-libertarianism, individualist anarchism and libertarian socialism, is associated with contemporary scholars such as Kevin Carson, Roderick T. Long, Charles Johnson, Brad Spangler, Sheldon Richman,Sheldon Richman (3 February 2011).

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Left-wing politics

Left-wing politics supports social equality and egalitarianism, often in opposition to social hierarchy.

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Lewis turning point

The Lewis turning point is a situation in economic development where surplus rural labor reaches a financial zero.

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Liberal People's Party (Norway)

The Liberal People's Party (Det Liberale Folkepartiet, DLF) was a classical liberal Norwegian political party created in 1992 by some of the members of the old Liberal People's Party.

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Library of Congress Classification:Class H -- Social sciences

Class H: Social Sciences is a classification used by the Library of Congress Classification system.

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List of companies traded on the JSE

This is a list of companies traded on the JSE.

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Lorenz curve

In economics, the Lorenz curve is a graphical representation of the distribution of income or of wealth.

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Low-carbon diet

A low-carbon diet refers to making lifestyle choices to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions (GHGe) resulting from consumption decisions.

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Luigi Pasinetti

Luigi L. Pasinetti (born September 12, 1930) is an Italian economist of the post-Keynesian school.

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Managerial state

Managerial state is a concept used in critiquing modern social democracy in Western countries.

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Market economy

A market economy is an economic system in which the decisions regarding investment, production, and distribution are guided by the price signals created by the forces of supply and demand.

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Master limited partnership

In the United States, a master limited partnership (MLP) is a limited partnership that is publicly traded, also known as a publicly traded partnership.

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Means of production

In economics and sociology, the means of production (also called capital goods) are physical non-human and non-financial inputs used in the production of economic value.

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Median voter theorem

The median voter theorem states that "a majority rule voting system will select the outcome most preferred by the median voter".

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Mission Vuelta al Campo

Mission Vuelta al Campo ("Return to the Countryside"; implementation announced in mid-2005) is one of the Bolivarian Missions (a series of anti-poverty and social welfare programs) implemented by former Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez.

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Mission Zamora

Mission Zamora is an integrated land reform and land redistribution program in Venezuela, created in law by the Ley de Tierras ("Law of Land"), part of a package of 49 decrees made by Hugo Chávez in November 2001.

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National Finance Commission Award

The National Finance Commission Award or NFC is a series of planned economic program enacted since 1951.

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Neoclassical economics

Neoclassical economics is an approach to economics focusing on the determination of goods, outputs, and income distributions in markets through supply and demand.

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Normative economics

Normative economics (as opposed to positive economics) is a part of economics that expresses value or normative judgments about economic fairness or what the outcome of the economy or goals of public policy ought to be.

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Ole Colbjørnsen

Ole Colbjørnsen (30 May 1897, Vegårshei, Aust-Agder – 12 November 1973) was a Norwegian journalist, economist and politician for the Labour Party.

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Outline of economics

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to economics: Economics – analyzes the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services.

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Philip Wicksteed

Philip Henry Wicksteed (25 October 1844 – 18 March 1927) is known primarily as an economist.

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Philippe-Antoine Merlin de Douai

Philippe-Antoine Merlin, known as Merlin de Douai (30 October 1754 – 26 December 1838) was a French politician and lawyer.

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Philosophy and economics

Philosophy and economics, also philosophy of economics, studies topics such as rational choice, the appraisal of economic outcomes, institutions and processes, and the ontology of economic phenomena and the possibilities of acquiring knowledge of them.

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Political economy

Political economy is the study of production and trade and their relations with law, custom and government; and with the distribution of national income and wealth.

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Positive economics

Positive economics (as opposed to normative economics) is the branch of economics that concerns the description and explanation of economic phenomena.

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Private equity in the 2000s

Private equity in the 2000s relates to one of the major periods in the history of private equity and venture capital.

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Privatization

Privatization (also spelled privatisation) is the purchase of all outstanding shares of a publicly traded company by private investors, or the sale of a state-owned enterprise to private investors.

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Production (economics)

Production is a process of combining various material inputs and immaterial inputs (plans, know-how) in order to make something for consumption (the output).

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Production function

In economics, a production function relates quantities of physical output of a production process to quantities of physical inputs or production function refers as the expression of the technological relation between physical inputs and outputs of the goods.

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Progressive Utilization Theory

Progressive Utilization Theory (Prout), also known by the acronym PROUT, is a socioeconomic and political theory developed by philosopher and spiritual leader Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar.

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Public economics

Public economics (or economics of the public sector) is the study of government policy through the lens of economic efficiency and equity.

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Publicly traded private equity

Publicly traded private equity (also referred to as publicly quoted private equity or publicly listed private equity) refers to an investment firm or investment vehicle, which makes investments conforming to one of the various private equity strategies, and is listed on a public stock exchange.

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Raisman Program

The Raisman Program (also known as Raisman Award), was a series of economic reforms programs enacted and established by Pakistan in 1951.

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Red-baiting

Red-baiting, also reductio ad Stalinum, is an informal logical fallacy that intends to discredit the validity of an opponent's logical argument by accusing, denouncing, attacking, or persecuting an individual or group as communist, socialist, Marxist, Stalinist or anarchist, or sympathetic towards these ideologies.

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Relations of production

Relations of production (German: Produktionsverhältnisse) is a concept frequently used by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels in their theory of historical materialism and in Das Kapital.

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Rip-off Britain

Rip-off Britain is an expression used by some to refer to the phenomenon in which some products and services cost significantly more in the United Kingdom than in other countries, especially other member states of the European Union and the United States, than a basic currency conversion would permit.

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Robin Boadway

Robin William Boadway, (born June 10, 1943) is a Canadian economist.

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Ruth Levitas

Ruth Levitas (born May 15, 1949 in London) is a Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Bristol.

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Service economy

Service economy can refer to one or both of two recent economic developments.

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Siamese coup d'état of 1933

The Siamese Coup d’état of June 1933 (รัฐประหาร 20 มิถุนายน..) was considered the first time in Thai history that the military successfully overthrew the constitutional government.

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Social

Living organisms including humans are social when they live collectively in interacting populations, whether they are aware of it, and whether the interaction is voluntary or involuntary.

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Social Democratic Party of Switzerland

The Social Democratic Party of Switzerland (also rendered as Swiss Socialist Party; Sozialdemokratische Partei der Schweiz, SP; Parti socialiste suisse, PS; Partito Socialista Svizzero; Partida Socialdemocrata de la Svizra) is a political party in Switzerland.

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Social Democrats (Denmark)

The Social Democrats (Socialdemokraterne), officially Social Democracy (Socialdemokratiet), is a social-democratic political party in Denmark.

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Social inequality

Social inequality occurs when resources in a given society are distributed unevenly, typically through norms of allocation, that engender specific patterns along lines of socially defined categories of persons.

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Social welfare function

In welfare economics, a social welfare function is a function that ranks social states (alternative complete descriptions of the society) as less desirable, more desirable, or indifferent for every possible pair of social states.

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Socialism

Socialism is a range of economic and social systems characterised by social ownership and democratic control of the means of production as well as the political theories and movements associated with them.

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Soviet anti-religious legislation

The government of the Soviet Union followed an unofficial policy of state atheism, aiming to gradually eliminate '''religious belief''' within its borders.

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Stock trader

A stock trader or equity trader or share trader is a person or company involved in trading equity securities.

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Subsistence economy

A subsistence economy is a non-monetary economy which relies on natural resources to provide for basic needs, through hunting, gathering, and subsistence agriculture.

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Synergy Health

Synergy Health plc is a global company headquartered in the United Kingdom.

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Tax

A tax (from the Latin taxo) is a mandatory financial charge or some other type of levy imposed upon a taxpayer (an individual or other legal entity) by a governmental organization in order to fund various public expenditures.

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Tertiary sector of the economy

The tertiary sector or service sector is the third of the three economic sectors of the three-sector theory.

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The City of the Sun

The City of the Sun (La città del Sole; Civitas Solis) is a philosophical work by the Italian Dominican philosopher Tommaso Campanella.

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The formalist vs substantivist debate

The opposition between substantivist and formalist economic models was first proposed by Karl Polanyi in his work The Great Transformation (1944).

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The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics

The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics (2008), 2nd ed., is an eight-volume reference work on economics, edited by Steven N. Durlauf and Lawrence E. Blume and published by Palgrave Macmillan.

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The Theory of Wages

The Theory of Wages is a book by the British economist John R. Hicks published in 1932 (2nd ed., 1963).

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Thomas Nixon Carver

Thomas Nixon Carver (25 March 1865 – 8 March 1961) was an American economics professor.

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Unearned income

Unearned income is a term coined by Henry George to refer to income gained through ownership of land and other monopoly.

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Value added

In business, the difference between the sale price and the production cost of a product is the unit profit.

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Vibratex

Vibratex is a manufacturer of sex toys, headquartered in Vallejo, California.

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Welfare economics

Welfare economics is a branch of economics that uses microeconomic techniques to evaluate well-being (welfare) at the aggregate (economy-wide) level.

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100 BC

Year 100 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar.

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Redirects here:

Land distribution, Redistribution (economics).

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distribution_(economics)

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