TSV

Economic Theories - TSV

Economic theories are frameworks that systematically explain the economic behavior of individuals, corporations, and governments, as well as market mechanisms and overall economic trends. Beginning with classical economics, they have evolved over time through Keynesian economics, neoclassical economics, monetarism, supply-side economics, and more. These theories form the foundation of modern economic policy and business strategy.

economics economic theory microeconomics macroeconomics Keynesian neoclassical monetarism
code	slug	name	description	field
01	supply-demand-theory	Supply and Demand Theory	The fundamental microeconomic theory explaining the price and quantity determination mechanism in markets.	Microeconomics
02	classical-economics	Classical Economics	An economic school formed from the late 18th to 19th century that emphasizes the market's automatic adjustment function.	History of Economic Thought
03	keynesian-economics	Keynesian Economics	A macroeconomic theory advocating that recessions caused by insufficient effective demand should be addressed through government fiscal policy.	Macroeconomics
04	neoclassical-economics	Neoclassical Economics	An economic school that emphasizes rational economic agents and market equilibrium, conducting analysis based on microeconomic foundations.	Micro and Macroeconomics
05	monetarism	Monetarism	A theory stating that money supply has a decisive impact on the economy and prices, represented by Milton Friedman.	Macroeconomics
06	supply-side-economics	Supply-Side Economics	An economic theory that emphasizes strengthening supply capacity over stimulating demand, advocating tax cuts and deregulation.	Macroeconomics
07	comparative-advantage	Theory of Comparative Advantage	A theory stating that even countries at an absolute disadvantage can gain from trade by producing and exporting goods in which they have a comparative advantage.	International Economics
08	innovation-theory	Innovation Theory	Schumpeter's theory that technological innovation is the driving force behind business cycles and economic growth.	Economic Development
09	solow-growth-model	Solow Growth Model	A neoclassical growth model where technological progress, capital accumulation, and population growth determine economic growth.	Economic Growth
10	endogenous-growth-theory	Endogenous Growth Theory	A growth theory developed in the 1980s that endogenously explains technological progress within the economic system.	Economic Growth