What is Constitutional Economics?
Constitutional economics is the study how constitutional law and interpretations constraint actions and choices by individuals.
More specifically, constitutional economics investigates the state constitutional law constrains individual activities and decisions and ultimately affect the economy.
What does Constitutional Economics Analyze?
Constitutional economics analyzes the following elements:
- How some of the constitutional rules came into existence and factors that led to their development through combined individuals’ inputs.
- How distinguishable rules are between collective and individual factors.
- Possibilities for further changes in constitutional rules.
- The economic effects that come as a result of the modified or developed change to rules.
Related Topics
- Economics
- Scarcity in Economics
- Division of Labor
- Microeconomics
- Macroeconomics
- Theory and Models
- Traditional Economy
- Command Economy
- Centrally Planned Economy
- Market Economy
- Free Market Economy
- Collaborative Economy
- Private Enterprise
- Mixed Economy
- Underground Economy
- Black Economy
- Government Market Regulation
- Capitalism
- Conscious Capitalism
- Communism
- Centrally Planned Economy
- Socialism
- Marxism
- Egalitarianism
- Plutocracy
- Neoliberalism
- Underground Economy
- Black Economy
- Globalization
- Imports and Exports
- Gross Domestic Product
- Fiscal Policy
- Social Economics
- Positive Economics
- Mathematical Economics
- Constitutional Economics
- Labor Economics
- Organizational Economics
- Development Economics
- Behavioral Economics
- Environmental Economics
- Evolutionary Economics
- True-Cost Economics
- Managerical Economics
- Experimental Economics
- Welfare Economics
- American Economic Association