What is Experimental Economics?
Experimental economics is a branch of economics where experimental methods are applied in the study of economic theories and economic behaviors. This branch of economics relies heavily on data, laboratory-controlled and scientifically developed experiments in the study of economic behaviors and theories.
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
Related Topics
- Classical Economics
- Social Economics
- Neo-Classical Economics
- Demand-Side Economics
- Supply-Side Economics
- Neoliberalism
- Positive Economics
- Mathematical Economics
- Constitutional Economics
- Labor Economics
- Organizational Economics
- Development Economics
- Behavioral Economics
- Environmental Economics
- Evolutionary Economics
- True-Cost Economics
- New Keynesian Economics
- Managerical Economics
- Experimental Economics
- Welfare Economics