Since no one seems to take Latin any more, you probably cannot translate "ceteris paribus." Real economists frequently cite the need to explicitly state the assumption that "all other things are equal ...
“Ceteris paribus, literally ‘holding other things constant,’ is a Latin phrase that is commonly translated into English as ‘all else being equal.’ A dominant assumption in mainstream economic thinking ...
A certain Latin phrase brings back memories of macroeconomic and microeconomic studies at the University of Helsinki back in the 1990's. Those were good years and life seemed kinder and much more ...
From my earliest days as an economic major, almost at the same time as I was studying supply and demand, I learned the phrase ceteris paribus which translates into “all other things remaining the same ...
This is a preview. Log in through your library . Abstract We interpret ceteris paribus conditions as the conditions necessary to conducting an experiment. "Ceteris paribus" is thus not a hold-all for ...
June seems an appropriate time for my annual ceteris paribus festival. You haven’t heard of that one? It’s the event that celebrates the beauty of economic theory and allows us to lift our glass ...
Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie, Vol. 42, No. 2 (November 2011), pp. 207-218 (12 pages) The problem of ceteris paribus clauses and Hempel's ...
August is normally a time for vacation and reinvigoration, for this author who is now in attendance at the Mont Pelerin Society meeting in Sweden. But while he is speaking of the virtues of free ...
Economic policy formulation is based on ?ceteris paribus? assumption ? a Latin term meaning ?all other things being equal or held constant?. In reality this is never the case, and monetary policy ...
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