Finance:Ecodynamics

From HandWiki

Econodynamics is a part of applied economics. It covers knowledge on monetary value, the usage of money,[1] and the money flow.[2] It deals with labor, and capital.

Applications in modern economic modeling

The concept of econodynamics has been applied in macroeconomic models that examine interactions among debt, investment, and financial instability. Some researchers use the term to describe dynamic feedback systems in which monetary flows, credit expansion, and asset prices mutually influence each other over time. For example, studies of nonlinear financial dynamics show how credit growth and asset valuation can reinforce each other, potentially leading to instability in leveraged economies.[3] Similar approaches also examine how monetary circulation interacts with production and consumption flows, using system-dynamics models to understand long-run disequilibria in capitalist economies.

See also

  • M. King Hubbert on the Nature of Growth. Testimony to Hearing on the National Energy Conservation Policy Act of 1974, Subcommittee on the Environment of the committee on Interior and Insular Affairs House of Representatives, June 6, 1974.
  • Herman E. Daly: Economics in a Full World, Scientific American, September 2005, Vol. 293, Issue 3.
  • System Dynamics Society

References

  1. M. Grasselli, B. Costa Lima: An analysis of the Keen model for credit expansion, asset price bubbles and financial fragility, Mathematics and Financial Economics Volume 6, Issue 3, June 2012, pp 191-210
  2. Trond Andresen: Fundamental financial accumulation dynamics, Department of Engineering Cybernetics, NT, Trondheim, Norway, August 2009.
  3. "Financial instability and endogenous cycles". Hans Böckler Foundation. 2014. https://www.boeckler.de/pdf/p_imk_wp_139_2014.pdf.