Demand-pull theory
Economic theory
In economics, the demand-pull theory is the theory that inflation occurs when demand for goods and services exceeds existing supplies.[1] According to the demand pull theory, there is a range of effects on innovative activity driven by changes in expected demand, the competitive structure of markets, and factors which affect the valuation of new products or the ability of firms to realize economic benefits.[2][3]
See also
- Demand-pull inflation
- Quantity theory of money
- Cost-push theory
References
- ^ O'Sullivan, Arthur; Sheffrin, Steven M. (2003) [January 2002]. Economics: Principles in Action. The Wall Street Journal:Classroom Edition (2nd ed.). Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458: Pearson Prentice Hall: Addison Wesley Longman. p. 341. ISBN 0-13-063085-3.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ Hartl, Jochen; Roland Herrmann (July 2006). "The Role of Business Expectations for New ProductIntroductions: A Panel Analysis for the German Food Industry" (PDF). The Role of Business Expectations for New Product Introductions. Journal of Food Distribution Research 37(2). Retrieved 2009-05-05.[dead link]
- ^ Popp, David. "Induced Innovation and Energy Prices" (PDF). The University of Kansas. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
- v
- t
- e
Economics
- Microeconomics
- Decision theory
- Price theory
- Game theory
- Contract theory
- Mechanism design
- Macroeconomics
- Mathematical economics
- Computational economics
- Behavioral economics
- Pluralism in economics
- Econometrics
- Economic statistics
- Experimental economics
- Economic history
- Agricultural
- Behavioral
- Business
- Cultural
- Democracy
- Demographic
- Development
- Digitization
- Ecological
- Education
- Engineering
- Environmental
- Evolutionary
- Expeditionary
- Feminist
- Financial
- Geographical
- Happiness
- Health
- Historical
- Humanistic
- Industrial organization
- Information
- Institutional
- Knowledge
- Labour
- Law
- Managerial
- Monetary
- Natural resource
- Organizational
- Participation
- Personnel
- Planning
- Policy
- Public
- Public choice / Social choice theory
- Regional
- Rural
- Service
- Socio
- Sociological
- Solidarity
- Statistics
- Urban
- Welfare
- Mainstream
- Heterodox
- American (National)
- Ancient thought
- Anarchist
- Mutualism
- Austrian
- Behavioral
- Buddhist
- Chartalism
- Chicago
- Classical
- Critique of political economy
- Democratic
- Disequilibrium
- Ecological
- Evolutionary
- Feminist
- Georgism
- Happiness
- Historical
- Humanistic
- Institutional
- Keynesian
- Malthusianism
- Marginalism
- Marxian
- Mercantilism
- Mixed
- Neoclassical
- New classical
- New institutional
- Physiocracy
- Socialist
- Stockholm
- Supply-side
- Thermo
- de Mandeville
- Quesnay
- Smith
- Malthus
- Say
- Ricardo
- von Thünen
- List
- Bastiat
- Cournot
- Mill
- Gossen
- Marx
- Walras
- Jevons
- George
- Menger
- Marshall
- Edgeworth
- Clark
- Pareto
- von Böhm-Bawerk
- von Wieser
- Veblen
- Fisher
- Pigou
- Heckscher
- von Mises
- Schumpeter
- Keynes
- Knight
- Polanyi
- Frisch
- Sraffa
- Myrdal
- Hayek
- Kalecki
- Röpke
- Kuznets
- Tinbergen
- Robinson
- von Neumann
- Hicks
- Lange
- Leontief
- Galbraith
- Koopmans
- Schumacher
- Friedman
- Samuelson
- Simon
- Buchanan
- Arrow
- Baumol
- Solow
- Rothbard
- Greenspan
- Sowell
- Becker
- Ostrom
- Sen
- Lucas
- Stiglitz
- Thaler
- Hoppe
- Krugman
- Piketty
- more
This economic term article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e