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Computational Models in Political Economy

Kollman, Ken(Edited by)Miller, John H.(Edited by)Page, Scott E.(Edited by)
Part of the The MIT Press series
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Researchers are increasingly turning to computational methods to study the dynamic properties of political and economic systems.

Politicians, citizens, interest groups, and organizations interact in dynamic, complex environments, and the static models that are predominant in political economy are limited in capturing fundamental features of economic decision making in modern democracies.

Computational models - numerical approximations of equilibria and dynamics that cannot be solved analytically - provide useful insight into the behavior of economic agents and the aggregate properties of political systems.

They serve as a valuable complement to existing mathematical tools.This book offers research on computational political economy.

The focus is on theoretical models of traditional problems in the field.

Each chapter presents an innovative model of interaction between economic agents.

Topics include voting behavior, candidate position taking, special interest group contributions, macroeconomic policy making, and corporate decision making.

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Product Details
MIT Press
0262112752 / 9780262112758
Hardback
20/06/2003
United States
English
320 p. : ill.
23 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More