All day
Santa Fe, New Mexico
As part of our celebration of the Institute’s 30th Anniversary, the Annual Trustees and Business Network Symposium will focus on the Institute’s longstanding interest in the economy as a complex system. Critical to this perspective are the realizations that: (a) economies are rarely, if ever, in equilibria; (b) humans are not completely rational utility maximizers; and (c) economies reflect the aggregate of many decisions and actions, by many different actors/agents, at many different scales, from the individual consumer, to the giant bank that’s “too big to fail”, to the actions of federal, state, and local governments. SFI speakers and collaborators will look backward to review and evaluate the accomplishments of the Institute’s alternative perspectives on economics and markets, and look forward to new developments and the extensions of current approaches.
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Complexities of the Economy
November 6, 2014
Capitalism Re-Defined (Part I): A Complexity Economics View of Growth and Prosperity
November 7, 2014
You Cannot Answer a Question if You Cannot Hear It - Removing the Wax from Game Theory's Ears
November 7, 2014
Complexity Economics: A Different Way to Look at the Economy
November 7, 2014
Predicting Technological Progress
November 7, 2014
Non-Elephants in Economics and Public Policy
November 7, 2014
Bringing Data to Life: Visualizing the Development of Economies, Cities and Culture
November 7, 2014
The Leverage Cycle and an Agent Based Model of the Housing Market
November 8, 2014
Another Stab at Economic Science
November 8, 2014
Changing Investment for the Better: Not What Is - What Can Be
November 8, 2014
Capitalism Re-Defined (Part II): Economics, Politics and Society
November 8, 2014