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  1. Edmund S. Phelps, 1992. " Consumer Demand and Equilibrium Unemployment in a Working Model of the Customer-Market Incentive-Wage Economy ," The Quarterly Journal of Economics, President and Fellows of Harvard College, vol. 107 (3), pages 1003-1032. Hoon, Hian Teck & Phelps, Edmund S, 1992.

  2. Edmund Phelps a Ernesto Zedillo. Edmund Strother Phelps (* 26. júl 1933, Evanston, Illinois, USA) je americký profesor ekonómie a nositeľ Nobelovej ceny ( Ceny Švédskej ríšskej banky za ekonómiu na pamiatku Alfreda Nobela) z roku 2006. V počiatkoch kariéry sa dostal do povedomia vďaka skúmaniu zdrojov ekonomického rastu, ktoré ...

  3. Edmund Phelps Designing Inclusion: Tools to Raise Low-end Pay and Employment in Private Enterprise Dynamism: The Values That Drive Innovation, Job Satisfaction, and Economic Growth

  4. Edmund Phelps. Edmund Strother Phelps ( Evanston, 26 luglio 1933) è un economista statunitense, considerato capostipite dei neo-keynesiani . Il 9 ottobre del 2006 è stato insignito del Premio Nobel per l'economia - come recita la motivazione - per «aver chiarito la comprensione delle relazioni tra gli effetti a breve ed a lungo termine delle ...

  5. Sr. Dr. Edmund Phelps. Edmund Phelps, ganador del Premio Nobel de Economía en 2006, es Director del Centro de Capitalismo y Sociedad de la Universidad de Columbia. Nacido en 1933, pasó su infancia en Chicago y, desde los seis años, creció en Hastings-on Hudson, N.Y. Asistió a escuelas públicas, obtuvo su B.A. de Amherst (1955) y obtuvo su ...

  6. Edmund Phelps, the winner of the 2006 Nobel Prize in Economics, is Director of the Center on Capitalism and Society at Columbia University. Born in 1933, he spent his childhood in Chicago and, from age six, grew up in Hastings-on Hudson, N.Y. He attended public schools, earned his B.A. from Amherst (1955) and got his Ph.D. at Yale (1959).

  7. 15 de ago. de 2020 · Mass Flourishing: How Grassroots Innovation Created Jobs, Challenge, and Change Edmund S. Phelps. In this book, Nobel Prize-winning economist Edmund Phelps draws on a lifetime of thinking to make a sweeping new argument about what makes nations prosper--and why the sources of that prosperity are under threat today.