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DBpedia 2015-10

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Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { ?s ?p "An aggregate in economics is a summary measure describing a market or economy. The aggregation problem refers to the difficulty of treating an empirical or theoretical aggregate as if it reacted like a less-aggregated measure, say, about behavior of an individual agent as described in general microeconomic theory. Examples of aggregates in micro- and macroeconomics relative to less aggregated counterparts are: Food vs. apples Price level and real GDP vs. the price and quantity of apples Capital stock vs. the value of computers of a certain type and the value of steam shovels Money supply vs. paper currency General unemployment rate vs. the unemployment rate of civil engineersStandard theory uses simple assumptions to derive general, and commonly accepted, results such as the law of demand to explain market behavior. An example is the abstraction of a composite good. It considers the price of one good changing proportionately to the composite good, that is, all other goods. If this assumption is violated and the agents are subject to aggregated utility functions, restrictions on the latter are necessary to yield the law of demand. The aggregation problem emphasizes: How broad such restrictions are in microeconomics Use of broad factor inputs ("labor" and "capital"), real "output", and "investment", as if there was only a single such aggregate is without a solid foundation for rigorously deriving analytical results.Franklin Fisher notes that this has not dissuaded macroeconomists from continuing to use such concepts."@en }

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