Anthropological Economics

Economics as as distinct field and discipline of study dates back to the days of Adam Smits, Alfred Marshall, David Ricardo. John Stuart Mill. Jean Baptiste Say, and others. Modern theory is mostly based on the neo-classical synthesis, and John Maynard Keynes, Paul Samuelson, Milton Freidman and others have contributed greatly to economic theory. However, the situation in developing nations is somewhat different. That is why we have proposed the field of Anthropological Economics, and have published many papers on it. The following are our papers on Anthropological Economics, which have again been published through Google books.

The following is the list of our publications on this subject

1 Introducing Anthropological Economics: The Quest for an Anthropological Basis for Economic Theory, Growth Models, and Policy Development for Wealth and Human Welfare Maximization ELK Asia Pacific Journal of Social Studies, 2020
2 Delineating “Cultural Limits” and “Anthropological Limits” as Central Theorems in the Social Sciences: Some More Useful and Practicable Techniques for Social Sciences Research Social Sciences Research Network (SSRN), 2024
3 Measuring Economic Performance against “Cultural Limits” and “Anthropological Limits”: Techniques and Strategies for Better Economic Planning and Economic Modeling Social Sciences Research Network (SSRN), 2024
4 Isolating Anthropological Factors that Determine Economic Performance or Non-performance: A Meritorious Way Forward in Anthropological Economics Social Sciences Research Network (SSRN), 2025
5 Expounding the Concepts of Socio-cultural Advantage, and Cultural and Anthropological Equilibrium: More Core Concepts in Anthropological Economics Social Sciences Research Network (SSRN), 2025
6 Propounding the Science of “Motivational Economics”: Another Crucial Component of the Science of Anthropological Economics Social Sciences Research Network (SSRN), 2025
7 Extolling the Virtues of Ethnography in Economic Planning and Decision-making: Mainstreaming “Econoethnography” in Anthropological Economics Social Sciences Research Network (SSRN), 2025
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