Behavioral Economics
Behavioral Economics is an economic-behavior concept used to analyze preferences, incentives, and decision-making.
Behavioral economics and allocation-efficiency concepts used in finance and markets.
Behavioral Finance and Allocation Efficiency covers economic theory, expectations, incentives, agency problems, information frictions, behavioral finance, profit, cost, and capital-allocation concepts used in finance.
Use these pages when a theory term helps explain investor behavior, policy credibility, market efficiency, pricing frictions, corporate decisions, or model assumptions. It sits inside Economic Theory and Behavior, so readers can move up when the broader economics context matters.
This landing page points readers toward Behavioral Economics, and Pareto Efficiency. Choose the narrower page when the term changes the evidence source, calculation, institution, market convention, risk exposure, or decision being made.
| Area | Use it for |
|---|---|
| Behavioral Economics | Behavioral Economics is an economic-behavior concept used to analyze preferences, incentives, and decision-making. |
| Pareto Efficiency | Pareto Efficiency is an economic-behavior concept used to analyze preferences, incentives, and decision-making. |
Theory pages are educational and do not diagnose individual behavior or recommend a security, strategy, or policy.
Choose a subsection first. Deeper term pages live inside each subsection, which keeps large topic hubs readable.
Behavioral Economics is an economic-behavior concept used to analyze preferences, incentives, and decision-making.
Pareto Efficiency is an economic-behavior concept used to analyze preferences, incentives, and decision-making.