The economics of strategy and the strategy of economics

In recent years, several papers have examined the state of economics in university teaching in which the reasons for the relative decline of the discipline have been analysed. This process of self-examination has generated a long list of factors as the possible reasons. Two related developments mo...

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Main Authors: Bloch, Harry, Stromback, Carl
Format: Journal Article
Published: Economic Society of Australia 2002
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/45534
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author Bloch, Harry
Stromback, Carl
author_facet Bloch, Harry
Stromback, Carl
author_sort Bloch, Harry
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description In recent years, several papers have examined the state of economics in university teaching in which the reasons for the relative decline of the discipline have been analysed. This process of self-examination has generated a long list of factors as the possible reasons. Two related developments most frequently mentioned are the competition from the other commerce/business disciplines and the changing composition and aspirations of the student population. With the expansion of tertiary education, students are drawn from a wider ability range and many appear to have very specific vocational aims. Business schools, but not economics, have been well placed to meet the expectations of these students and have experienced rapid growth. This has left economics to 'eke out a marginal existence in business schools', as in the title of one recent contribution (Millmow 1997).
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-455342017-01-30T15:21:26Z The economics of strategy and the strategy of economics Bloch, Harry Stromback, Carl In recent years, several papers have examined the state of economics in university teaching in which the reasons for the relative decline of the discipline have been analysed. This process of self-examination has generated a long list of factors as the possible reasons. Two related developments most frequently mentioned are the competition from the other commerce/business disciplines and the changing composition and aspirations of the student population. With the expansion of tertiary education, students are drawn from a wider ability range and many appear to have very specific vocational aims. Business schools, but not economics, have been well placed to meet the expectations of these students and have experienced rapid growth. This has left economics to 'eke out a marginal existence in business schools', as in the title of one recent contribution (Millmow 1997). 2002 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/45534 Economic Society of Australia restricted
spellingShingle Bloch, Harry
Stromback, Carl
The economics of strategy and the strategy of economics
title The economics of strategy and the strategy of economics
title_full The economics of strategy and the strategy of economics
title_fullStr The economics of strategy and the strategy of economics
title_full_unstemmed The economics of strategy and the strategy of economics
title_short The economics of strategy and the strategy of economics
title_sort economics of strategy and the strategy of economics
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/45534