Mackenzie, Donald

Libros de: Mackenzie, Donald

Mostrando 4 libros encontrados. (1 páginas).


  • Material Markets "How Economic Agents are Constructed"

    Mackenzie, Donald

    Oxford University Press (2019)

    valoración

    • EAN: 9780198835301
    • Páginas: 240
    • Fecha de edición: 2019

    pvp.27,95 €

    Disponible entre 11 y 20 dias

    Financial markets, processes, and instruments are often difficult to fathom; the credit crisis highlights both their importance and their fragility. Donald MacKenzie is one of the most perceptive analysts of the workings of the financial ...

  • Chains of Finance "How Investment Management is Shaped"

    Arjalies, Diane-Laure Grant, Philip Hardie, Iain Mackenzie, Donald Svetlova, Ekaterina

    Oxford University Press (2017)

    valoración

    • EAN: 9780198802945
    • Páginas: 224
    • Fecha de edición: 2017

    pvp.42,95 €

    Disponible entre 11 y 20 dias

    Investment is no longer a matter of individual savers directly choosing which shares or bonds to buy. Rather, most of their money flows through a 'chain': an often extended sequence of intermediaries. What goes on ...

  • An Engine, no a Camera "How Financial Models Shape Markets"
    How Financial Models Shape Markets

    Mackenzie, Donald

    Mit Press (2008)

    valoración

    • EAN: 9780262633673
    • Páginas: 392
    • Fecha de edición: 2008

    pvp.26,15 €

    Disponible entre 11 y 20 dias

    In An Engine, Not a Camera, Donald MacKenzie argues that the emergence of modern economic theories of finance affected financial markets in fundamental ways. These new, Nobel Prize-winning theories, based on elegant mathematical models of ...

  • Do Economists Make Markets?. On The Performativity Of Economics.

    Mackenzie, Donald Muniesa, Fabian Siu, Lucia

    Princeton University Press (2007)

    valoración

    • EAN: 9780691130163
    • Páginas: 360
    • Fecha de edición: 2007

    pvp.54,55 €

    Disponible entre 11 y 20 dias

    Around the globe, economists affect markets by saying what markets are doing, what they should do, and what they will do. Increasingly, experimental economists are even designing real-world markets. But, despite these facts, economists are ...