ECON 1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 27: Organizational Learning, Lionsolver, Counterfactual Thinking

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11 Oct 2020
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There are two levels at which one can think about opportunities: a systemic level and an individual level. At the systemic level, one is concerned with the role of opportunities in an economic system and examines this role from an economic perspective. From this perspective, opportunities can be seen as an artefact of the constant tendency of the economic system towards equilibrium as it absorbs both endogenous and exogenous shocks. At the individual level, one is concerned with the substantive reality of opportunities for the particular individuals who pursue them and seeks to understand this from a social psychological perspective. From this perspective, opportunities can be seen as an artefact of the knowledge and beliefs of individual actors about possible future states: systemic level. Such systemic thinking has been dominated by the notion of equilibrium as an optimal allocation of resources towards which an economic system tends.

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