Talk:Carnegie School

Latest comment: 10 years ago by 68.34.82.255

I removed the following comment on the page:

Disagreement - The so-called freshwater school of economics was monetarist, efficient markets and neo-classical. The Carnegie school described here is an institutional/evolutionary school of thought which is not freshwater by any means. The Carnegie school was built on Herb Simon's concept of bounded rationality which is an important cornerstone for institutional and evolutionary economics. The Cyert and March book, A Behavioral Theory of the Firm, is a towering achievement. Please see the descriptions of evolutionary and institutional schools of economic thought. I wish somebody knowledgeable in institutional/evolutionary economics would clean up these wiki pages on institutional/evolutionary/Carnegie schools of thought. They are essentially one school of thought.

This is helpful but belongs on the comment page and not in the article. To whomever wrote this: thank you for the insight. You seem like a good candidate to make the necessary sourced changes in the article to make it more accurate.68.34.82.255 (talk) 00:54, 11 August 2014 (UTC)Reply