--%>

Bad motives make wrong decisions

Which economic philosopher would have been most probably to have asserted which people do not have bad motives while they make wrong decisions; quite, they make bad computations? (w) Thomas Malthus. (x) Sir Edwin Chadwick. (y) Nassau Senior. (z) Jeremy Bentham.

Hello guys I want your advice. Please recommend some views for above economics problems.

   Related Questions in Public Economics

  • Q : Comunity engagement and education

    identify the modes employed in the management of comunity ECD programes in your community and explain them in the following lines 1 sole proprietorship and corporation 2 NGO mode 3 donor managed and ommunity owned

  • Q : Self-interested behaviour in economics

    Several critics of our economic system contend such that self-interested behavior is not intrinsic, although that people are taught to be "selfish" through our society's stress within competition. Such critics argue that when we encouraged cooperation as much as we cu

  • Q : Better off and worse off condition in

    When an economic change makes ten percent of the population better off and has no consequence on the economic welfare of the other ninety percent, in that case: (w) the community is better off. (x) the community is worse off. (y) community economic welfare does not ch

  • Q : Define much of a good as need at zero

    I need a good answer on the topic of free good in economic. Please give me your suggestion that when all people can consume as much of a good as they desire at zero cost, this is a: (w) welfare good. (x) bonus for buying something else. (y) surplus su

  • Q : Usefulness of Positive Economics Please

    Please help me to solve the problem that is given below: Positive economics is MOST helpful within finding if: (i) Particular economic goals are good or not. (ii) A set of national goals is desirable. (iii) Specific economic t

  • Q : Hedonistic calculus–regulation of human

    Social welfare is exploited while a “hedonistic calculus” regulates all human action as per the interventionist “liberal”: (i) John Stuart Mill. (ii) Thorstein Veblen. (iii) Milton Friedman. (iv) Karl Marx. (v)

  • Q : Determine when a good is scarce A good

    A good is scarce when: (1) individuals are willing to pay a positive price for more of this. (2) this is socially but not individually beneficial. (3) individuals are willing to pay to have this not produced. (4) more is obtainable at

  • Q : Define the economic theories Economic

    Economic theories are: (w) true with definition. (x) generally excellent in theory but wrong during practice. (y) made up of generalizations regarding economic behavior. (z) normative, whereas economic policy is more positive.

    Q : Weak assumptions

    Philosopher-mathematician Henri Poincaré asserted, “When a phenomenon admits of a total mechanical explanation this will admit of any infinity of others that will account equally well for all of the peculiarities disclosed through the experiment.” O

  • Q : Reason of confronting problem of

    People whole the world confront the problem of scarcity at all times just because which one reason: (i) Greedy capitalist monopolies under-produce goods, (ii) International markets are plagued with flawed distribution, (iii) Restricted resources and t