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LOCATION THEORY: A theoretical framework for studying the location decisions made of firms and households based on transportation cost and spatial differences in the accessibility of inputs and markets for outputs. Location theory, developed with noted contributions from August Losch, Alfred Weber, Johann von Thunen, Walter Christaller, and Walter Isard, explicitly considers the cost of transportation in the production and consumption choices made by firms and households. Location theory has been used to explain urban density, labor migration, and land use.

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SEVEN ECONOMIC RULES

A set of seven fundamental notions that reflect the study of economics and how the economy operates. They are: (1) scarcity, (2) subjectivity, (3) inequality, (4) competition, (5) imperfection, (6) ignorance, and (7) complexity.

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APLS

RED AGGRESSERINE
[What's This?]

Today, you are likely to spend a great deal of time calling an endless list of 800 numbers hoping to buy either car battery jumper cables or a dozen high trajectory optic orange golf balls. Be on the lookout for defective microphones.
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This isn't me! What am I?

The penny is the only coin minted by the U.S. government in which the "face" on the head looks to the right. All others face left.
"Nobody can be successful unless he loves his work. "

-- David Sarnoff, TV pioneer

JLE
Journal of Law and Economics
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