The Fundamentals of Economic Externality Modeling How the Economy Works and the Traditional Model (V)
Keywords:
Econ-Externality, Demand, Supply, Market Aftertaste, Weak Force, Isospin, Symmetry, Dirac Matrix, Neutral Weak CurrentAbstract
Both the economic processes at play and the significance of economic externalities are addressed in this article. Building on the foundation of weak force theory in physics, we provide a novel method of dynamic analysis for economic externality in Section 1. While looking at the macro-demand and individual micro-buyers or micro-sellers from a mesoscopic (intermediate scale) viewpoint, no differentiation is drawn between the two. In Section 2, two economic isospin models are constructed using the isospin modelling approach. Economic externality creates a tension between two impulses: the desire to succeed and the fear of failing. The second one concerns the connection between market behaviour and market leftovers, more specifically, market aftertaste. In Section 3, we go over the market's microstructural features, such as Dirac's equation and the market, the notation for Dirac γmatrices, and the chirality and spin characteristics of market elements. In Section 4, we take a look at the helical structure of supply chains, which in cludes things like CPT theorems, Penrose zigzag helical processes, and various ways of modelling economic externalities and weak interactions between buyers and sellers. Economic analysis of lepton weak currents, including the study of lepton neutral weak currents, externality mediations with Weinberg rotations, and extended externality are all covered in Section 5, which also delves into the electroweak model. The conventional model of economic dynamics is reviewed in Section 6, which concludes the paper.
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