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020 _a0-534-01083-0
040 _aGAM 2
_bINGLÉS
_cGAM 2
041 _aeng
050 0 0 _aLCC
245 0 0 _aEconomics for consumers
250 _a1st
260 3 _aUSA
_bWadsworth
_c1982
300 _a481
_bIlustraciones y tablas
_c18x24
490 0 _aSERIES
505 _aPART1: IS THE CONSUMER REALLY KING? 1 Chapter 1 The Consumer in a Free Society 3 The Consumer in a Free Economy 3 Who Is to Blame for America's Economic Problems? 5 Consumerism- A People's Movement Are Consumer Issues Changing in the 1980s? We Are All Consumers 10 How the Economy Operates 14 Satisfying Consumer Wants 16 Consumer Sovereignty? 17 The Dual Role of Consumers 26 Consumer Rights 27 Consumer Responsibilities Consumer Democracy 29 6 28 Chapter 2 The Complexity Consumer Demand of 33
520 _aThe election of a conservative, President Reagan. .n November 1980 and substantial cutbacks i federal and state consumer programs throughout the early 1980s have caused some to feel that consumerism is no longer the potent force that it was in the 1960s and 1970s. However, because consumerism is an economic force it will always be an integral part of our economy. As long as there is a healthy adversary relationship between the buyer and seller in our economy, there will be a need for consumerism, consumer economics. and consumer education, whose major purpose is to place the consumer on a more equal basis with the producer.
526 _aIngeniería en Administración
942 _2lcc
_cLIB
_e1st
_n0
945 _a1261
_dJenny Viridiana Quiroz Linares
_bJenny Viridiana Quiroz Linares
_c1261
999 _c10178
_d10178