User:Nick Gardner

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Revision as of 08:07, 20 December 2009 by imported>Nick Gardner (→‎Medium priority)
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Biography:

Nick Gardner is retired after successive careers as a flight test observer, as a professional engineer, and as an economist. He has worked in two industrial companies, a research establishment and four government departments; and served as economic adviser to four cabinet ministers. As an engineer he was engaged in aeronautical research and development including the development of new manufacturing processes, he took part in the Concorde project and he visited the Apollo project. As an economist he evaluated numerous aerospace projects, he played a part in the development of UK competition policy and he managed a major statistical series. During his working life he contributed to several professional journals and symposiums on subjects including spotwelding, launching aid and project management, and since retirement he has written a book on contemporary economic history and another on competition policy that was published in three editions. His latest book is Mistakes – how they have happened and how some might be avoided. Nick is mainly interested in how people form beliefs and how they make decisions. Pursuit of that interest has led him to explore published work in the fields of philosophy, cognitive psychology, neuroscience, genetics, economics, politics, media studies, religion and decision theory. His CZ contributions have mainly been on the economics and his principal CZ objective has been to attract constructive criticism from fellow-economists and, with their help, to develop articles that provide a wide range of readers with a clearer perception of economic issues than can be gained from other sources.

Planned contributions

Articles to complete or update

High priority

Medium priority

Low priority

  • Market: A term used in commerce and economics to denote a conjunction of buyers and sellers. [e] add efficient market hypothesis

New articles

  • Impossibility theorem: The proof that it is impossible to devise a rational democratic voting system that is guaranteed to produce a consistent set of preferences for a group from the preferences of the people in the group. [e]
  • Developing Article Social choice theory: The study of systems of collective decision-making. [e]

Past Contributions

Nick has made substantial contributions to CZ articles on:-

Easily lost links

CZ: Ready for approval#Economics

CZ: The Editor Role