Economic paradoxes
Sure! Here's a list of 100 economic paradoxes, each in one concise line: 💰 1–20: Classic & Popular Economic Paradoxes Paradox of Thrift – More saving reduces overall savings in a recession. Jevons Paradox – More efficiency in energy leads to more total consumption. Gibson’s Paradox – Interest rates rise with prices, not inflation. Lucas Paradox – Capital doesn’t flow to poorer nations as expected. Productivity Paradox – Tech improves, but measured productivity lags. Easterlin Paradox – More income doesn’t always mean more happiness. Voting Paradox – Rational people vote despite it not being individually beneficial. Leontief Paradox – The U.S. exports labor-intensive goods despite being capital-rich. Paradox of Value – Water is vital but cheap; diamonds are useless but expensive. Backfire Effect – People may double down on beliefs when given facts. Paradox of Plenty (Resource Curse) – Natural riches often lead to slower growth. Tragedy of the Commons – Shared resources get over...



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