Economic dynamics of epidemiological bifurcations
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2699612
DOI10.1515/snde-2019-0111OpenAlexW3121014583MaRDI QIDQ2699612
Kevin X. D. Huang, David Finnoff, David Aadland
Publication date: 19 April 2023
Published in: Studies in Nonlinear Dynamics and Econometrics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1515/snde-2019-0111
bifurcationrational expectationsindeterminacyeconomic epidemiologyself-fulfilling propheciesendogenous disease risk
Statistics (62-XX) Game theory, economics, finance, and other social and behavioral sciences (91-XX)
Cites Work
- Lyapunov functions and global stability for \(SIR\) and \(SIRS\) epidemiological models with non-linear transmission
- Infectious diseases and endogenous fluctuations
- A generalized model of social and biological contagion
- Stationary sunspot equilibria in a finance constrained economy
- Some discrete-time SI, SIR, and SIS epidemic models
- A simple SIS epidemic model with a backward bifurcation
- A disease transmission model in a nonconstant population
- Legal restrictions, ``sunspots, and cycles
- Lyapunov functions and global stability for SIR, SIRS, and SIS epidemiological models
- Is forward-looking inflation targeting destabilizing? the role of policy's response to current output under endogenous investment
- The Mathematics of Infectious Diseases
- INDETERMINACY AND PERIOD LENGTH UNDER BALANCED BUDGET RULES
- ON INTEREST RATE POLICY AND EQUILIBRIUM STABILITY UNDER INCREASING RETURNS: A NOTE
- On Endogenous Competitive Business Cycles
- The Solution of Linear Difference Models under Rational Expectations
- FISCAL POLICY, INCREASING RETURNS, AND ENDOGENOUS FLUCTUATIONS
- Rational Epidemics and Their Public Control
- Integrating Behavioral Choice into Epidemiological Models of AIDS
- INCREASING RETURNS AND THE DESIGN OF INTEREST RATE RULES
- Nonlinear dynamics and chaotic phenomena. An introduction
- A model for tuberculosis with exogenous reinfection
This page was built for publication: Economic dynamics of epidemiological bifurcations