His primary areas of study are Microeconomics, Mathematical economics, Social choice theory, Oligopoly and Impossibility. Kotaro Suzumura interconnects Private information retrieval, Public economics and Revelation in the investigation of issues within Microeconomics. His Mathematical economics research includes elements of Consistency, Rationality, Pareto principle, Revealed preference and Axiom.
His Social choice theory research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Normative economics, Positive economics and Group decision-making. His work carried out in the field of Positive economics brings together such families of science as Social Welfare and Welfare. The Oligopoly study combines topics in areas such as Economic welfare, Spillover effect and Profit maximization.
His primary areas of investigation include Mathematical economics, Social choice theory, Positive economics, Microeconomics and Axiom. The study incorporates disciplines such as Pareto principle, Impossibility, Rationality and Transitive relation in addition to Mathematical economics. Kotaro Suzumura has researched Social choice theory in several fields, including Social Welfare, Consequentialism, Public economics and Welfare.
His Positive economics research incorporates themes from Normative economics and Welfare economics. He studies Oligopoly, a branch of Microeconomics. As a member of one scientific family, Kotaro Suzumura mostly works in the field of Axiom, focusing on Existential quantification and, on occasion, Perception.
The scientist’s investigation covers issues in Mathematical economics, Positive economics, Social choice theory, Axiom and Voting. His Mathematical economics study combines topics in areas such as Basis, Preference, Social preferences and Transitive relation. His studies in Positive economics integrate themes in fields like Social science, Consistency, Public economics, Revealed preference and Consequentialism.
His studies link Impossibility with Social choice theory. His Impossibility study integrates concerns from other disciplines, such as Social policy, International political economy, Rationality, Principle of rationality and Arrow's impossibility theorem. His Equity research is included under the broader classification of Microeconomics.
Kotaro Suzumura spends much of his time researching Mathematical economics, Axiom, Voting, Transitive relation and Preference. His Mathematical economics research focuses on Social choice theory in particular. His Transitive relation research incorporates elements of Discrete mathematics and Property.
The concepts of his Property study are interwoven with issues in Social relation, Social welfare function, Product and Ultrafilter. His research integrates issues of Consistency and Dodgson's method in his study of Preference. His Consistency study incorporates themes from Probability distribution, Euclidean relation, Binary relation, Expected utility hypothesis and Completeness.
This overview was generated by a machine learning system which analysed the scientist’s body of work. If you have any feedback, you can contact us here.
Cooperative and Noncooperative R&D in an Oligopoly with Spillovers
Kotaro Suzumura.
The American Economic Review (1992)
Rational choice, collective decisions, and social welfare
Kotaro Suzumura.
(1983)
Strategic Information Revelation
Masahiro Okuno-Fujiwara;Andrew Postlewaite;Kotaro Suzumura.
The Review of Economic Studies (1990)
Entry Barriers and Economic Welfare
Kotaro Suzumura;Kazuharu Kiyono.
The Review of Economic Studies (1987)
Individual Rights Revisited
Wulf Gaerther;Prasanta K. Pattanaik;Kotaro Suzumura.
Research Papers in Economics (1991)
Remarks on the Theory of Collective Choice
Kotaro Suzumura.
Economica (1976)
Introduction, Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare, Edited by Kenneth Arrow, Amartya Sen and Kotaro Suzumura, Amsterdam: Elsevier/North-Holland
Kotaro Suzumura.
Research Papers in Economics (2001)
Rational Choice and Revealed Preference
Kotaro Suzumura.
The Review of Economic Studies (1976)
Impossibility theorems without collective rationality
Douglas H. Blair;Georges Bordes;Jerry S. Kelly;Kotaro Suzumura;Kotaro Suzumura.
Journal of Economic Theory (1976)
On the Consistency of Libertarian Claims
Kotaro Suzumura.
The Review of Economic Studies (1978)
If you think any of the details on this page are incorrect, let us know.
We appreciate your kind effort to assist us to improve this page, it would be helpful providing us with as much detail as possible in the text box below:
University of Montreal
Harvard University
University of California, Riverside
Paris School of Economics
Autonomous University of Barcelona
Stanford University
Cornell University
University of Oslo
Harvard University
London School of Economics and Political Science
Cornell University
National University of Singapore
University of California, Santa Barbara
Singapore University of Technology and Design
University of Sfax
University of Santiago de Compostela
University of Alberta
Indian Institute of Chemical Technology
Russian Academy of Sciences
Freie Universität Berlin
Federal University of Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Aix-Marseille University
Princeton University
Royal Holloway University of London
University of California, San Diego