2023 - Research.com Economics and Finance in Canada Leader Award
2022 - Research.com Economics and Finance in Canada Leader Award
His primary areas of study are Microeconomics, Mathematical economics, Oligopoly, Nash equilibrium and Property rights. In the field of Microeconomics, his study on Marginal cost overlaps with subjects such as Resource. He studies Game theory, a branch of Mathematical economics.
His Oligopoly research includes themes of Public economics, Trade barrier, Incentive, Optimal allocation and Industrial organization. His Nash equilibrium study combines topics in areas such as Stackelberg competition, Equilibrium level and Risk aversion. The concepts of his Game mechanics study are interwoven with issues in Differential, Competition, Capital and Public good.
Microeconomics, Welfare, Mathematical economics, Welfare economics and Incentive are his primary areas of study. His study in the field of Oligopoly, Sequential game, Nash equilibrium and Monopoly is also linked to topics like Resource. Ngo Van Long has researched Oligopoly in several fields, including Market structure, Industrial organization and Cournot competition.
His Nash equilibrium study often links to related topics such as Stackelberg competition. His studies in Welfare integrate themes in fields like Natural resource and Free trade. His Mathematical economics research is multidisciplinary, relying on both State variable and Optimal control.
Ngo Van Long focuses on Microeconomics, Incentive, Monopoly, Welfare economics and Profit. His Microeconomics study frequently draws connections to adjacent fields such as Consumption. His Incentive research incorporates themes from Dividend, Finance, Investment and Shareholder.
His study looks at the relationship between Monopoly and fields such as Duopoly, as well as how they intersect with chemical problems. Within one scientific family, Ngo Van Long focuses on topics pertaining to Green paradox under Welfare economics, and may sometimes address concerns connected to Neoclassical economics and Competition. The various areas that Ngo Van Long examines in his Oligopoly study include Market share and Nash equilibrium.
His primary scientific interests are in Microeconomics, Welfare, Labour economics, Nash equilibrium and Mathematical economics. His research integrates issues of Consumption and Public economics in his study of Microeconomics. His biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Natural resource, Welfare economics, Climate change, Renewable resource and Environmental economics.
His Labour economics research incorporates elements of Steady state and Capital. His Nash equilibrium research integrates issues from Global warming, Climate change mitigation, Differential game and Equilibrium selection. The Mathematical economics study combines topics in areas such as Norm, State variable and Mathematical optimization.
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Differential Games in Economics and Management Science
Engelbert J. Dockner;Steffen Jorgensen;Ngo Van Long;Gerhard Sorger.
Cambridge Books (2000)
Optimal Control Theory and Static Optimization in Economics
Daniel Léonard;Ngo van Long.
(1992)
International Pollution Control: Cooperative versus Noncooperative Strategies
Engelbert J. Dockner;Ngo Van Long.
Journal of Environmental Economics and Management (1993)
Dynamic Games in the Economics of Natural Resources: A Survey
Ngo Van Long.
Dynamic Games and Applications (2011)
Resource extraction under the uncertainty about possible nationalization
Ngo Van Long.
Journal of Economic Theory (1975)
A Survey Of Dynamic Games In Economics
Ngo Van Long;Ngo Van Long.
(2010)
Efficiency inducing taxation for polluting oligopolists
Hassan Benchekroun;Ngo van Long.
Journal of Public Economics (1998)
Vertical Integration, Foreclosure, and profits in the Presence of Double Marginalization
Géarard Gaudet;Ngo Van Long.
Journal of Economics and Management Strategy (1996)
Protectionist responses and declining industries
Ngo Van Long;Neil Vousden.
Journal of International Economics (1991)
Substitution between biofuels and fossil fuels: is there a green paradox?
R Quentin Grafton;Thomas Kompas;Ngo Van Long.
Journal of Environmental Economics and Management (2012)
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