Abstract
The turning point in economic science has now come, marked especially by triggering the biggest crisis since
the Great Depression of '29-'33, has called into question the need to reconsider the status of economic science and
finding ways in which it can increase its practical foundations. In the elaboration of this study I’ve took into account
the fact that beyond any abstract, formal and mathematical model, economics is a science, having the man in its center.
Furthermore, every economic process is based on the human being. But the way individuals behave does not follow
precisely the pattern predicted by classical and neoclassical models, but most of the time they are making decisions
under the influence of psychological factors. Starting from these assumptions I considered important to highlight a real
need for psychology in economic research. Therefore, the aim of this work is exclusively theoretical meant to show that
the study of psychological factors is necessary in economic research, because it allows a better explanation of the
economic problems and lead to obtaining results closer to reality than those who only take into consideration economic
factors. In this way I appealed to behavioral economics. This represents a new trend of economic thinking that reunites
psychology with economy. The thing that I observed after finishing the study is that behavioral economics can increase
the explanatory power of economics by providing more realistic psychological bases, because human behavior is not
only the subject matter of economics but psychology too.
Citation
ID:
235992
Ref Key:
gradinaru2014usvbehavioral