Essay Topic Hub

Economic Problems
Essays

408+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

408 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Economic problems encompass the recurring challenges that nations, communities, and institutions face in managing resources, growth, employment, and financial stability. This topic appears across a wide range of courses, including macroeconomics, economic history, political science, and public policy. What makes it academically compelling is its scope: economic problems are rarely isolated phenomena but instead intersect with political decisions, social structures, and historical events. The breadth of the subject invites students to examine how economic conditions shape and are shaped by broader forces, from wartime disruption to constitutional change to shifts in monetary policy.

The papers archived under this topic reflect a genuinely diverse set of approaches. Some take a historical angle, examining economic problems in Germany after World War I or tracing the history of economics as a discipline. Others are comparative, such as essays contrasting Roosevelt's New Deal with Obama's stimulus plan, or analyzing how different revolutions produced distinct economic outcomes. Case-study approaches appear as well, focusing on specific communities, industries like the music business, or policy figures. Some papers address social dimensions of economic problems, including the economic costs of drug and alcohol addiction or adult literacy challenges in African American communities.

A strong essay on economic problems begins with a clearly scoped thesis that identifies a specific problem, its causes, and its consequences rather than treating the subject in vague or sweeping terms. Evidence drawn from historical outcomes, policy results, and concrete economic data tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating symptoms with causes — a persuasive essay distinguishes between what an economic problem looks like and what actually produces it.

408 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
James Monroe: Early Years Born
Born on April 28, 1758, James Monroe was nurtured in Westmoreland County, Virginia by his Scottish father and his mother who was a descendant of Welsh. He had his early years of study, when he was 11 until he was 16, at…
Paper Doctorate
Flat (2006), Thomas Friedman Describes the New
In his book The World is Flat (2006), Thomas Friedman describes the new global capitalist economy and how it has affected the United States, as well as the type of skills and education that will be most in demand in the 21st Century. Even white-collar workers, managers and engineers have been doing poorly because of globalization, while unskilled and semiskilled blue-collar workers have been devastated. Construction and manufacturing workers with only a high school education have been losing ground in wealth and incomes to the elites for the last thirty years. This era has been far better for the creative and imaginative designers of new technologies than those performing routine tasks. For the last ten years, the majority of Americans were surviving through inflated credit, mortgage and asset bubbles, but when these collapsed in 2008-09 their true economic situation became stark.
Research Paper Doctorate
Tale an Intergalactic Space Mission From Earth
An intergalactic space mission from Earth tries to create a scientifically-based cooperative. The name of the ship is the Nefertiti, after the ancient Egyptian Queen. Captain Reeftart, his first mate Jane, and their…
Research Paper Doctorate
How the European Union Has Affected Ireland
EUROPA, the Internet informational site for the European Union, notes that one of the inspirations for the European Union was that, for centuries, "Europe was the scene of frequent and bloody wars," and it was hoped…
Research Paper Doctorate
Cultural Beliefs and Dietary Habits of Rural African Americans With Type 2 Diabetes
African-Americans in Louisiana & Type 2 Diabetes Rates
Essay Doctorate
Famine, Affluence, and Morality (1972) by Peter
Peter Singer addresses societal problems in his article titled, "Famine, Affluence, and Morality." He emphasizes the role of charity as being an obligation and a sense of duty that will bring end to poverty. He also views population control as a way of reducing the number of people who end up living in poverty. People who have more resources should support those that do not. If everyone takes on this idealistic point of view, Singer says that famine and extreme poverty could be ended.
Paper Masters
Analysis of contemporary research articles and their findings
In this paper, we are going to be studying the impact of a current news article on income disparities with other social issues. This will be accomplished by focusing on: the existence of the problem, what sustains it, the non-sociological explanations, how this is connected to other problems in the world and possible solutions. Once this takes place, is when we will provide specific insights that will show how these issues are creating a host of other challenges.
Essay Doctorate
Synthesis of electronic journal articles with textual analysis
¶ … rapid, post-World War II economic growth for the Japanese economy. A survey of the literature provides insights into management practices of Japanese firms, and offers direction for necessary changes that the…
Paper Undergraduate
Social entrepreneurship concepts and applications
A slum is a dwelling that is built on public or private real estates unlawfully. In Turkey, these illegal settlements started with movement of people from urban to rural areas in the 1950's. Main causes of the migration incident were subdivision of agricultural lands which was caused by the then heritage systems and lack of urban public services like health, education and culture among others in rural areas and job opportunities in metropolitan areas. Currently, on average 10% of buildings are slums in Turkey.
Research Paper Doctorate
The U.S. economy after 9/11
Robert T. Parry, President and Chief Executive Officer, the U.S. Economy after September 11: FRBSF Economic Letter