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When Prices Forget Value: Economic Lessons from the Tulip Bubble
The #Tulip_Bubble remains one of the most famous examples used in economic history to explain how markets can move away from #real_value. Although the event took place in the Dutch Republic in the seventeenth century, its lessons continue to be relevant for modern economies, financial markets, business education, and public understanding of #investor_behavior. The story is not important only because tulip prices rose and later collapsed. It is important because it shows how h
May 228 min read


The 1983/1984 Video Game Crash: What It Teaches Us About Quality, Trust, and Sustainable Growth
The 1983/1984 video game crash is often remembered through one simple story: the failure of E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial for the Atari 2600. In popular culture, this game became a symbol of poor planning, rushed production, and commercial disappointment. However, from an academic and economic perspective, the crash cannot be explained by one product alone. It was the result of a broader market problem: rapid growth without enough structure, quality control, consumer trust, or l
May 136 min read
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