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Eponymous economic ideologies

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Marxism
alt=Black-and-white head shot of Marx|upright=1.05|thumb|Karl Marx, after whom Marxism is named
Keynesian economics
group of macroeconomic theories
aristotelianism
upright=1.0|thumb|Aristotle by Francesco Hayez, 1811
Georgism
thumb|right|Georgist campaign button from the 1890s. The cat on the badge refers to the slogan "Do you see the cat?" from a story by Congressman James G. Maguire. He compared understanding the Single Tax to being able to make out a cat in a picture of a landscape.
Reaganomics
thumb|thumbtime=16:09|Reagan gives a televised address from the Oval Office, outlining his plan for tax reductions in July 1981. Reaganomics (; a portmanteau of Reagan and economics attributed to Paul Harvey), or Reaganism, were the neoliberal economic policies promoted by Ronald Reagan, president of the United States from 1981 to 1989. These policies focused mainly on supply-side economics. Opponents (including some Republicans) characterized them as "trickle-down economics" or Voodoo Economics, while Reagan and his advocates preferred to call it free-market economics.
Marxian economics
school of economics
Abenomics
thumb|Prime Minister Abe discussing his economic policies in a speech in London, June 2013
Colbertism
thumb|1655 portrait of Colbert by Philippe de Champaigne
Classical Marxism
economic, philosophical, and sociological theories expounded by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels
Robinson Crusoe economy
economy with one consumer, one producer and two goods
Ricardian socialism
branch of classical economic thought
Neozapatismo
thumbnail|Flag of the Neozapatista movement Neozapatismo or Neozapatism (sometimes simply Zapatismo) is the political philosophy and practice devised and employed by the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (, EZLN), who have instituted governments in a number of communities in Chiapas, Mexico, since the beginning of the Chiapas conflict.
Gandhian economics
economic system of Mahatma Gandhi
proto-communism
overview of communist-oriented ideologies and practices prior to the works of Karl Marx
Neo-Ricardianism
The neo-Ricardian school is an economic school of thought that derives from the close reading and interpretation of David Ricardo by Piero Sraffa, and from Sraffa's critique of neoclassical economics as presented in his The Production of Commodities by Means of Commodities, and further developed by the neo-Ricardians in the course of the Cambridge capital controversy. It particularly disputes the neoclassical theory of income distribution. Robert Rowthorn, in his 1974 article, Neo-classicism, neo-Ricardianism and Marxism in the New Left Review (I, 86), coined the name. Franklin Delano Rooseve
Fourierism
thumb|right|200px|Fourierism is the set of ideas first put forward by French Utopian socialism|utopian socialist François Marie Charles Fourier (1772–1837). Fourierism () is the systematic set of economic, political, and social beliefs first espoused by French intellectual Charles Fourier (1772–1837). It is based on a belief in the inevitability of communal associations of people who work and live together as part of the human future. Fourier's supporters called his doctrines associationism. Political contemporaries and subsequent scholarship have identified Fourier's set of ideas as a form of
Iqtisaduna
Our Economy (, ) is a foundational work on Islamic economics by Shia cleric Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr.
Rogernomics
thumb|Roger Douglas in 1996
Sorelianism
thumb | right | alt=French philosopher and sociologist Georges Sorel (1847-1922) | French philosopher and sociologist Georges Sorel (1847-1922) Sorelianism is advocacy for the support of the ideology and thinking of Georges Sorel, a French revolutionary syndicalist. Sorelians oppose bourgeois democracy, the developments of the 18th century, the secular spirit, and the French Revolution, while supporting Classicism. A revisionist interpretation of Marxism, Sorel believed that the victory of the proletariat in class struggle could be achieved only through the power of myth and a general strike.