scholarly journals CONSTRUCTION OF ENTERPRISE ECONOMIC DECISION RECOMMENDATION SYSTEM BASED ON COMBINED ASSOCIATION ANALYSIS MODEL

2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 249-254
Author(s):  
S. J. ZHAO

With the development of the information age and the network economy, enterprises need more and more decisions, and the difficulty and complexity of decision-making are constantly improving. The traditional centralized decision-making is no longer in line with the requirements of current social and economic development. Therefore, based on the in-depth study of conventional algorithms, this paper constructs a portfolio association analysis model for enterprise economic decision-making recommendation system, and uses the off-line test method to test the construction model. The test results show that the accuracy and recall rate calculated by the combination algorithm are higher than the common collaborative filtering algorithm. The enterprise economic decision recommendation system realizes the integration of economic mathematical model, operational research method and decision-making means, greatly improving the enterprise. The accuracy of scientifically feasible decision-making has improved the efficiency of business operations to a certain extent.

Author(s):  
Elena Reutskaja ◽  
Johannes Pulst-Korenberg ◽  
Rosemarie Nagel ◽  
Colin F. Camerer ◽  
Antonio Rangel

2013 ◽  
Vol 44 (5) ◽  
pp. 693-700
Author(s):  
Qin WANG ◽  
Xue-Jun BAI ◽  
Long-Jian GUO ◽  
De-Li SHEN

Author(s):  
Isabel Cepeda ◽  
Pedro Fraile Balbín

ABSTRACT This paper explores Alexis de Tocqueville's thought on fiscal political economy as a forerunner of the modern school of preference falsification and rational irrationality in economic decision making. A good part of the literature has misrepresented Tocqueville as an unconditional optimist regarding the future of fiscal moderation under democracy. Yet, although he initially shared the cautious optimism of most classical economists with respect to taxes under extended suffrage, Tocqueville's view turned more pessimistic in the second volume of his Democracy in America. Universal enfranchisement and democratic governments would lead to higher taxes, more intense income redistribution and government control. Under democracy, the continuous search for unconditional equality would eventually jeopardise liberty and economic growth.


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