It was more than 20 years ago that I first heard of Daniel Kahneman, who died recently at 90. This was shortly after he was first awarded the Nobel Prize for Economics (which is not a real Nobel Prize, but let’s not be pedantic). Kahneman’s ideas and, in fact, the entire field of behavioural economics came to widespread attention outside the field at around this time. Since then, Kahneman’s work, much of it in collaboration with Amos Tversky, has become very influential, not just in economics and finance, but across a wide range of fields, including psychology, political science, even medicine.
Valuations in Indian markets have become reasonable: Mirae's CIO Surana
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