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SYMBOL
LAST
BID
ASK
HIGH
LOW
NET CHG.
%CHG.
SPREAD
SOURCE
SPX
S&P 500 Index
7420.11
7420.11
7420.11
7532.17
7402.61
-91.23
-1.21%
--
--
DJI
Dow Jones Industrial Average
51492.54
51492.54
51492.54
52281.19
51392.58
-507.12
-0.98%
--
--
IXIC
NASDAQ Composite Index
26021.65
26021.65
26021.65
26511.55
25960.41
-354.69
-1.34%
--
--
USDX
US Dollar Index
100.000
100.000
100.080
100.090
99.960
-0.140
-0.14%
--
--
EURUSD
Euro / US Dollar
1.15170
1.15170
1.15177
1.15222
1.14995
+0.00168
+ 0.15%
--
--
GBPUSD
Pound Sterling / US Dollar
1.33115
1.33115
1.33125
1.33185
1.32793
+0.00226
+ 0.17%
--
--
XAUUSD
Gold / US Dollar
4319.23
4319.23
4319.62
4329.64
4254.40
+62.76
+ 1.47%
--
--
WTI
Light Sweet Crude Oil
74.790
74.790
74.825
75.640
74.507
-0.131
-0.17%
--
--

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Goldman Sachs: If Inflation Does Not Ease, The Federal Reserve Is Expected To Raise Interest Rates As Early As September

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The Main Egg Futures Contract Fell 100.00 Yuan During The Day, Currently Trading At 4577.00 Yuan/500 Kg, A Decrease Of 2.14%

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The Yield On Japan's 20-year Government Bonds Rose 1.5 Basis Points To 3.510%

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Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara: We Will Closely Monitor Market Dynamics And Guide Economic And Fiscal Policies As Appropriate

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Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara: The Impact Of The Weak Yen Must Be Fully Considered

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Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara: A Weak Yen Helps Improve Corporate Profits, But It Increases The Burden On Households

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The Most Active Caustic Soda Futures Contract Fell 2.00% Intraday, Currently Trading At 1966 Yuan/ton. The Most Active TSR20 Rubber Futures Contract Also Fell 2.00% Intraday, Currently Trading At 15360.00 Yuan/ton

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Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara: We Are Always Prepared To Take Necessary Actions In The Foreign Exchange Market

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Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara: No Comment On Foreign Exchange Levels

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Chinese Embassy In The Netherlands: Urges The Dutch Side To Cease Spreading False Information About China And Hyping Up The So‑called "China Threat" Narrative

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FAW Bestune Signs Strategic Cooperation Agreement With Egyptian State-Owned Automaker

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The Main Palladium Futures Contract Fell 2.00% During The Day, Currently Trading At 312.20 Yuan/gram

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The Main Fuel Oil Contract Fell 4.00% Intraday, Currently Trading At 3070.00 Yuan/ton

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The Most Active Coking Coal Futures Contract Fell 4% Intraday, Currently Trading At 1295 Yuan/ton. The Most Active Coke Futures Contract Fell Nearly 3% Intraday, Currently Trading At 026.5 Yuan/ton

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The Main Lithium Carbonate Futures Contract Fell By 2.00% During The Day, Currently Trading At 168,260 Yuan/ton

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China's Central Bank (PBOC) Announced Today That It Conducted 248 Billion Yuan Of 7-day Reverse Repurchase Operations, With Both The Bid And Winning Bids Amounting To 248 Billion Yuan. The Operating Rate Was 1.40%, Unchanged From The Previous Rate

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DBS: Gold Prices Will Trade In A Range In The Short Term

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Liao Min Meets Christopher Haynes, Chairman Of The Policy And Resources Committee Of The City Of London

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Bridgewater Associates Founder Ray Dalio: Despite The Large Amount Of Government Debt That Needs To Be Financed, Market Demand For This Debt Is Declining. This Decline In Demand Stems From Both Standard Supply And Demand Factors And Debt Holders' Concerns About Potential Sanctions

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Bridgewater Associates Founder Ray Dalio: The Monetary Situation Is Becoming Increasingly Dire. The US Government Is Currently Spending $7 Trillion, While Its Revenue Is Only About $5 Trillion, Representing An Overspending Of 40%

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    sonam flag
    Tom Moffitt
    @sonam After you gave the call it never came back to 4319-4316 levels so not sure how you are saying TP1 and TP2 hit . Advertise your work with common sense.
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    sonam flag
    Tom Moffitt
    @sonam After you gave the call it never came back to 4319-4316 levels so not sure how you are saying TP1 and TP2 hit . Advertise your work with common sense.
    @Tom Moffittand check 1 minutes candle market touch 4319
    sonam flag
    Tom Moffitt
    @sonam After you gave the call it never came back to 4319-4316 levels so not sure how you are saying TP1 and TP2 hit . Advertise your work with common sense.
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    sonam
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    4726115
    @sonam cảm ơn bạn. Tín hiệu của bạn rất chính xác
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    sonam
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    有sl问题不大
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    机会多的是
    77 flag
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    我看他昨晚冲高回落早上又冲高一定还是下等机会再抓一次空
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          5 Examples of Positive and Normative Economics in Real Life

          zhan chen
          Summary:

          Master the line between data and ideology. Explore 5 examples of positive and normative economics to sharpen your financial decision-making.

          Economic analysis shapes everything from personal investment portfolios to global monetary policy, but not all economic statements are built on the same foundation. Distinguishing between objective data and subjective values is essential for evaluating whether a proposed policy or financial strategy is based on measurable facts or ideological goals. By understanding the core boundaries between testable metrics and ethical judgments, individuals and policymakers can make more rational, clear-eyed decisions. This article explores the defining characteristics of both frameworks and breaks down five real-world scenarios to illustrate how they operate in practice.

          5 Examples of Positive and Normative Economics in Real Life

          What's the Difference Between Positive and Normative Economics?

          Positive economics deals with objective, verifiable facts and cause-and-effect relationships, while normative economics focuses on subjective value judgments and prescriptive policy recommendations. The fundamental difference between positive and normative economics lies entirely in empirical testability: a positive economic statement can be proven or disproven using data, whereas a normative statement rests on an individual's or society's moral framework.

          To determine which framework is being used, analysts evaluate whether a claim describes reality as it currently exists or prescribes how reality ought to be. Note that a positive statement does not have to be mathematically correct; it simply must be testable against real-world evidence.

          AttributePositive EconomicsNormative Economics
          Core FunctionDescribes "what is" and quantifies relationships.Prescribes "what should be" and evaluates outcomes.
          TestabilityFully objective. Claims can be validated or refuted using historical data or mathematical models.Wholly subjective. Claims cannot be scientifically proven or disproven.
          Key Indicators"Will," "causes," "is," "historically results in.""Should," "ought to," "fair," "too high," "unjust."
          Analytical OutputData forecasts, historical correlations, elasticity measurements.Policy recommendations, political platforms, ethical guidelines.
          Example ConceptMeasuring the exact percentage increase in the Consumer Price Index (CPI).Arguing that the government must act because inflation is hurting the working class.

          Why Does the Distinction Matter in Real Life?

          Failing to separate "what is" from "what ought to be" leads directly to flawed financial modeling and misguided public policy. When investors, voters, or corporate strategists confuse an empirical forecast with an ideological goal, they misprice systemic risk and allocate capital inefficiently.

          For example, a quantitative analyst stating "raising the corporate tax rate by 5% will reduce domestic capital investment by $100 billion" is operating strictly within the bounds of a positive economics definition. Even if the underlying calculation is flawed, the claim remains empirically testable. Conversely, a politician stating "corporations must pay a higher tax rate to ensure economic fairness" relies on a normative economics definition. The concept of "fairness" cannot be quantified on a balance sheet.

          This strict separation drives decision-making across three specific real-world domains:

          • Investment Analysis and Capital Allocation: Portfolio managers must strip normative bias from their forecasting models to generate alpha. An ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) investor might believe fossil fuels should be aggressively phased out (normative), but they must still allocate capital based on current global energy demand, grid capacity limits, and verifiable supply constraints (positive) to avoid underperforming the market.
          • Policy Evaluation and Legislation: Effective legislation requires lawmakers to separate the intended moral outcome of a policy from its actual statistical impact. Rent control debates routinely stall because proponents argue housing ought to be affordable (normative), while economists project the policy will reduce the overall supply of new housing units based on historical price ceilings (positive).
          • Central Bank Operations: Institutions like the Federal Reserve rely exclusively on positive metrics—such as the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index and nonfarm payrolls—to set the federal funds rate. They must isolate these objective data points from normative political pressure regarding how expensive mortgage borrowing "should" be for the average consumer.

          5 Real-Life Examples of Positive and Normative Economics

          To see how this boundary between data and values plays out in practice, we can examine several major policy domains. While positive economics measures the mechanical outcomes of a policy using empirical data, normative economics dictates whether those outcomes are socially desirable based on ethical judgments.

          Economic DomainPositive Economics Example (Testable Outcome)Normative Economics Example (Subjective Value)
          Minimum WageRaising the wage floor to $15/hr reduces teen employment by 2%.The government must mandate a $15/hr living wage.
          InflationA 50-basis-point interest rate hike lowers CPI by 0.5% over 18 months.The Fed should prioritize price stability over job growth.
          Tax PolicyRaising corporate taxes to 28% cuts capital investment by 1.5%.Wealthy corporations ought to pay a higher fair share.
          HealthcareMedicare-for-All shifts $3 trillion from private to public ledgers.Healthcare is a fundamental right that must be guaranteed.
          UnemploymentExtending jobless benefits by 13 weeks delays hiring by 1.5 weeks.Society must protect displaced workers during a recession.

          1. Minimum Wage: What the Data Shows vs. What Policy Should Do

          Minimum wage debates hinge on the tension between empirical employment elasticity and baseline living standards. The positive economics definition relies on observation and falsifiable claims to map this trade-off. For example, a positive statement notes that according to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), raising the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour would lift 0.9 million people out of poverty while eliminating 1.4 million jobs. This evaluates the quantifiable elasticity of labor demand.

          Conversely, the normative economics definition centers on prescriptive, value-based judgments regarding that exact same data. A normative statement asserts, "The government should enact a $15 minimum wage because no full-time worker should live below the poverty line." The positive analysis quantifies the mechanical trade-off—higher income for retained workers versus job loss for marginal workers—while the normative analysis decides which side of that trade-off is morally acceptable.

          2. Inflation: Measuring Price Changes vs. Deciding Who Should Bear the Cost

          Inflation analysis separates the mechanical tracking of purchasing power from the political choice of who suffers during economic stabilization. A positive economic statement models the mechanism: "A 50-basis-point increase in the federal funds rate reduces headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) by 0.5% over 18 months, while simultaneously increasing short-term borrowing costs for businesses." This is verifiable using historical macroeconomic data and demonstrates the Phillips Curve, which illustrates the inverse relationship between inflation and unemployment.

          The normative debate determines where on that curve a society ought to position itself. A normative claim argues, "The Federal Reserve should tolerate 3% inflation rather than inducing a recession, because job losses disproportionately harm low-income workers." This shifts the focus from how monetary policy works to whose economic pain the central bank should prioritize.

          3. Tax Policy: What Higher Taxes Do to Behavior vs. Whether They're Fair

          Tax economics divides the behavioral response to fiscal drag from the ethics of wealth redistribution. Positive economics relies on dynamic scoring to map revenue against deadweight loss. An analyst making a positive claim states, "Increasing the corporate tax rate from 21% to 28% generates an estimated $1.3 trillion in federal revenue over ten years but reduces domestic capital investment by 1.5%." This isolates the cause-and-effect relationship between marginal tax rates and corporate capital allocation.

          The normative equivalent ignores the behavioral friction to focus on distributive justice. A politician makes a normative statement by claiming, "Corporations must pay a 28% tax rate to ensure they contribute their fair share to national infrastructure." The concept of a "fair share" cannot be empirically tested; it requires a subjective agreement on ethical taxation.

          4. Healthcare Spending: Tracking Costs vs. Arguing Who Deserves Coverage

          Healthcare economics isolates the structural costs of medical delivery from the moral obligations of care access. A positive statement evaluates budgetary reallocation: "Implementing a universal Medicare-for-All system would shift $3 trillion annually from private premiums to federal tax liabilities, reducing administrative overhead by 8%." This claim maps financial flows and administrative friction without assigning a moral weight to either.

          The normative counterpart asserts a moral imperative, accepting the resulting tax friction as a necessary cost. The claim that "the United States ought to guarantee healthcare to all citizens regardless of their ability to pay" is pure normative economics. It prescribes a policy direction based on the belief that healthcare access is a human right, moving entirely outside the realm of objective cost tracking.

          5. Unemployment: Reporting the Rate vs. Debating Government's Responsibility

          Unemployment figures measure labor market slack, while the subsequent policy debate judges the state's duty to intervene. Positive economics tracks the precise mechanics of safety nets on reservation wages. A positive statement observes, "Extending unemployment insurance benefits by 13 weeks increases the average duration of a recipient’s job search by 1.5 weeks." This evaluates behavioral responses to subsidies using labor participation data.

          Normative economics dictates whether the welfare of the displaced worker outweighs the inefficiency of delayed labor market re-entry. The assertion that "the government must extend unemployment benefits during a recession to prevent undue hardship" cannot be proven true or false. It prioritizes the subjective value of worker protection over the measurable cost of reduced labor supply.

          How to Tell Positive and Normative Statements Apart on Your Own

          When analyzing these topics on your own, the defining boundary remains falsifiability. If a statement can be proven, disproven, or measured using empirical data, it utilizes positive economics. If it relies on value judgments, ethical metrics, or subjective definitions of fairness, it represents normative economics. Financial analysts and economists separate the two by applying the "data test": asking whether a comprehensive, perfect dataset could theoretically end the debate.

          What Language Clues Signal Positive and Normative Statements?

          Syntactic markers immediately reveal whether an author is describing economic reality or prescribing policy. Positive economics relies on definitive verbs and quantifiable metrics, while normative economics utilizes modal verbs expressing obligation or subjective adjectives.

          Linguistic Markers in Economic Analysis

          Statement TypeTypical Verbs & ModifiersAnalytical FunctionExample Phrase
          PositiveIs, was, will, causes, correlates, increases/decreases byStates a testable hypothesis, historical fact, or causal link."A 50-basis-point rate hike will reduce..."
          NormativeShould, ought to, must, fair, unfair, excessive, justifiableExpresses a policy preference, ethical stance, or value judgment."The central bank ought to prioritize..."

          To operationalize the difference between positive and normative economics, apply these two linguistic filters:

          • The Falsifiability Marker: Positive statements do not have to be true; they merely have to be testable. The claim "Cutting taxes by 20% increases government revenue by $5 trillion in one year" is mathematically false, but it remains a positive statement because historical data can invalidate it.
          • The Subjectivity Marker: Adjectives like "fair," "excessive," or "insufficient" guarantee a statement is normative. Data cannot quantify "fairness" without a pre-agreed, subjective threshold.

          Can the Same Topic Produce Both Types of Statements?

          Yes, every economic issue can be analyzed through both descriptive (positive) and prescriptive (normative) frameworks. Serious policy research typically sequences the two: analysts use positive economics to model the mechanical trade-offs of a decision, then apply normative frameworks to recommend a specific action based on a society's priorities.

          Below are distinct examples showing how a single policy area generates both types of analysis.

          Topic 1: The Minimum Wage

          • Positive: A 10% increase in the federal minimum wage correlates with a 1.5% decrease in total employment hours for workers under age 25. (Testable against labor statistics).
          • Normative: The government should mandate a $15 minimum wage because anyone working 40 hours a week deserves a living wage. (Relies on a moral definition of "deserving").

          Topic 2: Corporate Taxation

          • Positive: Reducing the statutory corporate tax rate from 21% to 15% will reduce federal tax revenue by an estimated $400 billion over a ten-year window, assuming static economic growth. (A quantifiable projection).
          • Normative: It is fundamentally unfair that multinational corporations utilize offshore tax havens to pay a lower effective tax rate than middle-class households. (A value judgment on tax equity—a classic normative economics example).

          Topic 3: Carbon Pricing

          • Positive: Implementing a $40-per-ton carbon tax will increase the average retail price of gasoline by 36 cents per gallon. (A mechanical cause-and-effect calculation).
          • Normative: Policymakers must implement a carbon tax immediately to force heavy emitters to pay for the environmental degradation they cause. (A prescriptive demand based on ethical responsibility).

          FAQs about 5 examples of positive and normative economics

          What is the key difference between positive and normative economics?

          Positive economics focuses on objective, fact-based statements that can be verified or tested using empirical data. In contrast, normative economics involves subjective opinions and value judgments about what economic outcomes are fair or desirable. Simply put, positive economics describes "what is," while normative economics describes "what ought to be".

          What are 5 examples of positive economics statements?

          Five examples of positive economics statements include stating that an increase in the minimum wage leads to a decrease in employment. Other examples are observing that progressive taxes reduce income inequality, and noting that unemployment benefits lower the incentive to work. Specific factual observations, such as measuring a nation's inflation rate at 2.5% or its unemployment rate at 3.7%, are also considered positive statements.

          What are 5 examples of normative economics statements?

          Five examples of normative economics statements include arguing that the government should increase taxes on the wealthy and that healthcare should be universally accessible. Additional examples are stating that unemployment benefits should be extended during economic recessions, or that the best way to handle crime is to hire more police. Finally, claiming that corporation taxes should be higher than personal income taxes is a normative statement because it relies on a value judgment.

          Why is the distinction between positive and normative economics important for economic policy?

          The distinction allows policymakers to clearly separate objective data analysis from subjective societal goals. Positive economics provides the factual foundation needed to understand how a specific policy will actually impact the economy. Meanwhile, normative economics is necessary to determine which policy outcomes are considered ethical, fair, or desirable based on cultural values.

          Conclusion

          Navigating complex financial and political landscapes requires a clear boundary between testable mechanics and subjective values. By consistently isolating positive economics from normative economics, analysts, investors, and voters can accurately assess the true costs and trade-offs of any given policy. Acknowledging "what is" before debating "what should be" ensures that capital allocation and legislative decisions remain grounded in reality rather than assumption.

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