philmophlegm: (adamsmith)
[personal profile] philmophlegm
This is something that people have asked me in the past. Of course my view is that basic introductory economics should be taught as a core subject in school. I had mandatory music, drama, needlework, metalwork, woodwork and religious education, all of which strike me as less important parts of education than understanding how people behave and interact. But that's a subjective opinion, and this is an objective educational post.

So, where to begin?


Where I began was my A-level textbook, 'Economics' by Begg, Fischer & Dornbusch. It's now in its 11th edition (I've got the 2nd edition) and is the standard text for a lot of university Economics degrees. It worked for me, but it's one of those things where the only reason you'd do the A-level was if you wanted to go on and do the degree. So it's very dry, it's very maths-based and it's full of curves. ("My god...it's full of...curves", as Bowman doesn't say in 2001.) It's a dull and difficult read. It's very long, very heavy and very expensive. So I wouldn't recommend it to someone who has no intention of doing an Economics degree but just wants to learn a bit more about how the world works.

Other university-level textbooks have the same problem for the newbie or the person coming from other fields - too dry, too much maths, too many curves. So, I'd avoid them.

What about going back to the beginning? Adam Smith's 'The Wealth of Nations' is surprisingly readable for a book that is as old as the United States. It's nicely organised and will seem more modern to many readers than it really is. If you were going to start with Adam Smith and then move on to other great economics thinkers, then fine, but this is not the quick way to get a grasp of economics. You have to bear in mind that The Wealth of Nations was simply the beginning. (You could argue that there are earlier works which form part of the discipline, but you have to start somewhere, and Smith advanced the study so much that he's a decent choice for Economist Zero.) So, I wouldn't recommend The Wealth of Nations as an introduction to Economics.

So where would I start? Well, first of all, I'd suggest dipping into one of the many mainstream books that show you how to think like an economist. There are lots of these. They follow a standard pattern - each chapter looks at some phenomenon of the modern world, and then explains why that phenomenon occurs the way it does using microeconomics. Like I said, there are lots of them about - 'Everlasting Light Bulbs - How Economics Illuminates the World' by John Kay, Robert H Frank's 'The Economic Naturalist - Why Economics Explains Almost Everything' and Steven E. Landsburg's 'The Armchair Economist - Economics and Everyday Life' are all very readable, lightweight paperbacks that will teach you how to think about everyday phenomena like prices and wages and supply and demand and correlation and causation in the way that an economist would. My favourite books in this genre are Tim Harford's 'The Undercover Economist' and the most famous of these books - 'Freakonomics - A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything', by Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner. (I'm not sure why Freakanomics is by a "rogue" economist - the economics in the anecdotes is pretty mainstream really, only the anecdotes themselves are unusual.) Most of the examples in Freakonomics are American, whereas The Undercover Economist is mostly British. I would highly recommend either (the Freakanomics sequel 'Superfreakonomics' isn't bad either).

Those books won't help you in understanding issues you see on the news though, so they might not ultimately be what you're looking for. I still think they're a very good place to start, and if you can understand how economists think on issues like abortion and crime rates or why women wear high heels, then you're well on the way to understanding the pros and cons of fixed exchange rates or minimum wages. A very popular answer to my original question would be Henry Hazlitt's 1946 'Economics in One Lesson', which is well-written, delightfully short, full of common sense and free. (Well, as a famous economist almost once said, "there's no such thing as a free economics textbook", but you get the idea...) Again, I highly recommend 'Economics in One Lesson', but not quite as unreservedly as some of its fans would.

You see there is a problem with Hazlitt in that he was an Austrian. I don't mean that he was from Austria, I mean that Hazlitt was a member of the 'Austrian School' of economists. And one thing that the Austrians are really not big on is macroeconomics. Austrians tend to see most macro-effects in the economy as deriving from micro-factors. So if you read just 'Economics in One Lesson', you really aren't going to learn much about macroeconomics. And I think if you want to have a view on, let's say, inflation or interest rates or exchange rate policy or quantitative easing, then you will need some macroeconomics.

The trouble is that there aren't too many books out there that are good introductions to macroeconomics for the newbie that aren't tainted by the views of the author (often their political views as well as their views on economics) and thus are rather more opinion-based than you would like as an introduction. However, I reckon I have a good couple of recommendations for you.

Once you've read something like Freakonomics or The Undercover Economist, and maybe after you've read Economics in one Lesson, you need a) some appreciation of how economics developed and b) different views on macroeconomics. Here's what you need - The Cartoon Introduction to Economics - Volume One: Microeconomics and Volume Two: Macroeconomics, by Grady Klein and Yoram Bauman ("The World's Only Stand-up Economist"). Really easy to read and understand, balanced in their coverage of hotly debated issues. These two brilliant books deserve to be as famous as Economics in One Lesson or Freakonomics.

So there you go, there's my reading list:

  • The Undercover Economist or Freakonomics

  • Economics in One Lesson

  • The Cartoon Introduction to Economics

Read those (and my blog posts of course) and you'll be very well informed about Economics.


Date: 2016-03-21 11:40 pm (UTC)
marycatelli: (Default)
From: [personal profile] marycatelli
Freakonomics suffers from my knowing that one of their cases is wrong. It's the "abortion prevents crime" which suffers from the fact that you can commit crime your entire life but can only be aborted in a nine month window. It argues from the general crime rate, whereas what you should look at is the crime rate by cohort.

Unfortunately for their argument, juvenile crime exploded in the culled cohorts; the big decline was driven first by the older cohorts who weren't affected, and then by the younger cohorts being locked in prison.

Profile

philmophlegm: (Default)
philmophlegm

March 2017

S M T W T F S
   1234
56 7891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 17th, 2025 09:26 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios