Thinkwell's Economics with Steven Tomlinson lays the foundation for success because, unlike a traditional economics book, students actually like using it. Thinkwell works with the learning styles of students who have proven that traditional textbooks are not effective. Watch one Thinkwell video lecture and you’ll understand why Thinkwell works better.
This book is well known for its coverage of modern topics (Game theory, Economics of Information, and Behavioral Economics), clarity of its writing style and graphs, and integrated use of real world examples. The emphasis on relevance and application to both managerial and public-policy decision-making are focused goals of the book. This emphasis is accomplished by including MANY extended examples that cover such topics as the analysis of demand, cost, and market efficiency; the design of pricing strategies; investment and production decisions; and public policy analysis.
The Return of Depression Economics and the Crisis of 2008
What better guide could we have to
the 2008 financial crisis and its
resolution than our newest Nobel
Laureate in Economics, the prolific
columnist and author Paul Krugman?
What better guide could we have to the 2008 financial crisis and it resolution than our newest Nobel Laureate in Economics, the prolific columnist and author Paul Krugman?
The aim of the series is to cover topics in economics, mathematical economics and econometrics, at a level suitable for graduate students or final year undergraduates specializing in economics. There is at any time much material that has become well established in journal papers and discussion series which still awaits a clear, self-contained treatment that can easily be mastered by students without considerable preparation or extra reading.
Law, Economics, and Morality examines the possibility of combining economic methodology and deontological morality through explicit and direct incorporation of moral constraints into economic models. Economic analysis of law is a powerful analytical methodology. However, as a purely consequentialist approach, which determines the desirability of acts and rules solely by assessing the goodness of their outcomes, standard cost-benefit analysis (CBA) is normatively objectionable.