Gå direkt till innehållet
What Economists Do: a Journey Through the History of Economic Thought
What Economists Do: a Journey Through the History of Economic Thought
Spara

What Economists Do: a Journey Through the History of Economic Thought

Läs i Adobe DRM-kompatibel e-boksläsareDen här e-boken är kopieringsskyddad med Adobe DRM vilket påverkar var du kan läsa den. Läs mer
Economists are sometimes praised and often chastised for what happens to the nation and the world economies. But what exactly do economists do to earn either praise or scorn? Author Attiat F. Ott with Sheila Vegari explores the answer to that question in What Economists Do: A Journey through the History of Economic Thought.Ott and Vegari outline the discipline of economics through the views and ideas of nine political economists of the seventeenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, and the twentieth centuries. The chronologies of ideas involve a journey through the history of economic thought from Adam Smiths The Wealth of Nations to Nobel Laureate James Buchanans The Calculus of Consent. This study reviews some of the arguments offered about economics as a science, presents the concepts of political economy, and discusses the principles of the macro economy as put forth by John Maynard Keynes in The General Theory. It also covers the idea of the public economy advanced by the classical economists and augmented by the work of Paul Samuelson, Richard Musgrave, Gordon Tullock and James Buchanan. It examines the role of the economist as a teacher, a political economist, and as an adviser to policy makers.What Economists Do: A Journey through the History of Economic Thought provides an intriguing picture of how economics has come of age through a chronology of ideas and principles that shape the worlds economies.
Undertitel
From the Wealth of Nations to the Calculus of Consent
ISBN
9781491701270
Språk
Engelska
Utgivningsdatum
2013-08-12
Förlag
Iuniverse
Tillgängliga elektroniska format
  • Epub - Adobe DRM
Läs e-boken här
  • E-boksläsare i mobil/surfplatta
  • Läsplatta
  • Dator