Written in an informal colloquial style, this student-friendly Principles of Microeconomics textbook does not sacrifice intellectual depth in its quest for accessibility. The author's primary concern is to instill "economic sensibility" in the student. Colander emphasizes the intellectual and historical context to which the economic models are applied. This new edition offers improvements to this established and respected text including special Questions from Alternate Perspectives end-of-chapter questions that facilitate class discussion of differing school of thought in the discipline, and…mehr
Written in an informal colloquial style, this student-friendly Principles of Microeconomics textbook does not sacrifice intellectual depth in its quest for accessibility. The author's primary concern is to instill "economic sensibility" in the student. Colander emphasizes the intellectual and historical context to which the economic models are applied. This new edition offers improvements to this established and respected text including special Questions from Alternate Perspectives end-of-chapter questions that facilitate class discussion of differing school of thought in the discipline, and access to over 250 minutes of new videos from Paul Solman of the Lehrer NewsHour.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
David Colander is Distinguished College Professor at Middlebury College. He has authored, coauthored, or edited over 40 books and over 150 articles on a wide range of economic topics.He earned his B.A. at Columbia College and his M.Phil. and Ph.D. at Columbia University. He also studied at the University of Birmingham in England and at Wilhelmsburg Gymnasium in Germany. Professor Colander has taught at Columbia University, Vassar College, the University of Miami, and Princeton University as the Kelley Professor of Distinguished Teaching. He has also been a consultant to Time-Life Films, a consultant to Congress, a Brookings Policy Fellow, and Visiting Scholar at Nuffield College, Oxford.He has been president of both the History of Economic Thought Society and the Eastern Economics Association. He has also served on the editorial boards of the Journal of Economic Perspectives, The Journal of Economic Education, The Journal of Economic Methodology, The Journal of the History of Economic Thought, The Journal of Socio-Economics, and The Eastern Economic Journal. He has been chair of the AEA Committee on Electronic Publishing, a member of the AEA Committee on Economic Education, and is currently the associate editor for content of the Journal of Economic Education. He is married to a pediatrician, Patrice. In their spare time, the Colanders designed and built an oak post-and-beam house on a ridge overlooking the Green Mountains to the east and the Adirondacks to the west. The house is located on the site of a former drive-in movie theater. (They replaced the speaker poles with fruit trees and used the I-beams from the screen as support for the second story of the carriage house and the garage.) They now live in both Florida and Vermont.
Inhaltsangabe
I: Introduction: Thinking Like An Economist Chapter 1: Economics and Economic Reasoning Chapter 2: Trade, Trade-off's and Government Policy Chapter 3: The Evolving U.S. Economy in Perspective Chapter 4: Supply and Demand Chapter 5: Using Supply and Demand II: Microeconomics I: Microeconomics: The Basics Chapter 6: Describing Supply and Demand: Elasticities Chapter 7: Taxation and Government Intervention II: Foundations of Supply and Demand Chapter 8: The Logic of Individual Choice: The Foundation of Supply and Demand Chapter 9: Production and Cost Analysis I Chapter 10: Production and Cost Analysis II III: Market Structure and Policy Chapter 11: Perfect Competition Chapter 12: Monopoly Chapter 13: Monopolistic Competition, Oligopoly, and Strategic Pricing Chapter 14: Real-World Competition and Technology Chapter 15: Antitrust Policy and Regulation IV: Factor Markets Chapter 16: Work and the Labor Market Chapter 17: Who Gets What? The Distribution of Income V: Applying Economic Reasoning to Policy Chapter 18: Government Policy and Market Failures Chapter 19: Politics and Economics: The Case of Agriculture Markets Chapter 20: Microeconomic Policy, Economic Reasoning, and Beyond Chapter 21: International Trade Policy, Comparative Advantage, and Outsourcing
I: Introduction: Thinking Like An Economist Chapter 1: Economics and Economic Reasoning Chapter 2: Trade, Trade-off's and Government Policy Chapter 3: The Evolving U.S. Economy in Perspective Chapter 4: Supply and Demand Chapter 5: Using Supply and Demand II: Microeconomics I: Microeconomics: The Basics Chapter 6: Describing Supply and Demand: Elasticities Chapter 7: Taxation and Government Intervention II: Foundations of Supply and Demand Chapter 8: The Logic of Individual Choice: The Foundation of Supply and Demand Chapter 9: Production and Cost Analysis I Chapter 10: Production and Cost Analysis II III: Market Structure and Policy Chapter 11: Perfect Competition Chapter 12: Monopoly Chapter 13: Monopolistic Competition, Oligopoly, and Strategic Pricing Chapter 14: Real-World Competition and Technology Chapter 15: Antitrust Policy and Regulation IV: Factor Markets Chapter 16: Work and the Labor Market Chapter 17: Who Gets What? The Distribution of Income V: Applying Economic Reasoning to Policy Chapter 18: Government Policy and Market Failures Chapter 19: Politics and Economics: The Case of Agriculture Markets Chapter 20: Microeconomic Policy, Economic Reasoning, and Beyond Chapter 21: International Trade Policy, Comparative Advantage, and Outsourcing
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