ECONOMICS: PRIVATE AND PUBLIC CHOICE, Fifteenth Edition, reflects current economic conditions, enabling students to apply economic concepts to the world around them. The up-to-date text includes analysis and explanation of measures of economic activity in today's market. It also includes highlights of the recession of 2008-2009, and an in-depth look at the lives and contributions of notable economists. ECONOMICS: PRIVATE AND PUBLIC CHOICE dispels common economic myths. The text uses the invisible hand metaphor to explain economic theory, demonstrating how it works to stimulate the economy. Important Notice: Media content referenced within the product description or the product text may not be available in the ebook version.
The book also discusses consumer decision making, the elasticity of demand, and how income influences demand. The text analyzes costs and producer decisions, the firm under pure competition, and how a competitive model functions.
ECONOMICS: PRIVATE AND PUBLIC CHOICE dispels common economic myths. The text uses the invisible hand metaphor to explain economic theory, demonstrating how it works to stimulate the economy.
Economics Coursebook: Private and Public Choice
The fully revised and updated third edition of the classic Common Sense Economics.
Economics: Private and Public Choice
Softbound - New, softbound print book.
Throughout this text, the authors integrate applications and real-world data in an effort to make the basic concepts of economics come alive for the reader.
... Michael White , St. Cloud State University ; Dona A. Derr , Rutgers College ; Don Millman , Itasca Community College ; Nathan Eric Hampton , St. Cloud State University ; D. E. Morris , University of New Hampshire ; James T. Bennett ...
" The book is suitable for students of economics and business, sociologists, general readers interested in real-world economics, and policy makers involved in national economic development.
Neither liberal nor conservative, yet on the whole skeptical about governmental involvement in the epidemic, this book is certain to be controversial, but its injection of hard-headed economic thinking into the AIDS debate is long overdue.