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Economics 10th edition [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 960 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 252x216x31 mm, kaal: 1549 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Aug-2016
  • Kirjastus: McGraw-Hill Education
  • ISBN-10: 125925545X
  • ISBN-13: 9781259255458
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 960 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 252x216x31 mm, kaal: 1549 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Aug-2016
  • Kirjastus: McGraw-Hill Education
  • ISBN-10: 125925545X
  • ISBN-13: 9781259255458
Teised raamatud teemal:
Colanders Economics 10e is specifically designed to help todays students succeed in the principles of economics course and grasp economic concepts they can apply in their daily lives. Colanders trademark colloquial approach focuses on modern economics, institutions, history, and modeling, and is organized around learning objectives to make it easier for students to understand the material and for instructors to build assignments within Connect. Through Connect and Smartbook students will find engaging activities, helpful tutorial videos, and learning resources at that moment of need. Connect is the only integrated learning system that empowers students by continuously adapting to deliver precisely what they need, when they need it, and how they need it, so that your class time is more engaging and effective.
PART I INTRODUCTION: THINKING LIKE AN ECONOMIST 
1  Economics and Economic Reasoning 4
2  The Production Possibility Model, Trade, and Globalization 24
Appendix: Graphish: The Language of Graphs 42
3   Economic Institutions 51
Appendix: The History of Economic Systems 71
4   Supply and Demand 77
5   Using Supply and Demand 100
Appendix: Algebraic Representation of Supply, Demand, and Equilibrium 116


PART II MICROECONOMICS 
I THE POWER OF TRADITIONAL ECONOMIC MODELS
6   Describing Supply and Demand: Elasticities 122
7   Taxation and Government Intervention 142
8   Market Failure versus Government Failure 162
8W   Politics and Economics: The Case of Agricultural Markets 183
II INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC POLICY ISSUES
9   Comparative Advantage, Exchange Rates, and Globalization 184
10   International Trade Policy 203
III PRODUCTION AND COST ANALYSIS
11   Production and Cost Analysis I 224
12   Production and Cost Analysis II 243
Appendix: Isocost/Isoquant Analysis 260
IV MARKET STRUCTURE
13   Perfect Competition 265
14   Monopoly and Monopolistic Competition 285
Appendix: The Algebra of Competitive and Monopolistic Firms 310
15   Oligopoly and Antitrust Policy 312
16   Real-World Competition and Technology 331
V FACTOR MARKETS
17   Work and the Labor Market 351
Appendix: Derived Demand 375
17W   Nonwage and Asset Income: Rents, Profits, and Interest 381
18   Who Gets What? The Distribution of Income 382
VI CHOICE AND DECISION MAKING
19  The Logic of Individual Choice: The Foundation of Supply and Demand 407
Appendix: Indifference Curve Analysis 427
20     Game Theory, Strategic Decision Making, and Behavioral Economics 432
Appendix: Game Theory and Oligopoly 452
VII MODERN ECONOMIC THINKING
21  Thinking Like a Modern Economist 457
22  Behavioral Economics and Modern Economic Policy 483
23  Microeconomic Policy, Economic Reasoning, and Beyond 501

PART III MACROECONOMICS
I MACROECONOMIC BASICS
24  Economic Growth, Business Cycles, and Unemployment 522
25  Measuring and Describing the Aggregate Economy 543
II POLICY MODELS
26  The Keynesian Short-Run Policy Model: Demand-Side Policies 567
26W  The Multiplier Model 593
27  The Classical Long-Run Policy Model: Growth and Supply-Side Policies 594

III FINANCE, MONEY, AND THE ECONOMY
28 The Financial Sector and the Economy 615
Appendix: A Closer Look at Financial Assets and Liabilities 636
29  Monetary Policy 642
30  Financial Crises, Panics, and Unconventional Monetary Policy 664
IV TAXES, BUDGETS, AND FISCAL POLICY
31  Deficits and Debt: The Austerity Debate 684
32  The Fiscal Policy Dilemma 700
V MACROECONOMIC PROBLEMS
33  Jobs and Unemployment 719
34  Inflation, Deflation, and Macro Policy 737
VI INTERNATIONAL MACROECONOMIC POLICY ISSUES
35  International Financial Policy 759
Appendix: History of Exchange Rate Systems 783
36  Macro Policy in a Global Setting 786
37 Structural Stagnation and Globalization 801
Appendix: Creating a Targeted Safety Net to Help Least Well Off 823
38 Macro Policy in Developing Countries 825

 
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.