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Modern Principles of Economics

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Through vivid examples and content that's relevant to today, Modern Principles of Economics turns learning ecnomics into an engaging and memorable experience for you.

976 pages, Hardcover

First published November 15, 2007

37 people are currently reading
714 people want to read

About the author

Tyler Cowen

101 books853 followers
Tyler Cowen (born January 21, 1962) occupies the Holbert C. Harris Chair of economics as a professor at George Mason University and is co-author, with Alex Tabarrok, of the popular economics blog Marginal Revolution. He currently writes the "Economic Scene" column for the New York Times and writes for such magazines as The New Republic and The Wilson Quarterly.

Cowen's primary research interest is the economics of culture. He has written books on fame (What Price Fame?), art (In Praise of Commercial Culture), and cultural trade (Creative Destruction: How Globalization is Changing the World's Cultures). In Markets and Cultural Voices, he relays how globalization is changing the world of three Mexican amate painters. Cowen argues that free markets change culture for the better, allowing them to evolve into something more people want. Other books include Public Goods and Market Failures, The Theory of Market Failure, Explorations in the New Monetary Economics, Risk and Business Cycles, Economic Welfare, and New Theories of Market Failure.

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5 stars
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36 (38%)
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9 (9%)
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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Andy Masley.
44 reviews41 followers
January 2, 2025
I've read the econ blogosphere for a decade, 10 popularizations of econ including 2 comic books, listened to hundreds of hours of econ podcasts, and yet never sat down and actually read an econ textbook. Big mistake! I should've started with a textbook! Don't be like me, start here.

So well written and fun.
Profile Image for Max.
85 reviews20 followers
January 10, 2023
One million Anki cards later...
Surprised how easily understandable this was. The book really tries to break down issues and explain it without assuming much knowledge. It uses a lot of examples, errs towards explains things twice, and uses a lot of graphs. Feel like I can understand some of my favorite newsletter better now.

This one from the exercises made me laugh:
Bell-bottom jeans insist on coming back every few years, and their ugliness creates external costs for all who see them. Therefore, bell-bottom jeans should be taxed heavily.


(Also surprised how few people seem to have read it, looking at the number of reviews here?)
Profile Image for Chris.
584 reviews47 followers
October 12, 2024
This is an Econ 101 text. It's written for a US audience. The writing is engaging, and the examples are very interesting. I wanted an introduction to economics, and a text-book seemed like a good idea. Unfortunately, there's lots of math. I'm looking for something to read, not work through. This preference may harm my ability to understand books with economics themes. We will see.
Profile Image for Akash Goel.
165 reviews13 followers
October 24, 2022
Quite possible, the best intro to econ book out there. I've read Mankiw before these, and I think the writing in this one is superior. Also, there were a few new ideas that I didn't find in Mankiw. Overall, I think the authors introduce topics in a way thats relatively simpler to grasp.
Profile Image for Lotti.
27 reviews1 follower
October 26, 2023
was mandatory…
war halt ein sachbuch, hat aber den context gut erklärt - bsp waren 🔝
2 reviews1 follower
November 1, 2025
A must-read to people who want to be introduced to basic echonomic concepts and its functions.
Profile Image for Fin Moorhouse.
106 reviews149 followers
August 31, 2024
I remember a classic mid-teen putdown during arguments about politics: “Dude, just read an economics textbook

That wasn't normally backed up with a recommendation for an excellent intro-level textbook.

And I certainly hadn't read one. I remember reading lots of books about economics, about why we need new heterodox methods, why ‘neoclassical’ assumptions are wrong, all of ‘capitalism’ needs rethinking, or whatever. But they were more like commentaries on the field of economics — not guides to its content. So I remember feeling faintly embarrassed that I still didn't exactly know how to read a supply-demand graph, or what exactly is the difference between fiscal and monetary policy, etc. I still figured that learning the econ basics would be like learning computer science for software engineering: either you pick it up through experience, or it's too academic to practically matter.

This was wrong and I should have read this book earlier. It is very clearly written, and written so that you could find it halfway enjoyable to read cover-to-cover, not just as reference material for a class.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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