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Cover for 9781137572509 Cover for 9780307961181 Cover for 9780307950727 Cover for 9781439912232 Cover for 9780373290901 Cover for 9780373290956 Cover for 9781439912249 Cover for 9781137448156 Cover for 9780231160148 Cover for 9781596988088 Cover for 9781470826710 Cover for 9780415603331 Cover for 9780521518765 Cover for 9781107404489 Cover for 9780983500636 Cover for 9780373290956 Cover for 9780373290901
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Product Description: Since its establishment in 1965, Business Economics has been an essential resource for those who use economics in the workplace. Its consistent intent has been to distinguish itself from academic journals by focusing on what is useful to practitioners of economics in their everyday work, and it has risen to become the leading forum for debating solutions to critical business problems, analyzing key business and economic issues, and sharing of best-practice models, tools, and hands-on techniques...read more
By Robert Thomas Crow (editor)

Hardcover:

9781137572509 | Palgrave Macmillan, January 5, 2016, cover price $125.00 | About this edition: Since its establishment in 1965, Business Economics has been an essential resource for those who use economics in the workplace.

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A bold indictment of some of our most accepted mainstream economic theories—why they’re wrong, and how they’ve been harming America and the world. Budget deficits are bad. A strong dollar is good. Controlling inflation is paramount. Pay reflects greater worker skills. A deregulated free market is fair and effective. Theories like these have become mantras among American economists both liberal and conservative over recent decades. Validated originally by patron saints like Milton Friedman, they’ve assumed the status of self-evident truths across much of the mainstream. Jeff Madrick, former columnist for The New York Times and Harper’s, argues compellingly that a reconsideration is long overdue. Since the financial turmoil of the 1970s made stagnating wages and relatively high unemployment the norm, Madrick argues, many leading economists have retrenched to the classical (and outdated) bulwarks of theory, drawing their ideas more from purist principles than from the real-world behavior of governments and markets—while, ironically, deeply affecting those governments and markets by their counsel. Madrick atomizes seven of the greatest false idols of modern economic theory, illustrating how these ideas have been damaging markets, infrastructure, and individual livelihoods for years, causing hundreds of billions of dollars of wasted investment, financial crisis after financial crisis, poor and unequal public education, primitive public transportation, gross inequality of income and wealth and stagnating wages, and uncontrolled military spending. Using the Great Recession as his foremost case study, Madrick shows how the decisions America should have made before, during, and after the financial crisis were suppressed by wrongheaded but popular theory, and how the consequences are still disadvantaging working America and undermining the foundations of global commerce. Madrick spares no sinners as he reveals how the “Friedman doctrine” has undermined the meaning of citizenship and community, how the “Great Moderation” became a great jobs emergency, and how economists were so concerned with getting the incentives right for Wall Street that they got financial regulation all wrong. He in turn examines the too-often-marginalized good ideas of modern economics and convincingly argues just how beneficial they could be—if they can gain traction among policy makers. Trenchant, sweeping, and empirical, Seven Bad Ideas resoundingly disrupts the status quo of modern economic theory.

Hardcover:

9780307961181 | Alfred a Knopf Inc, September 30, 2014, cover price $26.95 | About this edition: A bold indictment of some of our most accepted mainstream economic theories—why they’re wrong, and how they’ve been harming America and the world.

Paperback:

9780307950727 | Vintage Books, August 18, 2015, cover price $15.95

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Catastrophes ranging from the travesties of financial markets and the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon oil well to the tsunami that struck northern Japan and the levees breaking in New Orleans are examples of the limits of knowledge. Author Randy Martin insists that the expertise erected to prevent these natural and social disasters failed in each case.   In Knowledge LTD, Martin explores how both the limits of knowledge and the social constructions of culture reflect the way we organize social life in the face of disasters and their aftermath. He examines this crisis of knowledge as well as the social movements that rose up in its wake. Martin not only treats derivatives as financial contracts for pricing risk, but also shows how the derivative works in economic terms, where the very unity of the economy is undone.  Knowledge LTD ultimately points to a more comprehensive reordering of the once separate spheres of economy, polity, and culture. Martin provides a new way of understanding the social significance of the all-pervasive derivative logic. 

Hardcover:

9781439912232 | Temple Univ Pr, April 17, 2015, cover price $89.50

Paperback:

9781439912249 | Temple Univ Pr, April 17, 2015, cover price $29.95 | About this edition: Catastrophes ranging from the travesties of financial markets and the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon oil well to the tsunami that struck northern Japan and the levees breaking in New Orleans are examples of the limits of knowledge.
9780373290956, titled "The Gentleman Thief" | Harlequin Books, February 1, 2000, cover price $4.99 | also contains The Gentleman Thief
9780373290901, titled "Heart and Home" | Harlequin Books, December 1, 1999, cover price $4.99 | also contains Heart and Home | About this edition: Men Were Just Plain Inconvenient!

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Product Description: The Economists' Voice: Top Economists Take On Today's Problems featured a core collection of accessible, timely essays on the challenges facing today's global markets and financial institutions. The Economists' Voice 2.0: The Financial Crisis, Health Care Reform, and More is the next installment in this popular series, gathering together the strongest essays published in The Economist's Voice, a nonpartisan online journal, so that students and general readers can gain a deeper understanding of the financial developments shaping their world...read more
By J. Bradford De Long (editor), Aaron S. Edlin (editor), William Gale (editor), James Hines (editor) and Joseph E. Stiglitz (editor)

Hardcover:

9780231160148 | Columbia Univ Pr, June 5, 2012, cover price $27.95 | About this edition: The Economists' Voice: Top Economists Take On Today's Problems featured a core collection of accessible, timely essays on the challenges facing today's global markets and financial institutions.

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Milton Friedman is one of the most famous economists in history. His writings and theories on everything from capitalism and freedom to deregulation and welfare have inspired movements, influenced government policies, and changed the course of America's economic history. Now, acclaimed Friedman biographer Lanny Ebenstein brings together twenty of Friedman's greatest essays in The Indispensable Milton Friedman: Essays on Politics and Economics. The only collection of Friedman's writings to span his entire career, this book features some of Friedman's never-before-republished writings as well as the best and most timeless of his works. These exceptional essays not only illuminate the progression of Friedman's thought but explain how America might overcome some of its most difficult challenges. During this time of economic uncertainty, The Indispensable Milton Friedman is more necessary than ever.
By Lanny Ebenstein (editor)

Hardcover:

9781596988088 | Regnery Pub, October 2, 2012, cover price $27.95

CD/Spoken Word:

9781470826710 | Unabridged edition (Blackstone Audio Inc, October 2, 2012), cover price $29.95 | About this edition: Milton Friedman is one of the most famous economists in history.

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Product Description: The recent financial crisis has once again seen John Kenneth Galbraith return to the bestseller lists. Yet, despite the continued popular success of his works, Galbraith's contribution to economic theory is rarely recognised by today's economists...read more

Hardcover:

9780521518765 | Cambridge Univ Pr, December 31, 2010, cover price $140.00 | About this edition: The recent financial crisis has once again seen John Kenneth Galbraith return to the bestseller lists.

Paperback:

9781107404489 | Reprint edition (Cambridge Univ Pr, May 10, 2012), cover price $59.99 | About this edition: The recent financial crisis has once again seen John Kenneth Galbraith return to the bestseller lists.

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Product Description: Employment in America has become a depressing subject. The recession is officially long over, yet 32 million Americans want to work full-time and are not. Neither political side is getting anywhere with the problem, and Washington has almost stopped discussing it, let alone implementing anything to solve or even improve it...read more

Paperback:

9780983500636 | Royal Flush Pr, November 14, 2011, cover price $17.95 | About this edition: Employment in America has become a depressing subject.

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Product Description: Men Were Just Plain Inconvenient!Jane Sparks had a business to run, and no citified doctor filled with Wild West fantasies was going to distract her. Even one as warm and handsome as Dr. Adam Hart, the only man who ever tempted her into nightly dreams of love…!Women Were A Complete Mystery…...read more

Paperback:

9780373290901 | Harlequin Books, December 1, 1999, cover price $4.99 | also contains Knowledge Ltd: Toward a Social Logic of the Derivative | About this edition: Men Were Just Plain Inconvenient!

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