European University Institute Library

What would the great economists do?, how twelve brilliant minds would solve today's biggest problems, Linda Yueh

Label
What would the great economists do?, how twelve brilliant minds would solve today's biggest problems, Linda Yueh
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
What would the great economists do?
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1000364848
Responsibility statement
Linda Yueh
Sub title
how twelve brilliant minds would solve today's biggest problems
Summary
"Acclaimed economist and BBC broadcaster Linda Yueh profiles the great economic minds who focused on the big questions: growth, innovation, and the nature of markets. Most of them have won the Nobel Prize. All of them have had lasting impact on both the development of the discipline and how public policy has been and continues to be shaped. But Dr. Yueh goes a step further: In accessible and clear prose, she will explain the impact their respective research has on combating today's great economic problems. For example, she will ask: Milton Friedman, are central banks doing too much? Friedrich Hayek, can financial crashes be prevented? Douglass North, why are so few countries rich? After years of experience providing economic literacy to the public through podcasts, documentaries, lectures, and television programs, Dr. Yueh will bring that wealth of expertise to the page in her first trade book for a general reader. The Great Economists offers a concise history of modern economics, the trailblazing men and women who developed the field, and, more fundamentally, how their findings would solve everything from global inequality to what drives innovation. Economists included (in chronological order): Adam Smith, David Ricardo, Karl Marx, Alfred Marshall, Irving Fisher, John Maynard Keynes, Joseph Schumpeter, Friedrich Hayek, Joan Robinson, Milton Friedman, Douglass North, and Robert Solow"--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Adam Smith : should the government rebalance the economy? -- David Ricardo : do trade deficits matter? -- Karl Marx : can China become rich? -- Alfred Marshall : is inequality inevitable? -- Irving Fisher : are we at risk of repeating the 1930s? -- John Maynard Keynes : to invest or not to invest? -- Joseph Schumpeter : what drives innovation? -- Friedrich Hayek : what can we learn from financial crises? -- Joan Robinson : why are wages so low? -- Milton Friedman : are central banks doing too much? -- Douglass North : why are so few countries prosperous? -- Robert Solow : do we face a slow-growth future? -- The future of globalization
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