Browse Books
 
 
Browse Magazines
 
The Undercover Economist
Harford, Tim
Cover image
List Price: $16.00
Our Price: $14.40 or 17,280₩
You save: $1.60 (10% off)
Total delivery time: within 10 business days

Format: Paperback, 265pp.
Date of publication: Jan 2007
Publisher: Random House Trade
ISBN-13: 9780345494016
Dimensions: 20.22 cm. (length) X 13.31 cm. (width) X 1.55 cm. (thickness)
Weight: 213 grams
This book includes illustrations

Customers also bought

Author Note
Tim Harford is an editorial writer at the Financial Times, where he also writes the newspaper’s “Dear Economist” column and “The Undercover Economist” column, which also appears in Slate. He lives in London. [Edit review] [Delete review]
From the Publisher
“The economy [isn’t] a bunch of rather dull statistics with names like GDP (gross domestic product),” notes Tim Harford, columnist and regular guest on NPR’s Marketplace, “economics is about who gets what and why.” In this acclaimed and riveting book–part exposé, part user’s manual–the astute and entertaining columnist from the Financial Times demystifies the ways in which money works in the world. From why the coffee in your cup costs so much to why efficiency is not necessarily the answer to ensuring a fair society, from improving health care to curing crosstown traffic–all the dirty little secrets of dollars and cents are delightfully revealed by The Undercover Economist.

“A rare specimen: a book on economics that will enthrall its readers . . . It brings the power of economics to life.”
–Steven D. Levitt, coauthor of Freakonomics

“A playful guide to the... [More...] [Edit review] [Delete review]
Review
"Required reading."
—Steven Levitt, author of Freakonomics

"A playful guide to the economics of everyday life, and as such. . . something of an elder sibling to Steven Levitt’s wild child, the hugely successful Freakonomics."
The Economist

"A book to savor."
The New York Times

"The Undercover Economist is a book you must pick up if you want a fresh perspective on how basic ideas in economics can help in answering the most complex and perplexing questions about the world around us."
Business Today


“[Harford] is in every sense consumer-friendly. His chapters come in bite-size sections, with wacky sub-headings. His style is breezy and no-nonsense. . . . The Undercover Economist is part primer, part consciousness raiser, part self-help manual.” --Times Literary Supplement

"Anyone... [More...] [Edit review] [Delete review]
Excerpt
One

Who Pays for Your Coffee?

The long commute on public transportation is a commonplace experience of life in major cities around the world, whether you live in New York, Tokyo, Antwerp, or Prague. Commuting dispiritingly combines the universal and the particular. The particular, because each commuter is a rat in his own unique maze: timing the run from the shower to the station turnstiles; learning the timetables and the correct end of the platform to speed up the transfer between different trains; trading off the disadvantages of standing room only on the first train home against a seat on the last one. Yet commutes also produce common patterns—bottlenecks and rush hours—that are exploited by entrepreneurs the world over. My commute in Washington, D.C., is not the same as yours in London, New York, or Hong Kong, but it will look surprisingly familiar.

Farragut West is the Metro station ideally positioned to serve the World Bank, International... [More...] [Edit review] [Delete review]
Reviews from Goodreads.com
Browse related subjects:
• Business & Economics  >  Economics - General
• Business & Economics  >  Economic History
Would you like to...

Quantity:
Add to cart

Add to wishlist

 




Found it cheaper?
What store?
How much?
We may match your price (details)