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Modern Economic Issues (Audiobook - TTC) (Repost)

Posted By: bookwyrm
Modern Economic Issues (Audiobook - TTC) (Repost)

Modern Economic Issues (Audiobook) By Professor Robert Whaples
2007 | 19 hours and 2 mins | ISBN: 1598033794 | MP3 93 kbps (vbr) | 797 MB


How do the major economic issues that dominate today's news—questions about gross domestic product or budget deficits or trade imbalances—impact the average citizen? Why are health insurance and college tuition increasingly expensive? What can be done about soaring energy prices? In Modern Economic Issues, Professor Robert Whaples has crafted a course designed to answer just these sorts of questions—a primer in 21st-century economics for the non-economist. He first presents the results of a survey of professional economists around the country on what they consider today's most urgent economic issues—the ones all of us most need to understand. Professor Whaples then puts his award-winning teaching skills to work to shape an accessible course, explaining not only those urgent issues but also the raw data economists use to describe their shape and impact. The result is a course that finally makes the connection between the economics you may have studied in school and the economics of the lives we experience every day. For example, how do you make the decisions—big and small—that make up your daily life? What factors come into play when you're deciding whether to buy this car or that one, or even commute by bus? Mow the lawn or take a nap? Grill a burger with a bubbling slice of cheese or eat a simple salad? Most economists will tell you that you make decisions on this personal level by acting as what they would call a "rational maximizer," comparing, whether explicitly or implicitly, what you expect to gain from your decision against what you expect to give up. You weigh comfort and convenience against the rising cost of gasoline. The need to maintain your home's "curb appeal" against your need for sleep in a much-too-busy life. Your raw craving for that burger against the realities of an expanding waistline.