Professor John Komlos has just released a new textbook on economics which breaks away from the mold of producing clones of Samuelson’s genre-defining opus. Its title is “What Every Economics Student Needs to Know and Doesn’t Get in the Usual Principles Text”. At a price of $26.55 via Amazon, it is priced to be an affordable supplement to a standard textbook. Given the failings of the discipline that were so vividly highlighted by the global financial crisis, this book is well worth considering as an alternative to the Neoclassical monoculture that dominates economic tuition today.
The following blurb is lifted from John’s website:
About the book
The recent financial crisis illustrated vividly the flaws of weakly regulated markets, yet textbooks remain unchanged, failing to convey the systematic limitations of free markets. This book redresses this imbalance in the tradition of G. Akerlof, R. Easterlin, J.K. Galbraith, H. Minsky, D. Kahneman, J.M. Keynes, P. Krugman, A. Sen, R. Shiller, H. Simon, J. Stiglitz, Th. Veblen, and the Institute of New Economic Thinking.
It does so by exploring important topics that are generally overlooked in introductory economics courses and by juxtaposing blackboard models of the economy with real-world empirical observations. Komlos argues convincingly that it is misleading to focus on models of perfect competition in a world where such markets have become an insignificant share of economic activity. Rather, even beginning students ought to be introduced to the workings of oligopolistic market structures with imperfect information and endemic underemployment. In such cases markets are no longer efficient and there is plenty of opportunities to enhance the quality of life of its participants. Komlos proposes a human centered economics that attains full employment and an equitable distribution of income striving above all toward a just economy.
Concepts covered in the book include often neglected topics such as:
- Behavioral economics
- Cognitive biases
- Regulatory capture
- Bounded rationality
- Dot-Com Bubble
- Sub-prime mortgage crisis
- the Great Recession
- Corporate compensation
- Basic needs
- Income inequality
- Opportunistic behavior
- Moral hazard
- Principal-Agent problem
- Asymmetric information
- Financial meltdown of 2008
- Capitalism with a human face
- Predatory lending
- Relative income
- Signaling
- Countervailing power
- Happiness economics
- Bailouts