Most helpful client reviews
8 of 8 persons found the following review helpful.
okay book
By S. Manohar
This book’s lightweight and holds what you need for a typical econ course. Definitions are not brief or concise. They ARE lengthy. This book is great when supplemented by a college-level course but don’t suppose it to instruct you microeconomis.
Different editions are the practically the same thing (scam!), so buy the older edition if it is for less and the professor is not too specific.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
So, the U.S budget hasn’t been balanced since 1969? Really!
By Chaplain Donald Perry, Dallas TX
This book will support you be grateful for current news on the Economy, leaving you with open questions wanting to recognise more. It helps you in your personal life, home economy of “your household”, purchasing habits, and how not to spend while spending. It’s not a book to carry around each where you go, but you may get a glimpse of world economies without getting upset, and come up with your personal solutions to improve your “personal economy”, for example; “absolute advantage” and “comparative advantage” just might fetch closer ties in family and friendships. My wife and her cousin learned this concep. They now fetch home more groceries than the fridge may hold. Guys, it’s not a lady thing either. Get the book, but don’t trade it in! Keep it in your wallet! Chaplain Donald Perry, Dallas, TX
8 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
Best Microeconomics Textbook
By Kevin Briggs
Greg Mankiw (Harvard University) is without doubt one of the best writers when it comes to economics — a reasonably arcane and esoteric subject to most of the populace. Fortunately, Dr. Mankiw is competent to break down the rudimentary principles of macroeconomics and microeconomics in such a way that it becomes digestible to the intermediate college-age reader. I would highly commend this text book (as well as his other textbooks).
See all 25 client reviews…