Every field
of study has its own language and its own way of thinking. Mathematicians talk
about axioms, integrals, and vector spaces. Psychologists talk about ego, id
and cognitive dissonance. Lawyers talk about venue, torts, and promissory
estoppel.
Economics is
no different. Supply demand, elasticity, comparative advantage, consumer
surplus, deadweight loss these terms are part of the economics language. In
the coming chapters, you will encounter many new terms and some familiar words
that economists use in specialized ways.
At first this new language may seem
needlessly arcane. But as you will see. Its value lies in its ability to
provide you with a new and useful way of thinking about the world in which you
live.
The single
most important purpose of this book is to help you learn the economist’s way of thinking. Of
course just as you cannot become a mathematician, psychologist or lawyer
overnight learning to think like an economist will take some time. Yet with a
combination of theory, case studies and examples of economics in the news this
book will give you ample opportunity to develop and practice this skill.
Before
delving into the substance and details of economics, it is helpful to have an
overview of now economists approach the world. This chaplet discusses the
field’s methodology. What is distinctive about how economists coconut a
question? What does it mean to think like an economist.
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