Contents
Themes and capstone units
Consult CORE’s Fact checker for a detailed list of sources.
- Preface
- A note to instructors
- Producing The Economy ~ sustainable transport edition
- List of resources
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1—The capitalist revolution
- Introduction
- 1.1 Income inequality Global economyInequality
- 1.2 Measuring income and living standards
- 1.3 History’s hockey stick: Growth in income History, instability, and growthGlobal economyInequalityInnovation
- 1.4 The permanent technological revolution History, instability, and growthInnovation
- 1.5 The economy and the environment Environment
- 1.6 Capitalism defined: Private property, markets, and firms History, instability, and growth
- 1.7 Capitalism as an economic system History, instability, and growth
- 1.8 The gains from specialization History, instability, and growthGlobal economy
- 1.9 Capitalism, causation and history’s hockey stick History, instability, and growthGlobal economyInnovation
- 1.10 Varieties of capitalism: Institutions, government, and the economy History, instability, and growthGlobal economyPolitics and policy
- 1.11 Economics and the economy
- 1.12 Conclusion
- 1.13 References
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2—Technology, population, and growth
- Introduction
- 2.1 Economists, historians, and the Industrial Revolution History, instability, and growthGlobal economyInnovation
- 2.2 Economic models: How to see more by looking at less
- 2.3 Basic concepts: Prices, costs, and innovation rents Innovation
- 2.4 Modelling a dynamic economy: Technology and costs Innovation
- 2.5 Modelling a dynamic economy: Innovation and profit Innovation
- 2.6 The British Industrial Revolution and incentives for new technologies History, instability, and growthInequalityInnovation
- 2.7 Malthusian economics: Diminishing average product of labour
- 2.8 Malthusian economics: Population grows when living standards rise History, instability, and growthInnovation
- 2.9 The Malthusian trap and long-term economic stagnation History, instability, and growthInnovation
- 2.10 Escaping from Malthusian stagnation History, instability, and growthInequalityInnovation
- 2.11 Conclusion
- 2.12 References
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3—Scarcity, work, and choice
- Introduction
- 3.1 Labour and production
- 3.2 Preferences
- 3.3 Opportunity costs
- 3.4 The feasible set
- 3.5 Decision making and scarcity
- 3.6 Hours of work and economic growth Global economyInnovation
- 3.7 Income and substitution effects on hours of work and free time
- 3.8 Is this a good model?
- 3.9 Explaining our working hours: Changes over time History, instability, and growthInnovation
- 3.10 Explaining our working hours: Differences between countries Global economyPolitics and policy
- 3.11 Conclusion
- 3.12 References
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4—Social interactions
- Introduction
- 4.1 Social interactions: Game theory
- 4.2 Equilibrium in the invisible hand game
- 4.3 The prisoners’ dilemma Environment
- 4.4 Social preferences: Altruism Inequality
- 4.5 Altruistic preferences in the prisoners’ dilemma Inequality
- 4.6 Public goods, free riding, and repeated interaction Inequality
- 4.7 Public good contributions and peer punishment
- 4.8 Behavioural experiments in the lab and in the field Politics and policy
- 4.9 Cooperation, negotiation, conflicts of interest, and social norms InequalityEnvironment
- 4.10 Dividing a pie (or leaving it on the table) Inequality
- 4.11 Fair farmers, self-interested students? Global economy
- 4.12 Competition in the ultimatum game
- 4.13 Social interactions: Conflicts in the choice among Nash equilibria Global economyInequalityEnvironmentInnovation
- 4.14 Conclusion
- 4.15 References
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5—Property and power: Mutual gains and conflict
- Introduction
- 5.1 Institutions and power History, instability, and growthInequality
- 5.2 Evaluating institutions and outcomes: The Pareto criterion History, instability, and growth
- 5.3 Evaluating institutions and outcomes: Fairness History, instability, and growthInequality
- 5.4 A model of choice and conflict History, instability, and growthInequality
- 5.5 Technically feasible allocations
- 5.6 Allocations imposed by force History, instability, and growth
- 5.7 Economically feasible allocations and the surplus Inequality
- 5.8 The Pareto efficiency curve and the distribution of the surplus InequalityPolitics and policy
- 5.9 Politics: Sharing the surplus Politics and policy
- 5.10 Bargaining to a Pareto-efficient sharing of the surplus
- 5.11 Angela and Bruno: The moral of the story History, instability, and growthInequalityPolitics and policy
- 5.12 Measuring economic inequality InequalityPolitics and policy
- 5.13 A policy to redistribute the surplus and raise efficiency InequalityPolitics and policy
- 5.14 Conclusion
- 5.15 References
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6—The firm: Owners, managers, and employees
- Introduction
- 6.1 Firms, markets, and the division of labour
- 6.2 Other people’s money: The separation of ownership and control
- 6.3 Other people’s labour
- 6.4 Employment rents Inequality
- 6.5 Determinants of the employment rent Politics and policy
- 6.6 Work and wages: The labour discipline model Politics and policy
- 6.7 Wages, effort, and profits in the labour discipline model Inequality
- 6.8 Putting the model to work: Owners, employees, and the economy Politics and policy
- 6.9 Another kind of business organization InequalityPolitics and policy
- 6.10 Principals and agents: Interactions under incomplete contracts
- 6.11 Conclusion
- 6.12 References
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7—The firm and its customers
- Introduction
- 7.1 Breakfast cereal: Choosing a price
- 7.2 Economies of scale and the cost advantages of large-scale production Innovation
- 7.3 Production: The cost function for Beautiful Bicycles
- 7.4 Demand and isoprofit curves: Beautiful Bicycles
- 7.5 Setting price and quantity to maximize profit
- 7.6 Look at profit maximization as marginal revenue and marginal cost
- 7.7 Gains from trade
- 7.8 The elasticity of demand
- 7.9 Using demand elasticities in government policy Politics and policy
- 7.10 Price-setting, competition, and market power Politics and policy
- 7.11 Product selection, innovation, and advertising Innovation
- 7.12 Prices, costs, and market failure
- 7.13 Conclusion
- 7.14 References
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8—Supply and demand: Price-taking and competitive markets
- Introduction
- 8.1 Buying and selling: Demand and supply
- 8.2 The market and the equilibrium price
- 8.3 Price-taking firms
- 8.4 Market supply and equilibrium
- 8.5 Competitive equilibrium: Gains from trade, allocation, and distribution
- 8.6 Changes in supply and demand Global economy
- 8.7 The effects of taxes Politics and policy
- 8.8 The model of perfect competition
- 8.9 Looking for competitive equilibria
- 8.10 Price-setting and price-taking firms Politics and policy
- 8.11 Conclusion
- 8.12 References
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9—The labour market: Wages, profits, and unemployment
- Introduction
- 9.1 The wage-setting curve, the price-setting curve, and the labour market
- 9.2 Measuring the economy: Employment and unemployment Global economy
- 9.3 The wage-setting curve: Employment and real wages
- 9.4. The firm’s hiring decision
- 9.5. The price-setting curve: Wages and profits in the whole economy
- 9.6 Wages, profits, and unemployment in the whole economy
- 9.7 How changes in demand for goods and services affect unemployment Politics and policy
- 9.8. Labour market equilibrium and the distribution of income InequalityPolitics and policy
- 9.9. Labour supply, labour demand, and bargaining power Global economyPolitics and policy
- 9.10. Labour unions: Bargained wages and the union voice effect History, instability, and growthGlobal economyPolitics and policy
- 9.11 Labour market policies to address unemployment and inequality InequalityPolitics and policy
- 9.12. Looking backward: Baristas and bread markets
- 9.13 Conclusion
- 9.14 References
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10—Banks, money, and the credit market
- Introduction
- 10.1 Money and wealth
- 10.2 Borrowing: Bringing consumption forward in time
- 10.3 Impatience and the diminishing marginal returns to consumption
- 10.4 Borrowing allows smoothing by bringing consumption to the present
- 10.5 Lending and storing: Smoothing and moving consumption to the future
- 10.6 Investing: Another way to move consumption to the future Inequality
- 10.7 Assets, liabilities, and net worth
- 10.8 Banks, money, and the central bank History, instability, and growthPolitics and policy
- 10.9 The central bank, the money market, and interest rates History, instability, and growthPolitics and policy
- 10.10 The business of banking and bank balance sheets
- 10.11 The central bank’s policy rate can affect spending Politics and policy
- 10.12 Credit market constraints: A principal–agent problem Inequality
- 10.13 Inequality: Lenders, borrowers, and those excluded from credit markets Inequality
- 10.14 Conclusion
- 10.15 References
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11—Rent-seeking, price-setting, and market dynamics
- Introduction
- 11.1 How people changing prices to gain rents can lead to a market equilibrium
- 11.2 How market organization can influence prices
- 11.3 Short-run and long-run equilibria
- 11.4 Prices, rent-seeking, and market dynamics at work: Oil prices History, instability, and growthGlobal economyPolitics and policy
- 11.5 The value of an asset: Basics
- 11.6 Changing supply and demand for financial assets
- 11.7 Asset market bubbles
- 11.8 Modelling bubbles and crashes History, instability, and growth
- 11.9 Non-clearing markets: Rationing, queuing, and secondary markets Politics and policy
- 11.10 Markets with controlled prices Politics and policy
- 11.11 The role of economic rents InequalityInnovationPolitics and policy
- 11.12 Conclusion
- 11.13 References
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12—Markets, efficiency, and public policy
- Introduction
- 12.1 Market failure: External effects of pollution Environment
- 12.2 External effects and bargaining Environment
- 12.3 External effects: Policies and income distribution InequalityEnvironmentPolitics and policy
- 12.4 Property rights, contracts, and market failures History, instability, and growthEnvironmentPolitics and policy
- 12.5 Public goods EnvironmentInnovationPolitics and policy
- 12.6 Missing markets: Insurance and lemons Politics and policy
- 12.7 Incomplete contracts and external effects in credit markets InequalityPolitics and policy
- 12.8 The limits of markets History, instability, and growthInequalityPolitics and policy
- 12.9 Market failure and government policy Politics and policy
- 12.10 Conclusion
- 12.11 References
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13—Economic fluctuations and unemployment
- Introduction
- 13.1 Growth and fluctuations History, instability, and growthPolitics and policy
- 13.2 Output growth and changes in unemployment Global economy
- 13.3 Measuring the aggregate economy
- 13.4 Measuring the aggregate economy: The components of GDP Politics and policy
- 13.5 How households cope with fluctuations History, instability, and growthPolitics and policy
- 13.6 Why is consumption smooth?
- 13.7 Why is investment volatile? History, instability, and growthGlobal economyInnovation
- 13.8 Measuring the economy: Inflation History, instability, and growthGlobal economy
- 13.9 Conclusion
- 13.10 References
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14—Unemployment and fiscal policy
- Introduction
- 14.1 The transmission of shocks: The multiplier process
- 14.2 The multiplier model
- 14.3 Household target wealth, collateral, and consumption spending History, instability, and growthPolitics and policy
- 14.4 Investment spending InnovationPolitics and policy
- 14.5 The multiplier model: Including the government and net exports Politics and policy
- 14.6 Fiscal policy: How governments can dampen and amplify fluctuations History, instability, and growthPolitics and policy
- 14.7 The multiplier and economic policymaking Politics and policy
- 14.8 The government’s finances History, instability, and growthGlobal economyPolitics and policy
- 14.9 Fiscal policy and the rest of the world Global economyPolitics and policy
- 14.10 Aggregate demand and unemployment Politics and policy
- 14.11 Conclusion
- 14.12 References
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15—Inflation, unemployment, and monetary policy
- Introduction
- 15.1 What’s wrong with inflation? Inequality
- 15.2 Inflation results from conflicting and inconsistent claims on output
- 15.3 Inflation, the business cycle, and the Phillips curve
- 15.4 Inflation and unemployment: Constraints and preferences Politics and policy
- 15.5 What happened to the Phillips curve? History, instability, and growthPolitics and policy
- 15.6 Expected inflation and the Phillips curve
- 15.7 Supply shocks and inflation History, instability, and growthGlobal economyPolitics and policy
- 15.8 Monetary policy Global economyPolitics and policy
- 15.9 The exchange rate channel of monetary policy Global economyPolitics and policy
- 15.10 Demand shocks and demand-side policies Innovation
- 15.11 Macroeconomic policy before the global financial crisis: Inflation-targeting policy History, instability, and growthGlobal economyPolitics and policy
- 15.12 Another reason for rising inflation at low unemployment
- 15.13 Conclusion
- 15.14 References
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16—Technological progress, employment, and living standards in the long run
- Introduction
- 16.1 Technological progress and living standards History, instability, and growthInnovation
- 16.2 The job creation and destruction process Global economyInequalityInnovation
- 16.3 Job flows, worker flows, and the Beveridge curve Politics and policy
- 16.4 Investment, firm entry, and the price-setting curve in the long run Innovation
- 16.5 New technology, wages, and unemployment in the long run History, instability, and growthInnovationPolitics and policy
- 16.6 Technological change and income inequality InequalityInnovation
- 16.7 How long does it take for labour markets to adjust to shocks? History, instability, and growthGlobal economyInnovation
- 16.8 Institutions and policies: Why do some countries do better than others? History, instability, and growthGlobal economyInequalityInnovationPolitics and policy
- 16.9 Technological change, labour markets, and trade unions History, instability, and growthGlobal economyInequalityInnovationPolitics and policy
- 16.10 Changes in institutions and policies History, instability, and growthPolitics and policy
- 16.11 Slower productivity growth in services, and the changing nature of work History, instability, and growthGlobal economyInnovation
- 16.12 Wages and unemployment in the long run InnovationPolitics and policy
- 16.13 Conclusion
- 16.14 References
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17—Capstone: The Great Depression, golden age, and global financial crisis
- Introduction
- 17.1 Three economic epochs
- 17.2 The Great Depression, positive feedbacks, and aggregate demand
- 17.3 Policymakers in the Great Depression
- 17.4 The golden age of high growth and low unemployment
- 17.5 Workers and employers in the golden age
- 17.6 The end of the golden age
- 17.7 After stagflation: The fruits of a new policy regime
- 17.8 Before the financial crisis: Households, banks, and the credit boom
- 17.9 Modelling housing bubbles
- 17.10 The financial crisis and the great recession
- 17.11 The role of banks in the crisis
- 17.12 The economy as teacher
- 17.13 Conclusion
- 17.14 References
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18—Capstone: The nation and the world economy
- Introduction
- 18.1 Globalization and deglobalization in the long run
- 18.2 Globalization and investment
- 18.3 Globalization and migration
- 18.4 Specialization and the gains from trade among nations
- 18.5 Specialization, factor endowments, and trade between countries
- 18.6 Winners and losers from trade and specialization
- 18.7 Winners and losers in the very long run and along the way
- 18.8 Migration: Globalization of labour
- 18.9 Globalization and anti-globalization
- 18.10 Trade and growth
- 18.11 Conclusion
- 18.12 References
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19—Capstone: Economic inequality
- Introduction
- 19.1 Inequality across the world and over time
- 19.2. Accidents of birth: Another lens to study inequality
- 19.3 What (if anything) is wrong with inequality?
- 19.4 How much inequality is too much (or too little)?
- 19.5 Endowments, technology, and institutions
- 19.6 Inequality, endowments, and principal–agent relationships
- 19.7 Putting the model to work: Explaining changes in inequality
- 19.8 Predistribution
- 19.9 Explaining recent trends in inequality in market income
- 19.10 Redistribution: Taxes and transfers
- 19.11 Equality and economic performance
- 19.12 Conclusion
- 19.13 References
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20—Capstone: Economics of the environment
- Introduction
- 20.1 Recap: External effects, incomplete contracts, and missing markets
- 20.2 Climate change
- 20.3 The abatement of environmental damages: Cost-benefit analysis
- 20.4 Conflicts of interest: Bargaining over wages, pollution, and jobs
- 20.5 Cap and trade environmental policies
- 20.6 The measurement challenges of environmental policy
- 20.7 Dynamic environmental policies: Future technologies and lifestyles
- 20.8 Environmental dynamics
- 20.9 Why is addressing climate change so difficult?
- 20.10 Policy choices matter
- 20.11 Conclusion
- 20.12 References
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21—Capstone: Innovation, information, and the networked economy
- Introduction
- 21.1 The innovation process: Invention and diffusion
- 21.2 Innovation systems
- 21.3 External effects: Complements, substitutes, and coordination
- 21.4 Economies of scale and winner-take-all competition
- 21.5 Matching (two-sided) markets
- 21.6 Intellectual property rights
- 21.7 Optimal patents: Balancing the objectives of invention and diffusion
- 21.8 Public funding of basic research, education, and information infrastructure
- 21.9 Conclusion
- 21.10 References
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22—Capstone: Economics, politics, and public policy
- Introduction
- 22.1 The government as an economic actor
- 22.2 Government acting as a monopolist
- 22.3 Political competition affects how the government will act
- 22.4 Why an erstwhile dictator might submit to political competition
- 22.5 Democracy as a political institution
- 22.6 Political preferences and electoral competition: The median voter model
- 22.7 A more realistic model of electoral competition
- 22.8 The advance of democracy
- 22.9 Varieties of democracy
- 22.10 Democracy makes a difference
- 22.11 A puzzle: The persistence of unfairness and market failures in democracies
- 22.12 Economic infeasibility
- 22.13 Administrative infeasibility
- 22.14 Special interests
- 22.15 Policy matters and economics works
- 22.16 Conclusion
- 22.17 References
- Looking forward to economics after CORE
- Bibliography
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Leibnizes
- 2.2.1 Introducing the Leibnizes
- 2.7.1 The production function
- 3.1.1 Average and marginal productivity
- 3.1.2 Diminishing marginal productivity
- 3.1.3 Concave and convex functions
- 3.2.1 Indifference curves and the marginal rate of substitution
- 3.4.1 Marginal rate of transformation
- 3.5.1 Optimal allocation of free time: MRT meets MRS
- 3.6.1 Modelling technological change
- 3.7.1 Mathematics of income and substitution effects
- 4.4.1 Altruistic preferences: Finding the optimal distribution
- 5.4.1 Quasi-linear preferences
- 5.4.2 Angela’s choice of working hours
- 5.7.1 Angela’s choice of working hours when she pays rent
- 5.8.1 The Pareto efficiency curve
- 6.6.1 The worker’s best response function
- 6.7.1 Profit, wages, and effort
- 7.3.1 Average and marginal cost functions
- 7.4.1 Isoprofit curves and their slopes
- 7.5.1 The profit-maximizing price
- 7.6.1 Marginal revenue and marginal cost
- 7.8.1 The elasticity of demand
- 8.4.1 The firm and market supply curves
- 8.4.2 Market equilibrium
- 8.5.1 Gains from trade
- 8.6.1 Shifts in demand and supply
- 11.8.1 Price bubbles
- 12.1.1 External effects of pollution
- 12.3.1 Pigouvian taxes
- 22.2.1 Expected duration of the dictator or governing elite
- 22.2.2 How the monopolist sets the rent-maximizing level of taxes
- 22.3.1 The income and substitution effect of an increase in political competition
- Copyright acknowledgements
- Index