Gross domestic product. Health insurance. Soaring energy prices. Major economic issues dominate today's news, but how do these issues impact the average citizen? This primer in 21st-century economics for the non-economist su...

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Gross domestic product. Health insurance. Soaring energy prices. Major economic issues dominate today's news, but how do these issues impact the average citizen? This primer in 21st-century economics for the non-economist surveys today's most urgent economic issues that affect both global events and our everyday lives. You'll learn what economics has to say about making the decisions - big or small - that affect our daily lives: 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? And you'll see how this same kind of analysis applies to the major issues of public policy, where the needs and wants of a nation and its people - whether financial security, safety from terrorism, or even an available kidney for someone desperately waiting on a transplant list - involve tradeoffs, which are sometimes obvious and sometimes not. Whether dealing with the traditional sorts of topics most of us are used to seeing in an economics course - Social Security, inflation, unemployment, immigration, taxation, and the like - or issues perhaps surprising, such as gambling, major sports franchises, and even overeating, these 36 lectures offer a steady flow of insights about public policy and the American economy. By showing the full range of economic factors at work, this course can help you become an even more insightful judge of policy recommendations and of the leaders and policy makers who advocate them. And you may well learn to supplement your own analyses as you make the real-life economic choices each of us faces every day, becoming an even wiser consumer and manager of your own economic future.

  • 36 Lectures 1 What Economists Know about Economic Policy 2 Economy Up or Down? How to Tell 3 Economists' View of the Future 4 Productivity and Productivity Growth 5 Inflation—Why the Measure Matters 6 Unemployment—A Global Perspective 7 Economic Inequality 8 The Fallacy of Trade Barriers 9 Trade Imbalances and Saving 10 Budget Deficits—Past, Present, and Future 11 Taxes and the Income Tax Code 12 Rx for Social Security 13 Economic Answers for an Aging Population 14 Financing World-class Health Care 15 Supply, Demand, and the Future of Oil 16 Pollution—Tax or Trade? 17 Global Climate Change—Costs and Benefits 18 Minimum Wage and the Poverty Rate 19 It Pays to Be Married 20 Pay Gaps by Sex and Race 21 Economic Impact of Immigration 22 Labor Unions in Contemporary Economics 23 Productivity Trends in Schools 24 Higher Education—Supply and Demand 25 Wal-Mart and Productivity Growth 26 Corporate Governance in a Strong Economy 27 Zero-Sum Game of Conspicuous Consumption 28 Economic Upside of Postal Reforms 29 Is Everything a Commodity? 30 Economics of the Baseball Industry 31 Examining Economic Response to Terrorism 32 Helping Poor Countries 33 Upsides and Downsides of Urban Sprawl 34 Economic Costs and Benefits of Gambling 35 Economists’ View of Overeating We look at questions raised by these lectures, and conclude by recapping the most important points of the course and the most important advice economists have offered on the key challenges facing the American economy, now and in the future. 36 American Economy in the 21st Century

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