The Undercover Economist und über 1 Million weitere Bücher verfügbar für Amazon Kindle . Erfahren Sie mehr

Möchten Sie verkaufen? Hier verkaufen
Undercover Economist
 
 
Beginnen Sie mit dem Lesen von The Undercover Economist auf Ihrem Kindle in weniger als einer Minute.

Sie haben keinen Kindle? Hier kaufen oder eine gratis Kindle Lese-App herunterladen.

Undercover Economist [Englisch] [Taschenbuch]

Tim Harford
4.2 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (13 Kundenrezensionen)

Erhältlich bei diesen Anbietern.


Weitere Ausgaben

Amazon-Preis Neu ab Gebraucht ab
Kindle Edition EUR 7,49  
Gebundene Ausgabe --  
Taschenbuch EUR 6,70  
Taschenbuch, 14. August 2006 --  
Audio CD, Audiobook, Ungekürzte Ausgabe EUR 19,99  
Dieses Buch gibt es in einer neuen Auflage:
The Undercover Economist The Undercover Economist 4.2 von 5 Sternen (13)
EUR 6,70
Auf Lager.


Produktinformation

  • Taschenbuch: 278 Seiten
  • Verlag: Little, Brown Book Group (14. August 2006)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0316731161
  • ISBN-13: 978-0316731164
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 23,2 x 14,8 x 2 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 4.2 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (13 Kundenrezensionen)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 89.456 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)

Mehr über den Autor

Tim Harford
Entdecken Sie Bücher, lesen Sie über Autoren und mehr

Besuchen Sie die Seite von Tim Harford auf Amazon

Produktbeschreibungen

Amazon.co.uk

Author Q&A with Tim Harford

Tim Harford

So are you an economic missionary, or is this just something that you love to do?

It began as something that I love to do--and I think I am now starting to get a sense of it being a mission. People can use economics and they can use statistics and numbers to get at the truth and there is a real appetite for doing so. This is such a BBC thing to say--there’s almost a public service mission to be fulfilled in educating people about economics. When I wrote The Undercover Economist, it was all about my pure enthusiasm for the subject; the book is full of stuff I wanted to say and that is always the thing with the books: they are always such fun to write.

Do you think that people these days are generally more economically literate?

People are now aware of economics for various reasons. There are the problems with the economy--there is always more interest in economics when it is all going wrong.

Where is the border line in your new book between economics and sociology?

I don’t draw a border line, and particularly not with the new book. The Undercover Economist was basically all the cool economics I could think of and The Logic of Life was me investigating a particular part of economics. All of the references in The Logic of Life were academic economics papers that I had related--and hopefully made more fun. This new book, Adapt, is very different. I have started by asking what is wrong with the world, what needs fixing, how does it work--and if economics can tell us something about that (which it can) then I have used it. And if economics is not the tool that you need--if you need to turn to sociology or engineering or biology or psychology--I have, in fact, turned to all of them in this book. If that’s what you need, then that’s where I have gone. So I have written this book in a different way: I started with a problem and tried to figure out how to solve it.

What specific subjects do you tackle?

To be a bit more specific, the book is about how difficult problems get solved and I look at quick change; the banking crisis; poverty; innovation, as I think there is an innovation slow-down; and the war in Iraq. Also, I look at both problems in business and in everyday life. Those are the big problems that I look at--and my conclusion is that these sorts of problems only ever get solved by trial and error, so when they are being solved, they are being solved through experimentation, which is often a bottom-up process. When they are not being solved it is because we are not willing to experiment, or to use trial and error.

Do you think companies will change to be much more experimental, with more decisions placed in the hands of employees?

I don’t think that is necessarily a trend, and the reason is that the market itself is highly experimental, so if your company isn’t experimental it may just happen to have a really great, successful idea--and that’s fine; if it doesn’t, it will go bankrupt. But that said, it is very interesting to look at the range of companies who have got very into experimentation--they range from the key-cutting chain Timpson’s to Google; you can’t get more different than those two firms, but actually the language is very similar; the recruitment policies are similar; the way the employees get paid is similar.

The “strap line” of the book is that “Success always starts with failure.” You are a successful author… so what was the failure that set you up for success?

I was working on a book before The Undercover Economist… it was going to be a sort of Adrian Mole/Bridget Jones’ Diary-styled fictional comedy, in which the hero was this economist and through the hilarious things that happened to him, all these economic principles would be explained--which is a great idea--but the trouble is that I am not actually funny. My first job was as a management consultant… and I was a terrible management consultant. I crashed out after a few months. Much better that, than to stick with the job for two or three years-- a lot of people say you have got to do that to “show your commitment.” Taking the job was a mistake--why would I need to show my commitment to a mistake? Better to realise you made a mistake, stop and do something else, which I did.

That idea that “failure breeds success” is central to most entrepreneurs. Do you think we need more of it in the UK?

I think that the real problem is not failure rates in business; the problem is failure rates in politics. We have had much higher failure rates in politics. What actually happens is politicians--and this is true of all political parties--have got some project and they’ll say, “Right, we are going to do this thing,” and it is quite likely that idea is a bad idea--because most ideas fail; the world is complicated and while I don’t have the numbers for this, most ideas are, as it turns out, not good ideas.

But they never correct the data, or whatever it is they need to measure, to find out where their idea is failing. So they have this bad idea, roll this bad idea out and the bad idea sticks, costs the country hundreds, millions, or billions of pounds, and then the bad idea is finally reversed by the next party on purely ideological grounds and you never find out whether it really worked or not. So we have this very, very low willingness to collect the data that would be necessary to demonstrate failure, which is the bit we actually need.

To give a brief example: Ken Livingstone, as Mayor of London, came along and introduced these long, bendy buses. Boris Johnson came along and said, “If you elect me, I am going to get rid of those big bendy buses and replace them with double-decker buses.” He was elected and he did it, so… which one of them is right? I don’t know. I mean, isn’t that crazy? I know democracy is a wonderful thing and we voted for Ken Livingstone and we voted for Boris Johnson, but it would be nice to actually have the data on passenger injury rates, how quickly people can get on and off these buses, whether disabled people are using these buses… the sort of basic evidence you would want to collect.

Based on that, are you a supporter of David Cameron’s “Big Society”, which in a sense favours local experimentation over central government planning?

Well, I have some sympathy for the idea of local experimentation, but what worries me is that we have to have some mechanism that is going to tell you what is working and what is not--and there is no proposal for that. Cameron’s Tories seem to have the view that ‘if it is local then it will work.’ In my book, I have all kinds of interesting case studies of situations where localism really would have worked incredibly well, as in, say, the US Army in Iraq. But I have also got examples of where localism did not work well at all--such as a corruption-fighting drive in Indonesia.

Is the new book, Adapt, your movement away from economic rationalist to management guru? Are you going to cast your eye over bigger problems?

The two changes in Adapt are that I have tried to start with the problem, rather than saying, “I have got a hammer--I’m going to look for a nail.” I started with a nail and said, “Ok, look, I need to get this hammered in.” So I have started with the problem and then looked anywhere for solutions. And the second thing is that I have tried to do is write with more of a narrative. This is not a Malcolm Gladwell book, but I really admire the way that people like Gladwell get quite complex ideas across because they get you interested in the story; that is something that I have tried to do more of here. I am not too worried about it, because I know that I am never going to turn into Malcolm Gladwell--I am always going to be Tim Harford--but it doesn’t hurt to nudge in a certain direction.

On Amazon, we recommend new book ideas to people: “If you like Tim Harford you may like…”, but what does Tim Harford also like?

I read a lot of books, mostly non-fiction and in two categories: people who I think write a lot better than I do, and people who think about economics more deeply than I do. In the first category I am reading people like Michael Lewis, Kathryn Schulz (I loved her first book, Being Wrong), Malcolm Gladwell and Alain de Botton. In the second category, I read lots of technical economics books, but I enjoy Steven Landsburg, Edward Glaeser (who has a book out now which looks good), Bill Easterly… I don’t necessarily agree with all of these people!

When I am not reading non-fiction, I am reading comic books or 1980s fantasy authors like Jack Vance.

Click here to read a longer version of this interview.

-- Dieser Text bezieht sich auf eine andere Ausgabe: Taschenbuch .

Pressestimmen

*'Economists do indeed think differently from the rest of us. This book gives an excellent introduction as to quite why they do' TELEGRAPH *'THE UNDERCOVER ECONOMIST is an excellent Undercover Introduction to Economics. If you think that sounds boring, you probably ought to read it' FINANCIAL TIMES *'As lively and witty an introduction to the supposedly "dismal science" as you are likely to read' THE TIMES *'Harford writes like a dream ... reading THE UNDERCOVER ECONOMIST is like spending an ordinary day wearing X-ray goggles' David Bodanis, author of ELECTRIC UNIVERSE and E=MC2 *'THE UNDERCOVER ECONOMIST is a rare specimen ... beautifully written and argued, it brings the power of economics to life' Steven D. Levitt, Professor of Economics, University of Chicago and author of FREAKONOMICS


In diesem Buch (Mehr dazu)
Nach einer anderen Ausgabe dieses Buches suchen.
Einleitungssatz
I would like to thank you for buying this book, but if you're anything like me you haven't bought it at all. Lesen Sie die erste Seite
Mehr entdecken
Wortanzeiger
Ausgewählte Seiten ansehen
Buchdeckel | Copyright | Inhaltsverzeichnis | Auszug | Stichwortverzeichnis
Hier reinlesen und suchen:

Vorgeschlagene Tags zu ähnlichen Produkten

 (Was ist das?)
Setzen Sie den ersten relevanten Tag hinzu (ein Schlüsselwort, das mit diesem Produkt in engem Zusammenhang steht).
 

 

Kundenrezensionen

Die hilfreichsten Kundenrezensionen
29 von 31 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Von Donald Mitchell TOP 500 REZENSENT
Format:Taschenbuch
The Undercover Economist successfully avoids mind-numbing equations, boring examples and abstruse subjects.

Using ten themes, Mr. Harford provides a popular platform for the latest thinking on economics.

In Who Pays for Your Coffee? he looks at how a desire for quick access to caffeine allows landlords along commuter routes to charge high rents for take-out coffee locations.

In What Supermarkets Don't Want You to Know? he explores how item choices and pricing are used to create the appearance of competitiveness while encouraging the price insensitive to pay as much as they like. He also explains the theory of why you pay so much more for fancier coffee drinks . . . and even possibly for fair trade coffee.

Perfect Markets and the "World of Truth" considers how economic policy can influence how people make decisions and allocate resources more efficiently such as by raising taxes on fuel while subsidizing the poor with a "head start".

Crosstown Traffic looks at the ways that social problems can be solved by a judicious use of fees, such as by charging for the right to pollute.

The Inside Story examines how imperfect information causes costs and prices to soar . . . as those who know what's good and bad take advantage of those who don't. People sell used cars that are lemons and hold on to ones that are peaches. Those who need health insurance because they are sick buy it while those who are well avoid the cost.

Rational Insanity describes talks about irrationality in economic decisions such as the recent Internet bubble.

The Men Who Knew the Value of Nothing is about describes the brilliant and not so brilliant auctions that economists set up to sell radio spectrum for new services around the world.

Why Poor Countries are Poor contains an unforgettable tale of what it's like in Cameroon and why the economy isn't likely to get better anytime soon.

Beer, Fries and Globalization makes the case for free trade.

How China Grew Rich is a nice study in government policy in China and how it overcame the worst problems of being a centralized economy.

If you know economics, all that will be new in most of these chapters will be the examples, which are fairly new and interesting.

If you don't know economics, you probably won't follow some of the chapters such as Beer, Fries and Globalization.

So this book will be most appealing to those who know a lot about economics and will be interested to see how key ideas can be explained more simply and in a livelier way.

For those who don't know economics, it's a lot better than my economics professors in explaining key ideas. But you may end up learning more than you wanted to know. Many of the chapters are of more interest to economists than the typical non-economist reader. I suggest you selectively read the chapters to focus on the ones that seem interesting to you.

I thought that the last chapter on China had the most interesting material and explained it very well.

Some people will compare this book to Freakonomics. That's a peculiar comparison to make. That book uses economics to provide new perspectives on old problems. This book, instead, tries to teach economics. The two books have substantially different purposes and perspectives as a result.
War diese Rezension für Sie hilfreich?
4 von 5 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Format:Taschenbuch
This is a great book the read and maybe to enjoy during a coffee. I studied economics and thought after a while that it would be fun to read such a book. What I discovered was that the book actually covers all the major topics and issues that is subject to several years of studies. Yet, it is much better readable and actually funny than all the course literature you might come across.

So my judgment is that this book is a good pick for everybody who just wonders what economics is all about - both future/current students and people just interested in what makes the today's world spin around.
War diese Rezension für Sie hilfreich?
1 von 1 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Von V. Wanner
Format:Taschenbuch
As someone who has attended his economics 101 lectures, this book didn't really tell me anything I didn't know.

What it does manage to do, however, is to do it in a manner that even economically disinterested people should be able to comprehend quickly and easily, should they so choose.

Harford does oversimplify a bit too much at places, but that's alright - if you want to get some REALLY basic points across to people this book might give you the ammunition to do so with well-developed and clearly structured examples.

His analogy of the market as truth-finding mechanism is especially useful:

1a. You want to know how much it would cost to solve a problem.
1b. You want to know how much people would be willing to pay for the solution.

2. People WILL lie. Companies will claim ridiculous costs and consumers will claim total disinterest in the product.

3. The best (and often only) way to find out how much things really costs and is worth to people is by forcing them to put their money where their mouth is - via markets.

Harford is a newspaper columnist and that shows in his style: He is a far smoother read than most economists and has a knack for explaining things concisely and with vivid imagery.

A buy for economy laypeople who want to gain a better understanding of market basics. Interesting for seasoned economists who'd like to better communicate their ideas to laypeople.
War diese Rezension für Sie hilfreich?
Die neuesten Kundenrezensionen
must be read book!
Don't read it when you are in train, bus, ..., you will miss your station.
Don't read it when you have an appointment, you will miss your appointment.
... Lesen Sie weiter...
Vor 17 Monaten von gilas veröffentlicht
Ökonomie leicht gemacht
Erwartet habe ich etwas wie "Freakonomics". Bekommen habe ich ein Buch, das zwar weniger auf Alltagsfragen eingeht, dafür aber auf anschauliche Weise die Grundprinzipien der... Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 19. September 2009 von Peer Sylvester
Humorvolle Präsentation der Markttheorie im richtigen Leben
Unterhaltsam und amüsant mit interessanten und lehrreichen Anekdoten rund um das alltägliche Leben in der Marktwirtschaft. Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 8. April 2009 von Münchberg
Als zusätzliche Empfehlung zum Jura Studium gekauft
Im Buch werden Beispiele aus dem Alltag geben um die Ökonomie zu beschreiben. Lustig zu lesen. Auch das Englisch ist gut zu verstehen.
Veröffentlicht am 13. Februar 2009 von Miriam Pfister
Ein VWL Grundbuch!
Ich hatte das Buch gekauft, um unterhaltsame neue Einblicke und die Zusammenhänge des täglichen Lebens zu bekommen. Analog zu Freakonomics. Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 10. Juni 2007 von Gunther Tutein
A Lively Look at Beginning Economic Theory
The Undercover Economist successfully avoids mind-numbing equations, boring examples and abstruse subjects.

Using ten themes, Mr. Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 21. Mai 2007 von Donald Mitchell
Tendenziell langweilig!
Hatte ich mir das Buch gekauft in der Erwartung interessanter Einblicke in wirtschaftliche Phaenomene, wurde die Enttaeuschung ueber das Buch von Seite zu Seite groesser. Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 21. Februar 2007 von m-b-f-t.20six.de
A Lively Look at Beginning Economic Theory
The Undercover Economist successfully avoids mind-numbing equations, boring examples and abstruse subjects.

Using ten themes, Mr. Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 30. Januar 2007 von Donald Mitchell
A Lively Look at Beginning Economic Theory
The Undercover Economist successfully avoids mind-numbing equations, boring examples and abstruse subjects.

Using ten themes, Mr. Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 30. Januar 2007 von Donald Mitchell
A Lively Look at Beginning Economic Theory
The Undercover Economist successfully avoids mind-numbing equations, boring examples and abstruse subjects.

Using ten themes, Mr. Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 21. Juli 2006 von Donald Mitchell
Kundenrezensionen suchen
Nur in den Rezensionen zu diesem Produkt suchen

Kunden diskutieren

Das Forum zu diesem Produkt
Diskussion Antworten Jüngster Beitrag
Noch keine Diskussionen

Fragen stellen, Meinungen austauschen, Einblicke gewinnen
Neue Diskussion starten
Thema:
Erster Beitrag:
Eingabe des Log-ins
 


Aktive Diskussionen in ähnlichen Foren
Kundendiskussionen durchsuchen
Alle Amazon-Diskussionen durchsuchen
   
Ähnliche Foren


Lieblingslisten


Ähnliche Artikel finden


Anhand des Sachgebietes nach ähnlichen Produkten suchen:


Ihr Kommentar