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Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $79.99

Format:
Paperback
640 pp.
195 mm x 265 mm

ISBN-13:
9780198849841

Copyright Year:
2020

Imprint: OUP UK


Economy, Society, and Public Policy

CORE ESPP Team

In order to be well-governed, a democracy needs voters who are fluent in the language of economics and who can do some quantitative analysis of social and economic policy. We also need a well-trained cadre of researchers and journalists who have more advanced skills in these fields.

Many students in other disciplines are drawn to economics so that they can engage with policy debates on environmental sustainability, inequality, the future of work, financial instability, and innovation. But, when they begin the study of economics, they find that courses appear to have little to do with these pressing policy matters, and are designed primarily for students who want to study the subject as their major, or even for those destined to go on to post-graduate study in the field.

The result: policy-oriented students often find they have to choose between a quantitative and analytical course of studyeconomicsthat is only minimally policy oriented in content and that downplays the insights of other disciplines, or a policy and problem-oriented course of study that gives them little training in modelling or quantitative scientific methods.

Economy, Society, and Public Policy changes this.

It has been created specifically for students from social science, public policy, business studies, engineering, biology, and other disciplines who are not economics majors. If you are one of these students, we want to engage, challenge, and empower you with an understanding of economics. We hope you will acquire the tools to articulate reasoned views on pressing policy problems. You may even decide to take more courses in economics as a result.

The book is also being used successfully in courses for economics, business, and public policy majors, as well as in economics modules for masters courses in Public Policy and in Philosophy, Politics and Economics (PPE).

This textbook - the print complement to CORE's open-access online eBook - is the result of a worldwide collaboration among researchers, educators, and students who are committed to bringing the socially relevant insights of economics to a broader audience.

Readership : Undergraduate and postgraduate students from social science, public policy, business studies, engineering, and other disciplines who are not economics majors.

Reviews

  • `We chose ESPP because we have a very diverse cohort some students with Economic and Maths A level whilst others do not, so teaching a traditional course was hard most students were bored whilst others were struggling to keep pace. We wanted a more up-to-date, data-driven syllabus that covered the topics students wanted to discuss (inequality, climate change, etc.). I have just have finished teaching the first cohort of nearly 500 students and they seem to be highly engaged.'

    --Carlos Cortinhas, University of Exeter, UK

  • "ESPP was a very successful text for non-Economics majors. They really appreciated how they could get a great introduction to economics that focused on the real world and data, and was meaningful to their own experience of the world."

    --Mark Dodd, University of Adelaide, Australia

  • "Other economics textbooks teach you about individual tools. ESPP, on the other hand, teaches you how to address complex issues such as inequality and unemployment by simultaneously using all the tools in the toolbox. As a public policy student, this approach allowed me to evaluate current events and policy proposals through an economically comprehensive, rather than fragmented, lens."

    --Alaina Leggette, MPA student at Columbia University (SIPA)

  • "ESPP is an outstanding resource for teaching economic principles to students who will not major in the field. It provides an accessible yet comprehensive introduction to the economic ideas that are essential for understanding politics and policy."

    --Matthew DiGiuseppe, Leiden University, Netherlands

  • "I would recommend ESPP as an excellent resource for a wide range of courses teaching introductory economics with a focus on public policy. It takes some of the key material from The Economy and re-packages it for students who are not specialising in economics, and who want to see the subject in a wider context. I appreciate the increased focus on data, with links to Doing Economics."

    --Stephen Wright, Birkbeck, University of London, UK

  • "We were warned by the course leader before the start that we would not see the world in the same way after studying the module and this proved to be the case. While tackling the deep issues of global inequality and market failures CORE also gave us quick insights into specialist areas and analytical tools so I was able in the exam to solve a pure strategy Nash equilibrium and answer questions on the use of monetary policy and explain models of welfare economics. I particularly liked the snapshots of great economics thinkers and interactive graphics which brought complex ideas to life. The course succeeded in refreshing and updating my thinking and gave me confidence to work in more depth within the economics field as a financial journalist."
  • "The dynamic approach makes a sound rejoinder to the critics of the subject as the 'dismal science' and its teaching which shows exactly how it is as relevant today as it was during the formative years of Adam Smith or the crisis years of Keynes."

    --Simon Greaves, FT.com and Student in MSc PPE, Birkbeck, University of London

1. Capitalism and democracy: Affluence, inequality, and the environment
2. Social interaction and economic outcomes
3. Public policy for fairness and efficiency
4. Work, wellbeing, and scarcity
5. Institutions, power, and inequality
6. The firm: Employees, managers, and owners
7. Firms and markets for goods and services
8. The labour market and the product market: Unemployment and inequality
9. The credit market: Borrowers, lenders, and the rate of interest
10. Banks, money, housing, and financial assets
11. Market successes and failures
12. Governments and markets in a democratic society

There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.

This volume is written by the CORE ESPP Team.

Making Sense - Margot Northey

Special Features

  • Students begin their study of economics by understanding that the economy is situated within society and the biosphere.
  • Economists are interested in establishing causation does a policy work so, students learn how to identify causation (not just correlation) through the use of natural experiments, lab experiments, and other quantitative methods.
  • Social interactions (modelled using simple game theory) and incomplete information (modelled using a series of principal-agent problems) are introduced from the beginning. As a result, phenomena studied by the other social sciences such as social norms and the exercise of power play a role.
  • The insights of diverse schools of thought - from Marx and the classical economists to Hayek and Schumpeter - play an integral part in the book.
  • The way economists think about public policy is central to ESPP. This is introduced in Units 2 and 3, rather than later in the course.
  • Students analyse the government as an actor large enough to solve as well as to cause problems.
  • Students work with real data and learn transferable, quantitative skills by analysing policy problems. The online Doing Economics provides a step-by-step guide for the quantitative analysis of a policy problem related to each ESPP unit.