SOME students have been asking me about economics books they can read in order to help their university applications.
Here are some recommendations:
1. Predictably Irrational by Dan Ariely
This is a book about "behaviourial economics", the use of experiments and theories from psychology to better understand economic behaviour. This book challenges traditional economic ideas about how we make economic decisions. It's also very funny!
2. Ship of Fools by Fintan O'Toole
This book discusses the rise and fall of the Irish economy over the 1990s and 2000s. The country was praised around the world as the best example of how deregulation, low taxes and foreign investment could led to very high growth rates. Before it all went spectacularly wrong during the Credit Crunch. It's GDP has fallen by 14% between 2008 to 2010, and has the world's highest debt to other countries - equivalent to 811% of GDP. This book argues the stupidity and greed of Ireland's politicians and business leaders caused this.
3. The Storm: The World Economic Crisis and What It Means by Vince Cable
Vince Cable is currently the Miinster for Trade in the UK government. He was one of the few people to warn about the problems that eventually dragged this country into the Credit Crunch. This is a short and readable account of those events.
4. The Death of Economics by Paul Ormerod
This book was written some time ago, but is still excellent. It is good for those students who also know some maths. The central idea of the book is how the maths and stats used in making economic forecasts is wrong, and how this has led to completely wrong decisions and theories.
If you would like some more suggestions, here is a longer list from tutor2u:
http://www.tutor2u.net/blog/index.php/economics/comments/revised-reading-list-for-economists-post-as-papers/#extended
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