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Smart Economics: Commonsense Answers to 50 Questions about Government, Taxes, Business, and Households
 
 
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Smart Economics: Commonsense Answers to 50 Questions about Government, Taxes, Business, and Households [Hardcover]

Michael L. Walden (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 30, 2005 0275987507 978-0275987503

Budget deficits, gas prices, health care costs, social security, job security…. Anxiety over the economy pervades our daily lives—from reports on the early morning newscasts to gossip around the water cooler to dinner table debate. Yet most citizens are woefully ignorant when it comes to understanding how the economy works and how to interpret the impact of policies and business decisions. It's easy to slip into generalities: government spending is wasteful, taxes are too high, good-paying jobs are being shipped overseas, Americans don't save enough. Other issues become hijacked by political partisans to advance their agendas: trade must be fair!, tax cuts will pay for themselves!, there will be no money left in the social security till after the baby boomers loot it! In Smart Economics, Michael Walden provides an antidote: take 50 of today's top economic issues and explain their meaning, implications, and potential solutions in a logical, straightforward, commonsense, and non-partisan way. Has Government Spending Been Out of Control? Is Profit Bad? Walden applies basic economic concepts and logical argumentation to help readers get their bearings—to separate fact from fiction and ultimately make better economic decisions themselves. The result is an entertaining and highly informative introduction to economic principles and their influence on our behavior.

In Smart Economics, Michael Walden provides an antidote: take 50 of today's top economic issues and explain their meaning, implications, and potential solutions in a logical, straightforward, commonsense, and non-partisan way. From Has Government Spending Been out of Control? to Is Profit Bad? to Why Are Pro Sports Stars Paid So Much? Walden demystifies the dismal science, using basic concepts and logical argumentation to help readers get their bearings—to separate fact from fiction and ultimately make better decisions, when it comes to spending, investing, saving, and voting. The result is an entertaining and informative introduction to economic principles and their influence on our behavior.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"For readers with no background in economics or mathematics, Walden addresses some of the major economic questions in the news, not so much answering them as explaining the underlying issues and the criteria for making a decision. Among them are whether war helps the economy, whether Americans pay 60-80% of their income in taxes, whether low-paying jobs are replacing high-paying ones, and whether women earn less than men."

-

Reference & Research Book News



"Walden uses basic economic concepts and logic to examine the meaning, implications, and possible solutions to 50 current economic issues. Aimed squarely at the general reader, the book is organized as a series of questions with each two- to five-page chapter laying out the basic facts surrounding the issue and applying mainstream economic reasoning to explain those facts….Specific issues include budget deficits and the national debt, Social Security, outsourcing, the trade deficit, gasoline prices, sports franchises, immigration, poverty, and health care….Recommended. General readers; all levels of undergraduates."

-

Choice



"[A]n entertaining and informative introduction to economic principles and their influence on our behavior."

-

Greater Hartford Business Times

Review

"Smart Economics will be a terrific book with wide appeal to educators at all levels, journalists, business executives, investors and interested general readers. It should be especially useful for MBA students who need drilling on the basics."

(

J. F. Smith, Professor, Kenan-Flagler Business School, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

)

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 216 pages
  • Publisher: Praeger (August 30, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0275987507
  • ISBN-13: 978-0275987503
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.2 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,356,824 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Highly recommended, August 16, 2009
By 
Beartrap88 (Virginia, USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Smart Economics: Commonsense Answers to 50 Questions about Government, Taxes, Business, and Households (Hardcover)
As a former academic economist, I wish this book had been available to assign as outside reading back when I was teaching introductory economics in earlier decades. I first learned about this little volume from a colleague known for his clear thinking about policy issues, and it doesn't disappoint. A good, quick read and chock full of common sense, it will be equally useful inside or outside the college classroom, to any reader with or without a background in economics who wishes to think clearly about economic issues of the day -- perhaps now more than ever. The book is deceptively sophisticated; it presents complicated concepts in simple language, backed by sound logic and empirical observations, without ever lapsing into jargon. The author discusses his "50 questions" with cogent explanations that demonstrate a firm grasp of economics and the ability to apply these ideas to current policy issues. He had me at question 3, when -- without ever invoking the term "Ricardian equivalence" except in an endnote -- he deftly explains how expecations of future tax increases influence current behavior of businesses and households. And he keeps it up throughout, in a reasonable tone without exhortation or shrillness and with due consideration given to varying points of view on controversial topics. "Smart Economics" will make any reader smarter in thinking about today's economic issues.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars wrong, November 8, 2008
By 
This review is from: Smart Economics: Commonsense Answers to 50 Questions about Government, Taxes, Business, and Households (Hardcover)
This book is a collection of his articles from his bi-weekly newspaper column, "You Decide" Published 2005

He is for continuing as is with;
*unfettered globalization / free trade. So what, he says, if we've lost jobs. So what, he says, if the minuscule jobs we've gain from free trade are not of the same quality as the ones lost.

*deregulating businesses because competition trumps all. Forget about all the con-men and cooperate thieves stealing billions from the American people. So what if CEOs make 400% more than the employees.
---
He's pro immigration saying they will fix Social Security and Medicare yet in preceding chapters he more or less said there was nothing wrong with Social Security and Medicare! And forget that, as he says, immigrants depress wages and cause increased costs for public assistance (welfare, medicaid, food banks, shelters...) and education.

He says peoples wages have gone up compared to prices of goods. In fact it is the opposite.

He says women do not make less than men. "the pay gap has virtually disappeared." BULL!

He's into privatization of government programs believing competition for contracts will "eliminate wasteful spending.". Well it's been proven time and time again that the only thing price competition accomplishes is cheaper products made with cheap/cheapest materials and unskilled labor doing sub-par, unsafe work. Why? Because profit is the motive, the only driving force. I think that's the wrong way to go when it comes to the nations roads, bridges, dams, water treatment & supply, sewage treatment, etc. That kind of stuff needs to be of a top quality with consistent national standards.

His solution to globalization for the American worker is to go to college and get yourself a job skill that can't be outsourced. Right. If you happen to have the IQ and money to pay for college great. If you are not so blessed or lucky, tough. It's survival of the fittest in Michael L. Walden's world.

The unfortunate fact of life tho that Mr. Walden refuses to acknowledge is; not everyone can be a winner. Yeah wouldn't it be grand if we only begat pups with high IQs and tons of ambition, creativity, ingenuity and imagination. Making money, money, money. It'd be Walden's ideal world.

If we could just beget pups who were honest and unselfish I'd be happy. If we could beget way fewer pups everyone and the planet would be happy, cuz like it or not, water, oil and all resources are diminishing. Growth is not the smart way to go.

Oh that reminds me...Walden says America will always be awash in food. Another delusion of his. He's into "unimpeded production and trade." regardless of the damage done to land and water. You can't get more irresponsible than that.

Are we headed to or in a recession; is the government overextended thanks to Iraq, Afghanistan, tax cuts, bank bailouts, etc.? Nah. Everything is hunky-dory according to Walden (professor of agricultural/resource economics, north carolina state university).

Walden obviously lives the cloistered theoretical academic life.

Table of Contents:

ECONOMIC QUESTIONS ABOUT WHAT GOVERNMENT DOES, WHAT GOVERNMENT DOESN'T DO, AND HOW GOVERNMENT SPENDS OUR MONEY
Has Government Spending Been Out of Control?
Will the National Debt Sink Our Economic Future?
Do Budget Deficits Increase Interest Rates?
Can Government Spending Be Cut by Eliminating Waste?
Does Government Spend Too Much, or Not Enough, on the Poor?
Does Spending on War Help the Economy?
Does More Spent on Education Pay-off in Student Achievement?
Has the Social Security Surplus Been Stolen?
Is Social Security Going Bankrupt?
Should Our Money Be Backed by Gold?
Should Government Enforce a Living Wage?
Should the Government Control the Prices of Necessities?
Should Government Pay Businesses to Create Jobs?
Can Government Create Prosperity?

ECONOMIC QUESTIONS ABOUT HOW MUCH TAXES ARE PAID, WHO PAYS TAXES, AND THE FAIRNESS OF THE TAXES
Do We Pay 60% to 80% of Our Income in Taxes?
Does a Tax Bracket of 40% Mean the Government Takes 40% of Your Income?
Can Cutting Tax Rates Increase Tax Revenue?
Will a Tax Cut of $1 Create $7 to $10 of New Income?
Do Corporations Pay Too Little in Taxes?
Would Rich Investors Benefit from a Flat Tax?
Is the Sales Tax Regressive?
Do the Rich Get a Break on Social Security Taxes?
Has the Marriage Tax Ended?

ECONOMIC QUESTIONS ABOUT WHAT BUSINESS DOES AND WHY AND HOW THAT AFFECTS JOBS, CONSUMERS, AND THE COUNTRY
Is American Manufacturing Dying?
Are Low-Paying Jobs Replacing High-Paying Ones?
Are Companies Out-Sourcing Good-Paying Jobs?
Will Free Trade Destroy Our Economy?
Can U.S. Workers Compete with Low-Paying Foreign Workers?
Do Countries Only Prosper If They Run a Trade Surplus?
Is a "Strong" Dollar Good and a "Weak" Dollar Bad?
Are Profits Bad?
Does Business Make Obscene Profits?
Does Big Business Control the Economy?
Can Pro Teams and Facilities Hit Economic Home Runs?
Why Are Pro Sports Stars Paid So Much for Playing a Game?
Are We Running Out of Farmers, Farmland, and Food?
Are Gas Prices at an All-Time High??
Do Big Oil Companies Manipulate Oil Supplies and Gas Prices?
Should We Become Energy Self-Sufficient?
Is Immigration Hurting Our Economy?

ECONOMIC QUESTIONS ABOUT HOW HOUSEHOLDS LIVE AND HOW THEY EARN AND SPEND MONEY
Is Everything More Expensive Today, or Should You Wish for the "Good Old Days"?
Does It Take Two Incomes for Families to Get Ahead Today?
Are Americans Drowning in Debt and Not Saving?
Do Women Earn Less Than Men?
Are the Rich Getting Richer and Everyone Else Getting Poorer?
Is Poverty Getting Worse?
If It Saves One Life, Is It Worth the Cost?
Can Families Afford College?
Would Importing Drugs Lower their Prices?
Can the Government Lower Consumers' Health Costs?
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
insourced jobs, smart economics, outsourced jobs, prescription drug prices, wasteful government spending, pro sports teams, stronger dollar, weaker dollar
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Social Security, United States, Middle East, Senator Bigheart, Bureau of the Census, Federal Reserve System, World War, Bill Bigbucks, Council of Economic Advisors, Economic Report of the President, John Doe, Department of Commerce, Food Stamps, Health Insurance Coverage, Sri Lanka, Tax Foundation, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Are Gas Prices, Are Profits Bad, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Department of Energy, Economic Questions, Julia Roberts, New York City, North Dakota
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