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Small Is Beautiful: Economics as if People Mattered (Harper Perennial Modern Thought) Paperback – Illustrated, October 19, 2010
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E. F. Schumacher
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Print length352 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherHarper Perennial
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Publication dateOctober 19, 2010
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Dimensions5.31 x 0.79 x 8 inches
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ISBN-100061997765
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ISBN-13978-0061997761
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Lexile measure1330L
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“An eco-bible.” -- Time magazine
“Nothing less than a full-scale assault on conventional economic wisdom. Economists, Schumacher says, have established material growth as the most important measure of social progress. . . . Schumacher believes economists need a new set of values . . . to obtain maximum well-being with minimum consumption." -- Newsweek
“Small Is Beautiful changed the way many people think about bigness and its human costs.” -- New York Times
“Schumacher articulated truths that a funamentally true regardless of time, culture, or prevailing economic system . . . Small Is Beautiful is and always has been one of those rare books--a book that can inform a lifetime.” -- Paul Hawken, author of Natural Capitalism
From the Back Cover
Small Is Beautiful is Oxford-trained economist E. F. Schumacher's classic call for the end of excessive consumption. Schumacher inspired such movements as "Buy Locally" and "Fair Trade," while voicing strong opposition to "casino capitalism" and wasteful corporate behemoths. Named one of the Times Literary Supplement's 100 Most Influential Books Since World War II, Small Is Beautiful presents eminently logical arguments for building our economies around the needs of communities, not corporations.
About the Author
Born in Germany, Dr. E. F. Schumacher (1911–1977) fled to England after the rise of Nazism and, with the help of John Maynard Keynes, taught economics at Oxford University. He is the author of Small Is Beautiful, the book that "changed the way many people think about bigness and its human cost" (New York Times).
Product details
- Publisher : Harper Perennial; Illustrated edition (October 19, 2010)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 352 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0061997765
- ISBN-13 : 978-0061997761
- Lexile measure : 1330L
- Item Weight : 1 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.31 x 0.79 x 8 inches
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Best Sellers Rank:
#44,870 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #6 in Green Business (Books)
- #13 in Microeconomics (Books)
- #24 in Sustainable Business Development
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Over a period of eleven years, Fritz Schumacher used the pages of the pioneering British environmental magazine Resurgence to develop his ideas on a wide variety of subjects. This new book brings together twenty-one of these articles, the great majority of which have not been published elsewhere, inculding 'The Party is Over', 'Insane Work Cannot Produce a Sane Society', 'Industry & Morals', 'The Roots of Violence' and 'The critical Question of Size'. This I Believe will introduce to a new audience the freshness, clarity and profundity of Schumacher's thinking, which has already inspired a generation.
Customer reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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The 297 page book has four parts:
The Modern World has essays on sustainability and scale.
Resources discusses land, education, energy and technology
The Third World gets very deep into the similarities and differences between economic systems in "our world" and a poor village.
Organization and Ownership discusses different ownership structures and how their incentives (dis)serve man and society.
Schumacher's perspective is informed by Gandhian and Buddhist concepts of scale, i.e., the appropriate scale for a business or a job is the scale that an individual can understand and enjoy. As such, he runs directly against the "bigger is better" philosophy of mainstream economics that argues in favor of increasing scale until marginal costs begin to rise. Further, Schumacher goes against the idea that profits, per se, are the only goal. As a free-market economist, I have strong doubts about these ideas; as an environmental economist concerned with sustainable systems, I have to agree that his ideas are more sensible than those that pursue profits at all costs.
If these ideas had displaced mainstream economics (to the extent that Gordon Gekko said "small is beautiful" instead of "greed is good"), we would be living in a very different world today. Schumacher is certainly aware that he is fighting an uphill battle, but his analysis never veers from good economics. He does not hope that people will just "do the right thing." Instead, he pays attention to incentives and how they can be changed to accomplish his goals.
This book is full of wisdom, and the writing sparkles. Although you should read it to experience it yourself, I will leave you with this passage:
We are always having all sorts of clever ideas about optimizing something before it even exists. I think the stupid man who says "something is better than nothing" is much more intelligent than than the clever chap who will not touch something unless it is optimal.
Bottom Line: Economists study how humans use scarce resources. Their decisions are motivated by philosophies of why they want to use those resources. This book discusses those decisions with an important question: Is the goal more consumption or happier people? Since consumption does not appear to make us more happy, we have to ask what does, and Schumacher answers that question by noting that people living in communities and doing meaningful work are happier.
2014 update (after using the book to teach): Schumacher has a lovely vision for how a bottom-up system of production by the masses would work, but he does not describe a strategy for dealing with people(s) who prefer large and ugly, e.g., China, the US, Canada, et al. This weakness puts his advice into the aspirational rather than pragmatic section of my bookshelf.
Top reviews from other countries
O planeta viverá sem a gente. Nós é que precisamos reaprender como viver e conviver.










