How We Misunderstand Economics and Why it Matters

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A01=David Leiser
A01=Yhonatan Shemesh
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aggregate effects
Author_David Leiser
Author_Yhonatan Shemesh
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behavioural economics
bias
black markets
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Category=JMA
Category=KC
central bank
cognitive barriers to economic understanding
cognitive heuristics
conspiratorial style of thinking
conspiratorial thinking
COP=United Kingdom
currency
Current Account Balances
decision making
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Density Dependent Predation
Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium Modeling
Economic Financial Literacy
Economic Literacy Education
economic misconceptions
Elsa Fornero
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eq_business-finance-law
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eq_nobargain
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Federal Reserve
Federal Reserve System
Fiat Money
financial crisis
financial literacy
Financial Literacy Education
Financial Literacy Measurement
folk economics
foreign exchange market
fraud
Gdp Growth
globalization
Good-Begets-Good
heuristics
High Gdp Growth Rate
Hot Hand Fallacy
ideology in economic thought
iintentionality
Important Macroeconomic Variables
inflation
Language_English
lay economic beliefs
Low Cash Holdings
macroeconomics
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Mainland South East Asia
money
PA=Available
pension schemes
Phillips Curve
policy framing psychology
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Social Dominance Orientation
softlaunch
taxation
UK Withdrawal
UK's Exit
Van Hiel
Vice Versa
Yhonatan Shemesh

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138938939
  • Weight: 312g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 14 May 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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This is the first book to explain why people misunderstand economics. From the cognitive shortcuts we use to make sense of complex information, to the metaphors we rely on and their effect on our thinking, this important book lays bare not only the psychological traits that distort our ability to understand such a vital topic, but also what this means for policy makers and civil society more widely.

Accessibly written, the book explores the mismatch between the complexities of economics and the constraints of human cognition that lie at the root of our misconceptions. The authors document and explain the gamut of cognitive strategies laypeople employ as they grapple with such complex topics as inflation, unemployment, economic crises, finance, and money in the modern economy. The book examines sources of misconceptions ranging from the intentionality fallacy, whereby economic phenomena are assumed to have been caused deliberately rather than to have come about by an interplay of many agents and causal factors, to the role of ideology in framing economic thinking.

Exposing the underlying biases and assumptions that undermine financial and economic literacy, and concluding with recommendations for how policies and ideas should be framed to enable a clearer understanding, this will be essential reading not only for students and researchers across psychology and economics, but also anyone interested in progressive public policy.

Visit the associated website for the book here: http://www.misunderstandeconomics.com/

David Leiser is Full Professor of Economic and Social Psychology at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel. He is Past President of the International Association for Research in Economic Psychology, and President of the Economic Psychology Division of the International Association of Applied Psychology. He studies lay conceptions, especially in the economic domain.

Yhonatan Shemesh holds a BA and MA in cognitive science from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. His research focuses on the ways the human evolutionary cognitive endowment affects how people think and act in the modern world.

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