Microeconomics

Regular price €87.99
A01=Samuel Bowles
Altruism
Author_Samuel Bowles
Bargaining power
Bargaining problem
Barriers to entry
Betterment
Bribery
Capitalism
Category=KCC
Coase theorem
Common-pool resource
Comparative advantage
Competition
Competition (economics)
Competitive equilibrium
Contract curve
Coordination failure (economics)
Dictator game
Economic equilibrium
Economic surplus
Economics
Effective competition
Employment
Endowment effect
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Expected utility hypothesis
Experience good
Extended order
Externality
Incentive
Income
Incomplete contracts
Information asymmetry
Institution
Invisible hand
Involuntary unemployment
Isoquant
Keeping up with the Joneses
Limited liability
Loss aversion
Marginal cost
Marginal rate of substitution
Marginal utility
Market failure
Market power
Monopolistic competition
Nash equilibrium
Opportunity cost
Optimal tax
Pareto efficiency
Principal-agent problem
Prisoner's dilemma
Probability
Production-possibility frontier
Purchasing power
Residual claimant
Result
Risk aversion
Ronald Coase
Self-interest
Shadow price
Social dilemma
Spontaneous order
Strategic complements
Tax
Thomas Robert Malthus
Time preference
Unemployment
Utilitarianism
Utility
Voluntary exchange
Wage
Wealth

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691126388
  • Weight: 851g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Feb 2006
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In this novel introduction to modern microeconomic theory, Samuel Bowles returns to the classical economists' interest in the wealth and poverty of nations and people, the workings of the institutions of capitalist economies, and the coevolution of individual preferences and the structures of markets, firms, and other institutions. Using recent advances in evolutionary game theory, contract theory, behavioral experiments, and the modeling of dynamic processes, he develops a theory of how economic institutions shape individual behavior, and how institutions evolve due to individual actions, technological change, and chance events. Topics addressed include institutional innovation, social preferences, nonmarket social interactions, social capital, equilibrium unemployment, credit constraints, economic power, generalized increasing returns, disequilibrium outcomes, and path dependency. Each chapter is introduced by empirical puzzles or historical episodes illuminated by the modeling that follows, and the book closes with sets of problems to be solved by readers seeking to improve their mathematical modeling skills. Complementing standard mathematical analysis are agent-based computer simulations of complex evolving systems that are available online so that readers can experiment with the models. Bowles concludes with the time-honored challenge of "getting the rules right," providing an evaluation of markets, states, and communities as contrasting and yet sometimes synergistic structures of governance. Must reading for students and scholars not only in economics but across the behavioral sciences, this engagingly written and compelling exposition of the new microeconomics moves the field beyond the conventional models of prices and markets toward a more accurate and policy-relevant portrayal of human social behavior.
Samuel Bowles is Research Professor and Director of the Behavioral Sciences Program at the Santa Fe Institute and Professor of Economics at the University of Siena. He is coauthor of "Notes and Problems in Microeconomic Theory" (North Holland Texts in Mathematical Economics) and "Schooling in Capitalist America" (Basic Books), and has published articles, most recently, in the "American Economic Review, Nature", the "Quarterly Journal of Economics", the "Economic Journal", and the "Journal of Theoretical Biology".