Economics can be a difficult topic to get started with, and it can be a real turn off for many. Whether you’re a student about to enrol on an economics course, a business owner, or head of finances in your family, these books will be invaluable to read.
And read you will, because we’ve picked the easily digestible books written by authors who understand the difficulty of economics. Check them out below!
#1 Basic Economics by Thomas Sowell
Thomas Sowell earned his PhD in economics from the University of Chicago and has served as an economics professor for Cornell University and UCLA. He has also worked for two think tanks, the Urban Institute and the Hoover Institution.
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#2 Hidden Order by David Friedman
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#3 Freakonomics by Steven D. Levitt
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#4 Middle Schoolers, Meet Media Literacy by Jim Wasserman
The authors are experienced at breaking down complex economic theory into digestible portions so that anyone can understand them and come away with a solid foundation of economic principles. Each theoretical concept is reinforced by an exercise that demonstrates how that concept works in the real world, so you will not only learn economics, but you’ll come away with tools to help you navigate the pitfalls and traps that marketers use to get you to make decisions against your self-interest.
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#5 Small is Beautiful by Fritz Schumacher
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#6 Naked economics by Charles Wheelan
Charles Wheelan strikes a good balance in seeking the truth about how modern economies work, and more importantly, what makes them work better
I was pleasantly surprised as I didn’t expect a book on the broad spectrum of economics to be such an entertaining read. Charles Wheelan has a gift for taking a topic with the potential to operate as a sedative and turn it into an educational thriller.
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#7 Economics in One Lesson by Henry Hazlitt
By illustrating economic problems through stories instead of half-page sentences, he manages to convey complex, counter-intuitive ideas simply. The book is no thousand-page tome, and it doesn’t have to be. The core ideas of incentive systems, second and third-order consequences and the price mechanism are laid out in easy to understand form in just a few pages. Probably the easiest introduction to economics I’ve read.
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#8 The Undercover Economist by Tim Harford
The author does a fantastic job explaining vital economic concept, gratefully, without the confusing charts, graphs and formulas that usually adorn an economics course. Offerins some fascinating anecdotes about how economics plays out in everyday life.
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#9 Narconomics by Tom Wainwright
A great insight into the criminal world with very clear comparisons to legitimate businesses.
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#10 Basic Economics by Thomas Sowell
It can show you just how wrong we can be about how the economy functions and what Capitalism truly is.
I really liked that the book covered a variety of bad policies that usually suggested by politicians to address issues and end up making the original problems more severe.
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#11 Incremental Improvements by Mike Brodsky
Also, the chapter on personal finance provides a very thorough overview of this subject, with lots of information and professional wisdom that can help the reader to gain a better understanding of this discipline. The book includes lots of helpful ideas regarding personal finance, behavioral economics, as well as personal development, in an easy to read format.
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#12 The Economics Book by Niall Kishtainy
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#13 Talking to My Daughter About the Economy by Yanis Varoufakis
Talking to My Daughter About the Economy provides an understanding of the backdrop, necessary before learning more about specific facets of the economy and economics. I highly recommend it, both to teenagers and adults.
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#14 Average Is Over by Tyler Cowen
Cowen paints a rather bleak picture for many young folks just entering the labor force by stating that modern economies are splitting into two camps: very stagnant sectors vs. very dynamic sectors, with the difference between them based on imbalances in technological growth. And he believes that this will divide workers into two categories as well: those whose abilities complement the skill requirements of the computer world vs. those who are (essentially) competing against the computer. More and more members of the labor force are falling on one side of the divide or the other, and that is why being average is over.
The tech-savvy group that’s adept at getting the most out of technology will generally do well economically over the course of their working careers, but the others will struggle just to get by. Cowen then discusses the societal implications of these trends — which business leaders need to understand so that they can get ahead of the curve.
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#15 Economics in One Lesson by Henry Hazlitt
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