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ECONOMICS
LEEDS M., ALLMEN P., SCHIMING R. wydawnictwo: PEARSON, 2006, wydanie I cena netto: 630.00 Twoja cena 598,50 zł + 5% vat - dodaj do koszyka
This text comes packaged with an access kit for the new easy-to-use format of MyEconLab,
which requires no set-up by the professor. With this, students can access practice
problems for each chapter in the book, graphing questions, learning resources, and live
tutoring. Professors who plan to use advanced course management online should order the
book with MyEconLab in CourseCompass. View ‘Alternate Versions’ of this book on the
web catalog page, or contact your local representative for details.
Economics offers a novel approach to the principles of economics course based on three
pedagogical principles:
Ongoing assessment is an essential component of the learning process;
Students understand concepts better when they are presented in the context of engaging
stories;
Students remember more when they connect concepts to what they see or read in the news and
what they experience in their every day life.
Quality assessment permeates every component of Economics, the first textbook to offer a
class-tested test bank. MyEconLab’s innovative online homework and tutorial system, with
its innovative computer-grade graphing exercises, is tightly linked to the text.
Table of Contents
Part I: Introduction
1. Economics: The Science of Everyday Life
EXAMPLE Registering for Class on the First Day of the Semester
2. Efficiency and Allocation in the Global Economy
EXAMPLE U.S Spending on Military Build-up and Healthcare
3. The American Economy in a Global Setting
EXAMPLE Ups and Downs of Pittsburghs Steel Industry
4. Introduction to the Demand and Supply Framework
EXAMPLE Market for Coffee in Burlington, Vermont
5. Elasticity
EXAMPLE Lunchtime Market for Fast Food
6. Market Efficiency and Government Intervention
EXAMPLE Buying a Laptop Computer for College
PART II: The Role of Consumers and Firms
7. Consumer Behavior
EXAMPLE Spending Money on Pizza or CDs
8. Firm Production and Cost
EXAMPLE Guitar Production in Nashville, TN
PART III: Market Structure, Pricing, and Public Policy
9. Perfect Competition
EXAMPLE Pike Place Market and the Seattle Salmon Business
10. Monopoly
EXAMPLE Major League Baseball and an Atlanta Braves game
11. Monopolistic Competition and Product Differentiation
EXAMPLE Philly Cheese Steak Industry
12. Oligopoly
EXAMPLE Video Game Console Industry
13. Antitrust, Regulation, and Deregulation
EXAMPLE Ticketmaster as a Monopoly
PART IV: Resource Markets, Market Failure and Public Goods
14. Firms and Financial Markets
EXAMPLE Google's Rise to Prominence
15. Labor Markets
EXAMPLE MP3 Carrying Case Manufacturer
16. Poverty and the Distribution of Income
EXAMPLE Oprah Winfrey's Career
17. Market Failure and Public Goods
EXAMPLE The Chesapeake Bay's Endangered Natural Resources
Part V: Measuring Macroeconomic Health
18. Unemployment and Employment
EXAMPLE Unemployed College Grad in the San Francisco Job Market
19. Inflation and Prices
EXAMPLE Hyperinflation in Germany During the 1920's
20. GDP and the Business Cycle
EXAMPLE Buying American: Toyota Matrix or Ford Focus
Part VI: The Aggregate Demand, Aggregate Supply, and Fiscal Policy
21. Aggregate Demand/Aggregate Supply: The Basic Model
EXAMPLE Comparison of Macroeconomics Outcomes After the Vietnam War and Gulf Wars
22. From Short-Run to Long-Run Equilibrium: The Model in Action
EXAMPLE Comparative Performance of Various Economies
23. The Role of Aggregate Demand in the Short-Run
EXAMPLE Hollywood's Fascination with the Great Depression
24. Fiscal Policy
EXAMPLE "Blame Game" Over the Health of the Economy During Presidential
Elections
25. The Federal Budget and the National Debt
EXAMPLE Spiraling U.S. National Debt
Part VII: Money and Monetary Policy
26. Basics of Money and Banking
EXAMPLE Private Currency in Ithaca, New York
27. Money Creation and Monetary Policy
EXAMPLE Federal Reserve Actions to Stabilize the U.S. Economy in the Wakeof the 9/11
Terrorist Attacks
28. Money in the Macroeconomy
EXAMPLE Federal Reserve Doubles M1 Money Supply
Part VIII: Long-Run Economic Health
29. Long-Run Implications of Macroeconomic Policy
EXAMPLE Debate Over Active versus Passive Stabilizatoin Policies in Response to the 2001
Recession
30. Economic Growth
EXAMPLE Comparing the U.S. and Mexican Economies
Part IX: International Trade and Finance
31. International Trade
EXAMPLE Anti-globalization Protesters at the WTO Meeting in Seattle, WA
32. International Finance
EXAMPLE The Argentine Financial Crisis
Features
The test bank was developed alongside the textbook. With thousands of class-tested
questions, Economics ensures accuracy and provides instructor with reliable benchmarks for
monitoring student performance.
MyEconLab Study Guide exercises, found at the end of each chapter, are also found online
in the MyEconLab homework system, giving the instructors the option of assigning homework
on paper or online, where MyEconLab grades the problems for the instructor.
Tested in classrooms across the country, the stories that underpin each chapter
significantly improve student understanding and retention of the topics presented. Please
see the detailed TOC for a list of all the chapter length examples.
Twice per chapter, Economics directs students to MyEconLab for eThemes of the Times,
interactive new analysis problems built around full-text articles from the New York Times.
These exercises help solidify students’ understanding of chapter concepts. Instructors
can test students on these news analysis articles through preloaded quizzes in MyEconLab’s
assessment engine.
The Life Lessons boxed feature provides information that students can apply to their
everyday lives and decisions. Many are focused on consumer decisions that will have a
lasting impact.
To inspire critical-thinking of chapter concepts, the Strategy and Policy feature delves
into policies and issues and challenges students to analyze them using economic tools.
Graphs are clear, precise, and accessible, so students clearly understand the
relationships among economic variables.
Each chapter features two Test and Extend exercises. These exercises help student gauge
their comprehension of core material and encourage them to apply what they've learned to a
related active-learning exercise.
MyEconLab, the first online homework and tutorial system with gradable graphing problems,
allows the instructor to increase the frequency of assessment: all homework, including
exercises that require students to draw graphs, is automatically graded and input into an
online gradebook for the instructor. An algorithmic bank of problems offers nearly
limitless homework sets, and allows instructors to also use MyEconLab for low-stakes
quizzing.
MyEconLab’s Study Plan helps students focus on the areas in which they’re weakest.
Students complete online diagnostic tests and MyEconLab serves up additional problem sets
and tutorials to help students shore up weak areas.
MyEconLab’s three types of graphing exercises (Model-based Graph, Draw Graph, and macro
Data Graph problems) help students gradually increase their comfort level with graphs.
Chapter 6, Market Efficiency and Government Intervention covers efficiency concepts
(consumer and producer of surplus, and deadweight loss) and fairness in the same chapter,
giving students practical tools for thinking about government policies.
Chapter 4, Introduction to the Supply and Demand Framework, includes a well-received
section on the Limits of Demand and Supply Analysis. It discusses thin markets such as the
out-of-print-book market, dynamic vs. static models, and fluctuating market conditions.
Chapter 10, Monopoly, receives unanimous praise for motivating the discussion by examining
the price of attending a major league baseball game in Atlanta, Georgia. The authors lead
off the chapter by defining the market in terms of major league baseball teams in nearby
cities.
Chapter 18, Employment and Unemployment, personalizes the issue of unemployment for the
reader through the story of an unemployed college graduate pondering his opportunities in
the San Francisco job market. This chapter features a probing look at the impacts of
immigration, trade, and outsourcing, and emphasis on the interpretation of unemployment
rather than the calculation of unemployment.
Hardcover
870 pages
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