Armchair Economist book report

1093 Words3 Pages

Economic theories are as wide as an economist's vision to think. In the

Steven Landsburg book The Armchair Economist - Economics and Everyday Life,

Landsburg takes many of these economic theories and relates them to everyday

type scenarios and makes them understandable to a beginning economist. He

breaks his book into six sections each relating to different types of economics,

from personal to national theories.

Landsburg talks about the power of incentives in his first chapter. What he

is referring to is how incentives drive peoples decisions to do things in life.

He makes an analogy that Seatbelts kill. This statement refers to the added

protection one gets from wearing a seatbelt, which will entice someone to take

greater risks while driving a vehicle. We as consumers are bombarded with

incentives everyday in the market place. Incentives, come in all forms, sale

prices, free-bees, coupons. Incentives are designed to make you do something

NOW instead of putting it of until later. Incentives are not always a good

thing, such as in today?s housing market. Homebuyers were offered sub-prime and

zero percent interest rates to purchase homes. This allow buyers to buy a bit

more home than maybe they were qualified to get. Buyers made these decisions at

the time because they looked safe, but in the long run many of these buyers have

had to give up these homes due to bank foreclosure.

Landsburg also talks about maximizing our efficiencies. He relates this

theory into an idea of why Rolling Stones concerts always sell out. Is it

because they play good music? Maybe. Most likely it is because its tickets are

priced right. Pricing tickets is a theory of Supply and Dem...

... middle of paper ...

... that can be manipulated or misleading. Since this is

the measure of all things in the market place there are time where something

will not qualify for that. For example, If my moms water heater went out, she

could pay the money to have a plumber come and remove and install a new one.

The money spent on that would increase GNP. On the other hand if she had her

husband do the work the money not being spent on the installation is not going

into GNP. This is called household production, which GNP omits.

>

> There are many ideas and topics in Landsburgs? book that were covered

throughout the semester. As you can see in just the few topics that I chose to

go into economics hits everyone everyday. If we are making decisions on what to

eat what to wear or how to spend our hard earned money, it all affects economics

and economic effects us.

Open Document