Product Details
Publisher: McGraw-HillPublish Date: Jan 1 1998
ISBN: 0070067090
Edition: 1
Binding: Paperback
Dimensions: 6 x 8.8 x 0.7 inches
Weight: 1.05 pounds
Pages: 352 pages
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Editorial ReviewsProduct DescriptionFrom economics Nobel Laureate Gary Becker and historian Guity Nashat Becker comes this collection of the economist's popular BusinessWeek columns. These 138 essays have fueled numerous debates, touching on hot-button issues from crime to organization of sports. The Beckers' surprising--and uncompromising--positions on drugs ("legalize them"), immigration ("auction off immigration slots"), welfare ("curtail it sharply"), and other topics provide a provocative commentary on our times. Amazon.com Review
"The great majority of people are more rational and make fewer mistakes in promoting their own interests than even well-intentioned government officials," writes this impressive couple (Gary won the 1992 Nobel Prize for Economics). The short, column-length essays that make up this volume first appeared in Business Week magazine and show for a popular audience how market incentives influence human behavior in countless ways. The Beckers criticize centralized planning, racial quotas and trade tariffs, and endorse drug legalization, privatized social security and school vouchers. They also veer into unexpected terrain, addressing religion, sports and marriage with keen insight. Product DetailsPublisher: McGraw-HillPublish Date: Jan 1 1998 ISBN: 0070067090 Edition: 1 Binding: Paperback Dimensions: 6 x 8.8 x 0.7 inches Weight: 1.05 pounds Pages: 352 pages |
|