Riku Sayuj's Reviews > Cartoon Introduction to Economics, Volume I: Microeconomics
Cartoon Introduction to Economics, Volume I: Microeconomics
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Riku Sayuj's review
bookshelves: economics, creative-enough, economics-intros
Apr 02, 2018
bookshelves: economics, creative-enough, economics-intros
Read 2 times. Last read April 1, 2018 to April 2, 2018.
Bauman is fun as always and has the knack for picking the right pirate analogy for the right skirmish. Bauman, however, skips most of the traditional basics from most microeconomics textbooks, and instead gives a lot of space to game theory and strategic interactions, things normally reserved for the later chapters of an introductory textbook, or for an intermediate text.
The structure of the book overall is interesting, for an introductory work: Economics is about interactions, Bauman establishes first and then takes us through the progression: first one to one, then one to some and finally one to many, with Part two being taken up with detailed discussion of Game Theory, Pareto Efficiency, Auctions, etc., laying the ground work for larger scale interactions like Tragedy of the Commons in the final section, but surprisingly not much discussions about Nash Equilibriums and stuff. But there is one area where the book stays conventional: just like most introductory books these days, this one also teaches skepticism of the species Homo Economicus, and, of course, ends with Kahneman.

Overall, it is an unconventional book and I am not sure students turning to this to seek an introduction would be helped much, instead it might be the seasoned student seeking to get some fresh energy late into a final semester who might find this sort of a treatment invigorating.
A lil� nugget:
�
Don't forget to check out the supremely funny and tragic The Cartoon Introduction to Climate Change by the Stand-up Economist.
The structure of the book overall is interesting, for an introductory work: Economics is about interactions, Bauman establishes first and then takes us through the progression: first one to one, then one to some and finally one to many, with Part two being taken up with detailed discussion of Game Theory, Pareto Efficiency, Auctions, etc., laying the ground work for larger scale interactions like Tragedy of the Commons in the final section, but surprisingly not much discussions about Nash Equilibriums and stuff. But there is one area where the book stays conventional: just like most introductory books these days, this one also teaches skepticism of the species Homo Economicus, and, of course, ends with Kahneman.

Overall, it is an unconventional book and I am not sure students turning to this to seek an introduction would be helped much, instead it might be the seasoned student seeking to get some fresh energy late into a final semester who might find this sort of a treatment invigorating.
A lil� nugget:
�

Don't forget to check out the supremely funny and tragic The Cartoon Introduction to Climate Change by the Stand-up Economist.
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Cartoon Introduction to Economics, Volume I.
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Reading Progress
Finished Reading
April 1, 2018
–
Started Reading
April 2, 2018
– Shelved
April 2, 2018
– Shelved as:
economics
April 2, 2018
– Shelved as:
creative-enough
April 2, 2018
– Shelved as:
economics-intros
April 2, 2018
–
Finished Reading
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Richard
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Apr 07, 2018 02:12PM

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