GDP

A Brief Affectionate History
Nicht lieferbar | Lieferzeit: Nicht lieferbar I
Gewicht:
344 g
Format:
222x139x14 mm
Beschreibung:

Diane Coyle is the author of a number of books, including The Economics of Enough and The Soulful Science: What Economists Really Do and Why It Matters (both Princeton). She holds a PhD in economics from Harvard and is a visiting research fellow at the University of Oxford's Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment.
Introduction 1 ONE From the Eighteenth Century to the 1930s: War and Depression 7 TWO 1945 to 1975: The Golden Age 41 THREE The Legacy of the 1970s: A Crisis of Capitalism 59 FOUR 1995 to 2005: The New Paradigm 77 FIVE Our Times: The Great Crash 93 SIX The Future: Twenty-first-Century GDP 119 Acknowledgments 141 Notes 143 Index 153
Diane Coyle traces the history of this artificial, abstract, complex, but exceedingly important statistic from its eighteenth- and nineteenth-century precursors through its invention in the 1940s and its postwar golden age, and then through the Great Crash up to today. The reader learns why this standard measure of the size of a country's economy was invented, how it has changed over the decades, and what its strengths and weaknesses are. The book explains why even small changes in GDP can decide elections, influence major political decisions, and determine whether countries can keep borrowing or be thrown into recession. The book ends by making the case that GDP was a good measure for the twentieth century but is increasingly inappropriate for a twenty-first-century economy driven by innovation, services, and intangible goods.

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