Macroeconomics : a European perspective, 3rd. ed.
This new European edition of Macroeconomics is based on and extends the well-tested US edition as well as the experience of previous European editions in national languages – French, German, Spanish and Italian – some of which have been used in universities around Europe for many years (the Ita...
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Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Pearson
2020
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/jspui/handle/123456789/15317 |
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Summary: | This new European edition of Macroeconomics is based on
and extends the well-tested US edition as well as the experience
of previous European editions in national languages –
French, German, Spanish and Italian – some of which have
been used in universities around Europe for many years (the
Italian edition since 1998).
We had two main goals in preparing this book:
● To make close contact with current macroeconomic events.
What makes macroeconomics exciting is the light it sheds
on what is happening around the world, from the major
economic crisis which has engulfed the world since 2008,
to monetary policy in the United States, to the problems of
the euro area, to growth in China. These events – and many
more – are described in the book, not in footnotes, but in
the text or in detailed boxes. Each box shows how you can
use what you have learned to get an understanding of these
events. Our belief is that these boxes not only convey the
‘life’ of macroeconomics, but also reinforce the lessons from
the models, making them more concrete and easier to grasp.
● To provide an integrated view of macroeconomics. The
book is built on one underlying model, a model that draws
the implications of equilibrium conditions in three sets of
markets: the goods market, the financial markets, and
the labour market. Depending on the issue at hand, the
parts of the model relevant to the issue are developed in
more detail while the other parts are simplified or lurk in
the background. But the underlying model is always the
same. This way, you will see macroeconomics as a coherent
whole, not a collection of models. And you will be able
to make sense not only of past macroeconomic events, but
also of those that unfold in the future. |
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