The Little Book of Economics: How the Economy Works in The Real World
“As much a guidebook for our times as an explainer of economics.”
–From the foreword, by Mohamed El-Erian, CEO of PIMCO
The Little Book of Economics: How the Economy Works in The Real World is:
•Clearly written with lots of anecdotes and analogies and no Greek letters
•Not a crisis book, but it does explain origins of crisis, and its consequences
•Journalism, not ideology
•Useful: explains economic indicators and economic concepts
•Little: half the size of most hard cover books. And short!
•Cheap! About $12 at Amazon.com
PLEASE READ ON FOR MORE EXPERT RECOMMENDATIONS AND A CHAPTER SUMMARY.
In my book I walk you through the critical issues in economics today: the sources of long-term economic growth, how recessions become depressions, inflation vs. deflation, globalization, how budget deficits can save an economy or bring on disaster, and why we keep having financial crises. It’s compact (less than 250 short pages), and written in plain English with ample analogies and examples to illustrate the main points.
The Little Book of Economics is also an indispensable resource to students or anyone thinking of working in economics or finance. Each chapter explains key concepts and indicators. For example, it guides you through the Labor Department’s two different surveys of employment and shows why they sometimes conflict, describes the make up of the consumer price index and how it may overstate inflation, and the many ways to measure the national debt.
It really is little, about the size of a Kindle.
“Greg Ip gives us a lucid and entertaining understanding of ‘the dismal science’ and reveals how economic concepts and institutions affect our daily lives. This little gem can turn all of us into sophisticated and educated citizens.”
—Burton G. Malkiel, Professor of Economics, Princeton University; author of A Random Walk Down Wall Street and The Elements of Investing
“Greg Ip is one of the world’s best economic journalists. The Little Book of Economics will teach you much more than a little about the forces that shape all of our lives.”
—N. Gregory Mankiw, Professor of Economics,HarvardUniversity; author of Principles of Economics
“If you’ve never read anything about economics but have often wondered about it, this is, quite simply, the best book for you to read. It’s short, but packs in a lot of information without becoming boring and often with a small, healthy dose of humor. It’s very, very readable and could be digested on an airplane flight. More importantly, it gives you just enough connections between events and economic theory to pull you deeper into topics that interest you and makes reading economic news that much easier.”
–Trent Hamm, in The Christian Science Monitor online
“The data are well chosen and the writing is decidedly unwonky. Ip skillfully includes essential economic history without making readers feel as though a time warp has thrown them back into an unpleasant undergraduate economics course.”
–USAToday
“Journalist Greg Ip’s neat new book goes a long way toward dealing with our pandemic economic ignorance… [his] little book packs a big punch.”
–Miami Herald
“A clever, easily accessible guidebook and reference that explains the building blocks and drivers of economic growth, and the endless tug of war between inflation and deflation.”
– Eric Pianen, in The Fiscal Times
“The Little Book of Economics” … made me fall in love with economics, so much that I am changing my major to Econ. The simplicity of the book is brilliant, and its content is even more. I am almost in my third time of reading it.”
– Martin Bradford, reader
Read on for a chapter summary.
Chapter One
The Secrets of Success; How People, Capital, and Ideas Make Countries Rich
In 1990,Japanseemed poised to overtake theUnited Statesas the world’s richest, most powerful economy. What went wrong? Its bubble economy collapsed, and, beneath the surface, the key determinants of long-term growth turned against it: productivity growth slowed down and its work force began to shrink. This chapter explains how population, capital and ideas (i.e. innovation and technology) add up to long-term growth and what government does to foster or ruin the climate for growth.
Chapter Two
Economic Bungee Jumping ; Business Cycles, Recessions, and Depressions . . . Oh My!
Business cycles are an unavoidable and largely unpredictable feature of market economies. In this chapter we learn how psychology, the financial markets and the Federal Reserve all drive these cycles of expansion and recession. Recessions became milder during the Great Moderation of 1982-2007 but they were not eradicated. Financial crises produce severe recessions and weak recoveries and can even result in a depression. The chapter explains how recessions and depressions are identified and the role of the National Bureau of Economic Research in dating recessions.
Chapter Three
In-Flight Monitor; Tracking and Forecasting the Business Cycle from Takeoff to Landing
We have a wealth of tools and data with which to monitor the progress of the economy. They are far from perfect: if the economy were an airplane, then it would have imprecise instruments, a filthy windshield, and old, faded maps. But they’re all we got, and this chapter explains how to use them. It explains the components of gross domestic product and the other key economic indicators such as retail sales and housing and what they tell us about the state of the economy. It shows us how to locate and use economic forecasts, their shortcomings, and how to use the financial markets as leading economic indicators.
Chapter Four
Labor Pains: Employment, Unemployment, and Wages
In the depths of recession it is almost impossible to conceive of where the jobs will come from. Yet the new jobs always come. This chapter explains the determinants of labor force growth, participation in the labor force, employment, unemployment, the natural rate of unemployment, wages, and the role of technology and globalization in wage inequality.
Chapter Five
Fire and Ice: Warning: Inflation and Deflation Are Toxic to Your Economic Health
High inflation is destabilizing and corrosive; deflation can be destructive. This chapter explains how the inflation and deflation damage an economy, and what causes them. The money supply, for all its theoretical importance, is useless in practical terms for understanding inflation. Instead, you should scrutinize the gap between economic output and its potential capacity, and the public’s expectations of inflation. Different measures of inflation are analyzed, in particular the consumer price index, and its shortcomings. It explains the political choices involved in inflation and the impact on social stability.
Chapter Six
Drop the Puck! The Globalization Game Is Here Whether We’re Ready or Not
When you study economic growth, jobs, and interest rates you have to keep in mind that globalization is exerting an often hidden influence, the way a distant planet ’ s gravitational pull alters another planet’s orbit. This is the first of two chapters dealing with globalization; it focuses on international trade. Exports and imports are both important to Americans’ welfare. Their determinants are discussed, along with outsourcing and other current controversies, protectionism, and how theUnited Statesand the World Trade Organization handle trade disputes (which are like the penalties handed out in a hockey game).
Chapter Seven
All the World’s an ATM: Knitting Global Markets Together
Financial globalization has connected factory workers inShanghai, mutual fund investors in theUnited States, sovereign wealth funds in thePersian Gulf, and banks in Düsseldorf to one global ATM. It continuously channels money from savers in one part of the world to borrowers in another. This chapter explains the current and capital accounts, currency markets, fixed and floating exchange rates, howChina’s exchange rate policies have accelerated its growth, and how integrated global capital markets both expand investment opportunities and make the global economy more vulnerable to crisis.
Chapter Eight
All the President’s Men: They Don’t Control the Economy But They Sure Do Try
A president implements economic policy both through his own decisions, aided by a network of advisors and government departments, and through the people he appoints to run regulatory agencies. This chapter identifies the key players and agencies that help the president formulate policy such as the National Economic Council and Treasury Department, and the roles of regulatory agencies such as the Federal Trade Commission and how they influence the economy.
Chapter Nine
The Buck Starts Here: The Federal Reserve’s Amazing Power to Print and Destroy Money
The first of three chapters on the Federal Reserve, this one gives an overview of the Fed’s main responsibilities, its history and the errors that led to today’s structure. It describes the culture and governance of the institution, political threats to its independence and how these have been handled.
Chapter Ten
White Smoke over the Washington Mall: The Making of Monetary Policy and the Fine Art of Fed Watching
This chapter describes how the Federal Open Market Economy looks at the economy and inflation and the threats to both, how its meetings (held in at its headquarters overlooking Washington’s mall) are run, and how it communicates with the outside world. We get a profile of Ben Bernanke and a look into the motivations of the Fed’s hawks and doves . We learn how the Fed uses open market operations to raise or lower interest rates, then turns to unconventional strategies such as large-scale purchases of government bonds, if it has already lowered interest rates to zero.
Chapter Eleven
When the World Needs a Fireman:America’s Lender of Last Resort and the World’s Crisis Manager
The Fed s unique power to lend at will makes it the financial system’s crisis manager. This chapter shows how the Fed, as lender of last resort, lends to banks in need of cash, and how it stretched the boundaries of its powers to prop up the financial system in the crisis of 2007-2009.
Chapter Twelve
The Elephant in the Economy: What the Government Giveth and Taketh Away
Fiscal policy is the government’s most pervasive influence on the shape of society. This chapter describes the categories of federal spending (interest, discretionary and mandatory spending) with special attention to entitlements. Taxes come in a wide variety of forms with different impacts on growth and incentives. The chapter explains the budget process, the role of the president and the various congressional committees, and how state budgets differ from the federal budget.
Chapter Thirteen
Good Debt, Bad Debt: How Government Borrowing Can Save or Destroy an Economy
Government borrowing is like Ritalin. At the right dosage it can jolt a lethargic economy out of recession, while an overdose can bring on seizure. This chapter explains how government deficits crowd out investment in good times but are an essential stabilizer during bad times. Fiscal stimulus is usually redundant but at times like in 2009 when the Federal Reserve is impotent, it’s vital. The specter of a debt crisis such asGreecesuffered hangs over many countries now. This chapter explains why some countries are more at risk of such a crisis than others and whether theUnited Statesis one of them.
Chapter Fourteen.
Love-Hate Relationship: The Bipolar Financial System—Essential for Economic Growth But Sometimes It Goes Nuts
The financial system channels capital from those who have it to those who need it, much as the circulatory system moves blood from the heart to the lungs and muscles. This chapter breaks down the financial system into its main parts: financial institutions and capital markets. Financial institutions are composed of banks, investment banks, and “shadow banks”. All depend on capital and liquidity and the lack of both contributed to the financial crisis. Capital markets are composed of stocks, bonds, asset-backed and mortgage-backed securities, and derivatives, all with a vital role to play and all vulnerable to upheaval.
Chapter Fifteen
A Species of Neuralgia: The Multiple, Recurring Causes of Financial Crises
Humans regularly swing between greed and fear. In certain circumstances, this results in a crisis. This chapter lists the factors that are common contributors to such a crisis: they include bubbles, the “this time is different” syndrome, leverage, moral hazard, interest rate and currency mismatches, contagion, and elections. It profiles the various bodies created to look for and handle crises and why they’re probably doomed to failure.
ISBN 978-0-470-62166-0 (cloth); 978-0-470-92940-7 (ebk); 978-0-470-92939-1 (ebk)

Congratulations, Greg, on this book. The blurbs are impressive and the outline looks intriguing. I’ll certainly be picking up a copy asap.
Jim Carson
Ottawa
Jim Carson
August 2, 2010 at 10:07 am
Looking forward to reading this. No one conveys economic forces with more clarity than Greg Ip.
sandra lewis
August 11, 2010 at 12:10 am
It’s been twenty years since our Economics classes together so I’m looking forward to catching up on things. The book arrives on the 1st. Congrats.
Richard Stewart
August 28, 2010 at 9:58 am
[...] 2008 (1)November 2008 (3)October 2008 (1)September 2008 (3) Greg Ip's new book, The Little Book of Economics, provides a nice, brief overview of the field, with a an emphasis on macro [...]
Economics in a Nutshell - Economics -
September 9, 2010 at 8:26 am
[...] in a Nutshell [Mankiw] Greg Ip’s new book, The Little Book of Economics, provides a nice, brief overview of the field, with a an emphasis on macro topics. Categories: [...]
Economics in a Nutshell [Mankiw] | DreamInn
September 9, 2010 at 1:13 pm
This book is recommended by Gregory Mankiw – the guy who suggested we should have “negative interest rates”? Obviously another economist who is completely lost in the ocean of Keynesian voo-doo thoughts. Thanks but no thanks.
Marc
September 11, 2010 at 1:46 am
Plan to use in my Intro Macro class at Miami University next semester.
Nick Noble
September 14, 2010 at 10:32 am
At least a copy will come to Angola.
Jose
September 15, 2010 at 1:33 am
Thanks – hope it’s helpful.
– Greg
gregip
September 15, 2010 at 9:01 pm
Greg, it seems like a wonderful book you’ve created here. Is there any chance of a UK translation (by which I mean for measures of unemployment, inflation, the BoE, the role of the Chancellor, different sporting metaphors etc)?
Dom25
September 18, 2010 at 10:18 am
Mr. Ip,
I am thoroughly enjoying your book. Looking forward to the recommended reading list being added to this website. There are so many economics books out there, and I will appreciate your guidance on navigating through them.
Regards,
John Crippen
John Crippen
September 19, 2010 at 5:19 pm
Let’s see how this one does first! — Greg
gregip
September 19, 2010 at 7:56 pm
[...] book, The Little Book of Economics: How the Economy Works in the Real World (hot off the press from John Wiley & Sons for $19.95), offers dozens of simple, precise [...]
Review of Greg Ip’s “The Little Book of Economics” | Cezary Salad
October 24, 2010 at 6:18 pm
Greg,
I’m now reading THE LITTLE BOOKK OF ECONOMICS, and agree with the reviewers that it is very entertaining and informative; however, I have a question about the statements you make on page 6. You say “… if the labor force grows 1 percent a year and its productivity by 1.5 percent, then potential growth is 2.5 percent.” It seems to me that, since labor force growth is measured in terms of additional workers/year, and productivity in terms of output/worker, then, according to the units involved, the potential growth would be equal to labor force growth multiplied by (not added to) the output/year. As it now stands you’re adding apples (workers/year) to oranges (output/worker), which mathematically is a no no. You can’t add terms in an algebraic equation, unless each term has the same units.
If what I’m saying is correct, the potential growth in your example should be 1.5 percent instead of 2.5 percent. To have a potential growth of 2.5 percent with 1.5 percent productivity, you would need a population growth of 1.67 percent.
I would like to hear from you on this–and please correct me if I’m wrong.
Sincerely, Tom G
Tom G
December 12, 2010 at 9:59 pm
Hi Greg,
I’m enjoying your book. I just read the employment chapter and have a couple of issues. First, in your example of the reporter whose stories are seen by more people you say that the reported had become more productive. I don’t see how that follows. The reporter didn’t write more words (or more insightful) in a shorter time. Distribution became more productive — if that’s the word for it. This seems like a tricky issue.
Secondly, you say that it’s not small companies by new companies that create jobs. I think that even that goes too far. It seems to me that new capital creates new jobs. New companies are frequently those that are investing new capital, which is probably why new jobs are found there. But old companies that invest new capital also create jobs. So it’s likely that there is even less to the story of where jobs are created than we believe. Job are created when new capital creates them. That may be pretty tautologous, but that’s probably the way it is.
Thanks again for the book.
– Russ Abbott
Russ Abbott
December 31, 2010 at 11:12 am
Sorry for the typos. Here’s a fixed version.
Hi Greg,
I’m enjoying your book. I just read the employment chapter and have a couple of issues. First, in your example of the reporter whose stories are seen by more people you say that the reporter had become more productive. I don’t see how that follows. The reporter didn’t write more (or more insightful) words in a shorter time. Distribution became more productive — if that’s the word for it. This seems like a tricky issue.
Secondly, you say that it’s not small companies but new companies that create jobs. I think that even that goes too far. It seems to me that new capital creates new jobs. New companies are frequently where new capital is invested, which is probably why new jobs are found there. But old companies that invest new capital also create jobs. So it’s likely that there is even less to the story of where jobs are created than we believe. Job are created when new capital creates them. That may be pretty tautologous, but it’s probably the way it is.
Thanks again for the book.
– Russ Abbott
Russ Abbott
December 31, 2010 at 11:16 am
To Tom G.
1.01 x 1.015 = 1.02515, which is a 2.515% increase.
– Russ
Russ Abbott
December 31, 2010 at 6:42 pm
Greg –
I’m currently Reading your book and enjoying it a lot. I couldn’t tell, but what theory of economics do you adhere to – Keynesian, Austrian, etc.? Thanks.
-Speigel
Speigel
January 20, 2011 at 6:21 pm
Hi Greg! Your book is excellent and your podcasts with The Economist are always informative and filled with insight. I took my one and only economics class in 1983 as part of first year requirements at Carleton University (BA History ’88). I didn’t get much out of it, honestly. Recently, I have a renewed interest in the field and your book is exactly what I needed to get the basics in place again. Thanks for a great idea and for the effort to see if through.
Brian Creary
August 17, 2011 at 10:13 am