Learning Basic Macroeconomics: A Policy Perspective from Different Schools of Thought


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Description

Economics has been dubbed the "dismal science" since Thomas Carlyle coined the phrase in 1849. The 2008 presidential candidate who said, "Economics is something that I've really never understood," probably sides with this view. So, why is economics so dismal to so many? Is it because it has become too mathematical? Is it because traditional textbooks fail to connect topics and models in a concise, cohesive, and meaningful way? Is it because the computer simulations that are used to teach economic principles "stifle students' imagination, contribute to a dependent learning style, and fail to stimulate interest in the subject matter" (Wetzstein 1988)? Or, is it because economists from different schools of economic thought rarely agree on anything? This book uses MAPLE and the simulation models that I developed in Learning Basic Macroeconomics (2014) to make teaching or learning economics more favorable. MAPLE is ideally suited for this because it allows users to assemble and systematically combine the various models that form the aggregate market model, frees users from doing tedious calculations and algebraic manipulations, and is as easy to use as Microsoft WORD. Building and analyzing the macroeconomic model using MAPLE is a fun way to learn the dismal science of economics.

Author: Hal W. Snarr
Publisher: Business Expert Press
Published: 10/31/2014
Pages: 220
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.47lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.33d
ISBN13: 9781631570810
ISBN10: 1631570811
BISAC Categories:
- Business & Economics | Economics | Macroeconomics
- Business & Economics | Statistics

About the Author
Hal W. Snarr currently teaches at Westminster College, which is located in Salt Lake City, Utah. He graduated from Naval Nuclear Power School, has bachelor's degrees in business and mathematics, and earned a PhD in economics from Washington State University. His teaching career began in the U.S. Navy; today, Hal has a YouTube channel (The Snarr Institute) and website (www.halsnarr.com) that are used to deliver lectures on macroeconomic principles and other topics in statistics and economics.