- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > 英文書
- > Business / Economics
Full Description
The integrated solutions for Colander's Economics 9e have been specifically designed to help today's students succeed in the principles of economics course. Colander's trademark colloquial approach focuses on modern economics, institutions, history, and modeling, and is organized around learning objectives to make it easier for students to understand the material and for instructors to build assignments within Connect. McGraw-Hill's adaptive learning component, LearnSmart, provides assignable modules that help students master core topics. Significant improvements in pedagogy such as reworked end-of-chapter problems, seamless integration within the Connect eBook, and instant feedback on assignments will engage students in the ninth edition like never before and instill the "economic sensibility" necessary to apply economic concepts to the real world.Connect is the only integrated learning system that empowers students by continuously adapting to deliver precisely what they need, when they need it, and how they need it, so that your class time is more engaging and effective.
Contents
Part 1Economic ReasoningChapter 2: The Production Possibility Model, Trade, and GlobalizationChapter 3: Economic InstitutionsChapter 4: Supply and DemandChapter 5: Using Supply and DemandPart 2: MicroeconomicsI The Power of Traditional Economic ModelsChapter 6: Describing Supply and Demand: ElasticitiesChapter 7: Taxation and Government InterventionChapter 8: Market Failure versus Government FailureChapter 8W: Politics and Economics: The Case of Agricultural MarketsII International Economic Policy IssuesChapter 9: Comparative Advantage, Exchange Rates, and GlobalizationChapter 10: International Trade PolicyIII Production and Cost AnalysisChapter 11: Production and Cost Analysis IChapter 12: Production and Cost Analysis IIIV Market StructureChapter 13: Perfect CompetitionChapter 14: Monopoly and Monopolistic CompetitionChapter 15: Oligopoly and Antitrust PolicyChapter 16: Real-World Competition and TechnologyV Factor MarketsChapter 17: Work and the Labor MarketChapter 17W: Nonwage and Asset Income: Rents, Profits, and InterestChapter 18: Who Gets What? The Distribution of IncomeVI Choice and Decision MakingChapter 19: The Logic of Individual Choice: The Foundation of Supply and DemandChapter 20: Game Theory, Strategic Decision Making, and Behavioral EconomicsVII Modern Economic ThinkingChapter 21: Thinking Like a Modern EconomistChapter 22: Behavioral Economics and Modern Economic PolicyChapter 23: Microeconomic Policy, Economic Reasoning, and BeyondPart 3: MacroeconomicsI Macroeconomic ProblemsChapter 24: Economic Growth, Business Cycles, Unemployment, and InflationChapter 25: Measuring the Aggregate EconomyII Policy ModelsChapter 26: The Short-Run Keynesian Policy Model: Demand-Side PoliciesChapter 26W: The Multiplier ModelChapter 27: The Classical Long-Run Policy Model: Growth and Supply-Side PoliciesChapter 27W: Advances in Modern Macroeconomic TheoryChapter 28: The Structural Stagnation Policy DilemmaIII Finance, Money, and the EconomyChapter 29: The Financial Sector and the EconomyChapter 30: Monetary PolicyChapter 31: Financial Crises, Panics, and Unconventional Monetary PolicyIV Taxes, Budgets, and Fiscal PolicyChapter 32: Deficits and DebtChapter 33: The Fiscal Policy DilemmaV Macroeconomic ProblemsChapter 34: Jobs and UnemploymentChapter 35: Inflation, Deflation, and Macro PolicyVI International Policy IssuesChapter 36: International Financial PolicyChapter 37: Macro Policy in a Global SettingChapter 38: Macro Policy in Developing CountriesNER(01): WOW