
The Macro Economy Today
McGraw-Hill Education (Publisher)
15th Edition
Published on 19. March 2018
Book
Hardback
978-1-260-10515-5 (ISBN)
Description
The Macro Economy Today is noted for three great strengths:readability, policy orientation, and effective pedagogy. The accessible writing style engages students and brings the excitement of domestic and global economic news into the classroom.
Schiller emphasizes how policymakers must choose between government intervention and market reliance to resolve the core issues of what, how, and for whom to produce. These strategic trade offs are highlighted throughout the full range of micro and international issues, and every chapter ends with a policy issue that emphasizes the markets vs. government dilemma.
The authors teach economics in a relevant context, filling chapters with the real facts and applications of economic life. Schiller is also the only principles text that presents all macro theory in the single consistent context of the AS/AD framework and uniquely features a full supply-side economics chapter.
The Macro Economy Today, 15th edition, is thoroughly integrated with adaptive digital tools and dynamic interactive resources available in Connect -- proven to increase student engagement and success.
Schiller emphasizes how policymakers must choose between government intervention and market reliance to resolve the core issues of what, how, and for whom to produce. These strategic trade offs are highlighted throughout the full range of micro and international issues, and every chapter ends with a policy issue that emphasizes the markets vs. government dilemma.
The authors teach economics in a relevant context, filling chapters with the real facts and applications of economic life. Schiller is also the only principles text that presents all macro theory in the single consistent context of the AS/AD framework and uniquely features a full supply-side economics chapter.
The Macro Economy Today, 15th edition, is thoroughly integrated with adaptive digital tools and dynamic interactive resources available in Connect -- proven to increase student engagement and success.
More details
Edition
15th edition
Language
English
Place of publication
OH
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Illustrations
Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 274 mm
Width: 216 mm
Thickness: 18 mm
Weight
919 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-260-10515-5 (9781260105155)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Bradley R. Schiller has more than four decades of experience teaching introductory economics at American University, the University of Nevada, the University of California (Berkeley and Santa Cruz), and the University of Maryland. He has given guest lectures at more than 300 colleges ranging from Fresno, California, to Istanbul, Turkey. Dr. Schillers unique contribution to teaching is his ability to relate basic principles to current socioeconomic problems, institutions, and public policy decisions. This perspective is evident throughout The Economy Today.
Dr. Schiller derives this policy focus from his extensive experience as a Washington consultant. He has been a consultant to most major federal agencies, many congressional committees, political candidates, and presidents. In addition, he has evaluated scores of government programs and helped design others. His studies of poverty, discrimination, training programs, tax reform, pensions, welfare. Social Security, and lifetime wage patterns have appeared in both professional journals and popular media. Dr. Schiller is also a frequent commentator on economic policy for television and radio, and his commentary has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, The New York Times, and Los Angeles Times, among other major newspapers.
Dr. Schiller received his Ph.D. from Harvard and his B.A. degree, with great distinction, from the University of California (Berkeley). On his days off, Dr. Schiller is on the tennis courts, the ski slopes, or the crystal-blue waters of Lake Tahoe.
Dr. Karen Gebhardt is a faculty member in the Department of Economics and is the Director of the Online Economics Program at the University of Colorado Boulder in 2023, she received a national award by the University Professional and Continuing Education Association recognizing her excellence in online teaching and course development. Dr. Gebhardt has a passion for teaching economics. She regularly instructs courses in all modalities (online, on campus, hybrid, remote) from introductory courses in macro- and microeconomics, to upper-division courses in microeconomics, international trade, and managerial economics and graduate courses in environmental economics and public finance.
She is an early adopter of teaching with technology and advocates strongly for it because she sees the difference it makes in student engagement and learning. Dr. Gebhardt was the recipient of the Water Pik Excellence in Education Award in 2006 and was awarded the Best Teacher Award in 2015 while she was at Colorado State University. She most recently won a national award for excellence in online teaching and course development from the University Professional and Continuing Education Association.
Dr. Gebhardt research interests, publications, and presentations involve economics and online education and the economics of human-wildlife interaction. Before returning to academia, she worked as an economist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture/Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service/Wildlife Services/National Wildlife Research Center, conducting research related to the interactions of humans and wildlife. Her current research focuses on using data to improve student learning outcomes in economics education with an emphasis on improving grades and completion rates in online courses.
In her free time. Dr. Gebhardt enjoys learning about new teaching methods that integrate technology and going rock climbing and camping in the Colorado Rockies and beyond.
Dr. Schiller derives this policy focus from his extensive experience as a Washington consultant. He has been a consultant to most major federal agencies, many congressional committees, political candidates, and presidents. In addition, he has evaluated scores of government programs and helped design others. His studies of poverty, discrimination, training programs, tax reform, pensions, welfare. Social Security, and lifetime wage patterns have appeared in both professional journals and popular media. Dr. Schiller is also a frequent commentator on economic policy for television and radio, and his commentary has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, The New York Times, and Los Angeles Times, among other major newspapers.
Dr. Schiller received his Ph.D. from Harvard and his B.A. degree, with great distinction, from the University of California (Berkeley). On his days off, Dr. Schiller is on the tennis courts, the ski slopes, or the crystal-blue waters of Lake Tahoe.
Dr. Karen Gebhardt is a faculty member in the Department of Economics and is the Director of the Online Economics Program at the University of Colorado Boulder in 2023, she received a national award by the University Professional and Continuing Education Association recognizing her excellence in online teaching and course development. Dr. Gebhardt has a passion for teaching economics. She regularly instructs courses in all modalities (online, on campus, hybrid, remote) from introductory courses in macro- and microeconomics, to upper-division courses in microeconomics, international trade, and managerial economics and graduate courses in environmental economics and public finance.
She is an early adopter of teaching with technology and advocates strongly for it because she sees the difference it makes in student engagement and learning. Dr. Gebhardt was the recipient of the Water Pik Excellence in Education Award in 2006 and was awarded the Best Teacher Award in 2015 while she was at Colorado State University. She most recently won a national award for excellence in online teaching and course development from the University Professional and Continuing Education Association.
Dr. Gebhardt research interests, publications, and presentations involve economics and online education and the economics of human-wildlife interaction. Before returning to academia, she worked as an economist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture/Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service/Wildlife Services/National Wildlife Research Center, conducting research related to the interactions of humans and wildlife. Her current research focuses on using data to improve student learning outcomes in economics education with an emphasis on improving grades and completion rates in online courses.
In her free time. Dr. Gebhardt enjoys learning about new teaching methods that integrate technology and going rock climbing and camping in the Colorado Rockies and beyond.
Content
Part One: The Economic ChallengeChapter 1: Economics: The Core IssuesAppendix: Using GraphsChapter 2: The U.S. Economy: A Global ViewChapter 3: Supply and DemandChapter 4: The Role of Government
Part Two: Measuring Macro OutcomesChapter 5: National Income AccountingChapter 6: Unemployment Chapter 7: Inflation
Part Three: Cyclical InstabilityChapter 8: The Business CycleChapter 9: Aggregate DemandAppendix: The Keynesian CrossChapter 10: Self-Adjustment or Instability?
Part Four: Fiscal Policy ToolsChapter 11: Fiscal PolicyChapter 12: Deficits and Debt
Part Five: Monetary Policy OptionsChapter 13: Money and BanksChapter 14: The Federal Reserve SystemChapter 15: Monetary Policy
Part Six: Supply-Side OptionsChapter 16: Supply-Side Policy: Short-Run OptionsChapter 17: Growth and Productivity: Long-Run Possibilities
Part Seven: Policy ConstraintsChapter 18: Theory Versus Reality
InternationalPart Eight: International EconomicsChapter 19: International TradeChapter 20: International FinanceChapter 21: Global Poverty
Part Two: Measuring Macro OutcomesChapter 5: National Income AccountingChapter 6: Unemployment Chapter 7: Inflation
Part Three: Cyclical InstabilityChapter 8: The Business CycleChapter 9: Aggregate DemandAppendix: The Keynesian CrossChapter 10: Self-Adjustment or Instability?
Part Four: Fiscal Policy ToolsChapter 11: Fiscal PolicyChapter 12: Deficits and Debt
Part Five: Monetary Policy OptionsChapter 13: Money and BanksChapter 14: The Federal Reserve SystemChapter 15: Monetary Policy
Part Six: Supply-Side OptionsChapter 16: Supply-Side Policy: Short-Run OptionsChapter 17: Growth and Productivity: Long-Run Possibilities
Part Seven: Policy ConstraintsChapter 18: Theory Versus Reality
InternationalPart Eight: International EconomicsChapter 19: International TradeChapter 20: International FinanceChapter 21: Global Poverty