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Thinking Like an Economist

How Efficiency Replaced Equality in U.S. Public Policy

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Thinking Like an Economist

By: Elizabeth Popp Berman
Narrated by: Suzie Althens
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About this listen

For decades, Democratic politicians have frustrated progressives by tinkering around the margins of policy while shying away from truly ambitious change. What happened to bold political vision on the left, and what shrunk the very horizons of possibility? In Thinking like an Economist, Elizabeth Popp Berman tells the story of how a distinctive way of thinking - an "economic style of reasoning" - became dominant in Washington between the 1960s and the 1980s and how it continues to dramatically narrow debates over public policy today.

Introduced by liberal technocrats who hoped to improve government, this way of thinking was grounded in economics. At its core was an economic understanding of efficiency, and its advocates often found themselves allied with Republicans and in conflict with liberal Democrats who argued for rights, equality, and limits on corporate power. By the Carter administration, economic reasoning had spread throughout government policy and laws affecting poverty, healthcare, antitrust, transportation, and the environment.

Thinking like an Economist offers critical lessons for the future. With the political left resurgent today, Democrats seem poised to break with the past - but doing so will require abandoning the shibboleth of economic efficiency and successfully advocating new ways of thinking about policy.

©2022 Princeton University Press (P)2022 HighBridge, a division of Recorded Books
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A hole in the middle

A tedious recitation of institutional organization, this book never actually says much about how economists think (meaning, of course, how many but not all economists think). The narrator's mispronunciations and flat delivery suggest similarly casual attention to audio production.

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