Reinventing the bazaar: a natural history of markets by John McMillan
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General | 330.122 MCM (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | M003675 |
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330.1 ECO Guide to economic indicators : making sense of economics | 330.1 STO A textbook of economic theory | 330.109 DEO Economic sutra | 330.122 MCM Reinventing the bazaar: a natural history of markets | 330.156 HIR Keynesian reflections : effective demand, money, finance, and policies in the crisis | 330.182 MAD Econometrics | 330.905 SHA Breakout nations: in search of the next economic miracle |
Including bibliographical notes and index
John McMillan's Reinventing the Bazaar is an extremely accessible description of markets large and small, as well as an explanation of their underlying mechanisms. An "absolutely free market," he says, is a "free-for-all brawl," while a "real market" is an "ordered brawl." Sprinkling his analysis with hundreds of anecdotes and examples--prison camps, eBay, the American experiment with alcohol prohibition, the Tokyo fish market, and traditional Ghanaian bazaars--and pertinent quotes from the likes of Chekhov, Twain, and Steinbeck, McMillan animates his subject. Why do banks build showcase headquarters? Which "frictions" brake, and which spur, various markets? Is the "invisible hand" attached to a clothed arm? Why are both pro- and antimarket absolutists, in McMillan's view, the economics equivalent of "flat-earthers"? Is there such an animal as a "perfect" market? Reinventing the Bazaar answers these questions, and many more, in an eminently wise, entertaining, and instructive way.
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