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Microeconomics
Paperback
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Ryerson; 13 edition (Jan. 24 2013)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1259066541
ISBN-13: 978-1259066542
Product Dimensions: 25.4 x 21.4 x 1.8 cm
Shipping Weight: 839 g
Product Description
About the Author
Sean is an assistant professor of economics at Scripps College in Claremont, California. He is the author of the international best seller "Economics for Dummies" as well as the coauthor, along with Campbell McConnell and Stanley Brue, of the world's best-selling college economics textbook, "Economics: Principles, Problems, and Policies".
An avid martial artist, Sean is a former Aikido national champion and has coached five of his students to U.S. national aikido titles.
A recurring commentator on FOX Business, ABC News, and NPR, Sean holds a B.A. in economics from the University of Southern California and a Ph.D. in economics from U.C. Berkeley, where he completed his dissertation under the supervision of Nobel Laureate George Akerlof.
Sean's research focuses on the often puzzling and seemingly irrational behavior of stock market investors, but he's also investigated topics as wide-ranging as the factors that affect customer tipping behavior at restaurants and why you see a lot of unionized workers only in certain industries.
Stanley L. Brue did his undergraduate work at Augustana College (South Dakota) and received its Distinguished Achievement Award in 1991. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. He is a professor at Pacific Lutheran University, where he has been honored as a recipient of the Burlington Northern Faculty Achievement Award. Professor Brue has also received the national Leavey Award for excellence in economic education. He has served as national president and chair of the Board of Trustees of Omicron Delta Epsilon International Economics Honorary. He is coauthor of Economic Scenes, Fifth edition (Prentice-Hall), Contemporary Labor Economics, Seventh edition, Essentials of Economics, First edition (both The McGraw-Hill Companies), and The Evolution of Economic Thought, Seventh edition (South-Western).
Campbell R. McConnell earned his Ph.D. from the University of Iowa after receiving degrees from Cornell College and the University of Illinois. He taught at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln from 1953 until his retirement in 1990. He is also coauthor of Contemporary Labor Economics, Seventh edition, and Essentials of Economics, First edition (both The McGraw-Hill Companies), and has edited readers for the principles and labor economics courses. He is a recipient of both the University of Nebraska Distinguished Teaching Award and the James A. Lake Academic Freedom Award, and is past-president of the Midwest Economics Association. Professor McConnell was awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Cornell College in 1973 and received its Distinguished Achievement Award in 1994.
Thomas P. Barbiero received his Ph.D. from the University of Toronto after completing undergraduate studies at the same university. He is a professor at Ryerson University in Toronto. Professor Barbiero also teaches an economic history course to Ryerson students in Rome during the spring semester. He spends his summers in Fontanarosa, a small town in his native region of Campania in southern Italy.
Macroeconomics
Paperback: 560 pages
Publisher: Pearson Canada; 14 edition (Feb. 22 2013)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0321866339
ISBN-13: 978-0321866332
Product Dimensions: 21 x 1.9 x 25.4 cm
Shipping Weight: 1 Kg
Product Description
About the Author
Christopher Ragan is an Associate Professor in the Department of Economics at McGill University in Montreal. In addition, he holds the David Dodge Chair in Monetary Policy at the C.D. Howe Institute in Toronto where he helps to direct the Institute’s research and publication program on monetary policy. From January 2009 through June 2010, he was the Clifford Clark Visiting Economist at the Department of Finance in Ottawa, where he served as a senior advisor to the Minister and other senior Finance officials. In the 2004-05 academic year, he served as the Special Advisor to the Governor of the Bank of Canada. For several years (with a few breaks for his stints in Ottawa) he has been a member of the C.D. Howe Institute’s Monetary Policy Council.
Since his appointment to McGill in 1989, Chris Ragan has taught a wide variety of courses, at undergraduate and graduate levels, and in 2007 he was awarded the Noel Fieldhouse teaching prize in the Faculty of Arts. His passion for teaching extends also to his writing. Ragan is the co-author with Richard Lipsey of Economics, which after thirteen editions is still the most widely used introductory economics textbook in Canada.
Ragan’s academic research focuses on the role of economic policy, especially pertaining to macroeconomics. He has published several articles in academic and policy journals including Economica, Labour Economics, Canadian Journal of Economics, Canadian Public Policy, Canadian Business Economics, Policy Options, and the Bank of Canada Review. His 2004 book, co-edited with his McGill colleague William Watson, is called Is the Debt War Over? Dispatches from Canada’s Fiscal Frontline. In 2007 he published A Canadian Priorities Agenda, co-edited with Jeremy Leonard and France St-Hilaire from the Institute for Research on Public Policy.
Chris Ragan frequently writes economic columns for newspapers, including the National Post, the Montreal Gazette, and the National Post Magazine, and during the mid 1990s he was the Editor-in-Chief of World Economic Affairs. Ragan teaches microeconomics regularly for McKinsey & Company, a leading international consulting firm, and also teaches in McGill’s Executive MBA program and in EDHEC’s MBA program in Nice, France.
Ragan received his Bachelor’s degree in economics in 1984 from the University of Victoria and his Master’s degree in economics from Queen’s University in 1985. He then moved to Cambridge, MA, where he completed his Ph.D. in economics at M.I.T. in 1989. See his personal website at McGill for downloads of his published research as well as his magazine editorials and articles:
http://people.mcgill.ca/christopher.ragan/