Tuesday, 21 June 2011

Books that should be read before starting a Ph.D. in economics

Suppose a young person is going to start a Ph.D. in economics. What essential readings would you recommend prior to this?



In my opinion, the Ph.D. in economics involves a heavy emphasis on tools. But the story isn't told, about why we are building these tools. The intuition isn't built, about the world out there that we seek to model. I always joke that economics students who are clueless about reality are like a child studying projectile motion without having ever thrown something into the air.



So I thought it's useful to pick a set of books that touch on the great themes of the world, often going into troublesome terrain that the models aren't very good at, so as to lay a foundation of background knowledge and historical knowledge which can pave the way to usefully assimilating what's taught in the economics Ph.D. Of course, they should be books that are fun to read and un-putdownable.



Here's my suggested compact checklist of books worth reading. Please do suggest books, and disagree with this list, in the comments to this post.

  1. The evolution of cooperation, by Robert M. Axelrod

  2. Good capitalism, bad capitalism, and the economics of growth and prosperity by William J. Baumol, Robert E. Litan and Carl J. Schramm


  3. A splendid exchange: How trade shaped the world by William J. Bernstein


  4. The elusive quest for growth by William Russell Easterly


  5. Invisible engines: How software platforms drive innovation and transform industries by David S. Evans, Andrei Hagiu and Richard Schmalensee


  6. The ascent of money by Niall Ferguson

  7. Economic gangsters: Corruption, violence and the poverty of nations by Raymond Fisman and Edward Miguel

  8. Capitalism and freedom by Milton Friedman


  9. The great crash of 1929 by John Kenneth Galbraith


  10. The age of uncertainty by John Kenneth Galbraith


  11. Exit, voice, loyalty by Albert O. Hirschman


  12. Development, geography and economic theory by Paul Krugman

  13. More money than God: Hedge funds and the making of a new elite by Sebastian Mallaby


  14. Reinventing the bazaar: A natural history of markets by John McMillan


  15. Readings in applied microeconomics: The power of the market edited by Craig Newmark


  16. From the corn laws to free trade: Interests, ideas and institutions in historical perspective by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey


  17. Seeing like a State by James C. Scott


  18. The company of strangers by Paul Seabright


  19. Information rules: A strategic guide to the network economy by Carl Shapiro and Hal R. Varian


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