You are reading Economic Forces, a free weekly newsletter on economics, especially price theory, without the politics. You can support our newsletter by signing up here:
Part of the impetus for our newsletter was our frustration with how people discuss economic ideas, including how most textbooks explain things. We wanted to use the newsletter for material in our own courses and also be a resource to other teachers and students of economics. Since starting, it’s been great to hear from professors that have assigned our newsletter in their classes.
With the start of the fall semester coming up and people finalizing their syllabi, we want to collect the pieces that we think would be helpful in teaching. Hopefully, it will also be a helpful reference for new readers who haven’t followed us from day one or missed some newsletters.
The first section is basic price theory that could be included in every course. After all, supply and demand isn’t an idea just for principles of microeconomics; it is all of economics. After that, the links are split out by common course names with some newsletters under multiple headings.
If you’re teaching a different course and want some recommended newsletters, make sure to leave a comment, and we will see if there is anything helpful.
General Price Theory
Principles of Microeconomics
All of the posts above plus:
Principles of Macroeconomics
Podcast: Peter Ireland | Chicago Monetary Economics and Price Theory
Podcast: David Glasner | Ralph Hawtrey and Price Theory vs. Microfoundations in Macro
Podcast: Claudia Williamson | Institutions, Economic Development, and Policy Humility
Podcast: Mark Koyama and Jared Rubin | How the World Became Rich
Podcast: Carola Binder | Inflation Expectations, Measurement and Causes
Intermediate Microeconomics
Industrial Organization or Competition Policy
Money and Banking or Monetary Economics
Podcast: Peter Ireland | Chicago Monetary Economics and Price Theory
Podcast: Carola Binder | Inflation Expectations, Measurement and Causes
Public Economics/Public Finance
What (and who) in the world are we trying to tax when we tax corporate income?
Podcast: Casey Mulligan | Regulation, Innovation, and the Economics of Pandemic
Law and Economics
Podcast: Charles Hickson | Earl Thompson, National Defense, and Efficient Institutions
Podcast: Claudia Williamson | Institutions, Economic Development, and Policy Humility
Podcast: Henry Thompson | Mafia Courts and Contracting without the Law
Podcast: Mark Koyama and Jared Rubin | How the World Became Rich
I just came across this and I just want to thank you guys. These newsletters make teaching my AP Micro/Macro classes even more fun.
Can this be interpreted and be useful to someone who doesn't know much economics but is looking to learn?