Macroeconomics (4th Edition) | 
| Author: Olivier Blanchard Publisher: Prentice Hall Category: Book
List Price: $160.00 Buy Used: $40.00 You Save: $120.00 (75%)
New (22) Used (108) from $40.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 15 reviews Sales Rank: 31424
Media: Hardcover Edition: 4 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 648 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3 Dimensions (in): 10.1 x 7.7 x 1.1
ISBN: 0131860267 Dewey Decimal Number: 339 EAN: 9780131860261 ASIN: 0131860267
Publication Date: August 8, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Hardly used hardcover with no marks or highlighting.
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Product Description
Do you want a book that provides an integrated view of macroeconomics? Olivier Blanchard helps students to see the big macroeconomic picture by integrating one unifying model throughout the text. Are you tired of macroeconomics texts that take too many shortcuts? Olivier Blanchard gives thorough treatment to many concepts that other books just skim over, with the understanding that students will use these tools throughout their academic and professional careers. Do you want a book that allows the greatest degree of flexibility in learning and teaching macroeconomics? Olivier Blanchard’s organization allows for the greatest degree flexibility, so professors can direct their class as they see fit, and students can learn from a methodology that matches the goals of their course.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 10 more reviews...
AD July 17, 2008 Excellent book very educational and particularly suitable for non economists. Macroeconomics (4th Edition)
Generally a good text February 15, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The book is generally a good text. However, I have a lot of problems with how illustration of ideas by calculus is handled. I find several inconsistencies which even my instructor have problems in explaining. I recommend it to the mathematically challenged person not to mathematical enthusiasts.
Best Macroeconomics Text In The Market April 22, 2006 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is simply the best Macroeconomics text out there. The book is easy enough to read for the layman, yet contains concepts hard enough for those who want to be challeneged. It also includes real world examples for those who want to understand the application of macroeconomics rather than just the theory. The study guide should come with the book. (At least that is how I got it when I brought it new...). The study guide is very helpful as it contains excellent summaries of each chapter and questions following those reviews with answers in the back. Neither the study guide or the book, however, contain answers to the text, so be prepared to work a little bit harder on those end-of-the-chapter questions ;)
the thresher June 2, 2005 39 out of 43 found this review helpful
Olivier Blanchard's handsome hardbound "Macroeconomics" (3rd Ed.) is a challenging and unfriendly freshman-level macroeconomics text that does a solid but daunting job.
This third outing was published in 2003, meaning it incorporates the Bushian twin deficits, the euro, the Argentinean retrieval, the rise and fall of the Asian tigers, etc. So that's nice.
Note that if you're teaching an economics class for the non-major, this book is most definitely inappropriate. For this purpose I would recommend either Stephen Slavin's "Macroeconomics" (8th Ed.), or, if you require more rigor, Mankiw's "Principles of Macroeconomics" (3rd Ed.), both of which are much easier on the math.
Olivier's juggernaut is more appropriate as a freshman level text for finance or economics majors who are slated to do some heavy-duty number-crunching later in their college career.
It is certainly NOT an intermediate text in macroeconomics (i.e., a junior-level text that incorporates integration and differentiation), so it would most profitably deployed in a rigorous or honors-level freshman-level class (in fact this is the standard text used in freshman econ at MIT -- its author is this brilliant French dude who sometimes teaches freshman econ there).
So be not deceived: this book assumes intermediate algebra, trigonometry, and even some (non-calculus) statistics. There's also some nasty addition and multiplication!
Though there's nothing in it beyond what a high school graduate ought to know, it would help to be clear on its demands. Many freshman books I have thumbed through seem to require only beginning algebra, if that. Not here: algebra is woven into the fiber of this book like a fingernail to the flesh, and any student unskilled in the equational arts will have a rotten time of things.
One good thing about the book: it comes with a cool CD on which you can manipulate the graphs, chapter by chapter, in a fun and instructive (and time-killing) way.
One bad thing about the book: although there are review questions and problem sets at the end of every chapter, there are no answers anywhere in the book. Sheesh! Presumably, given the math level required and the merciless tone of the text, we are meant to see this as a book for adult learners, so why are we being treated like children? Is Mr. Blanchard afraid I'm gonna copy the answers?
undergrad macro text full of intuitions July 13, 2004 3 out of 7 found this review helpful
Unlike the graduate textbook (Lectures on Macroeconomics), this undergraduate textbook is full of economic intuitions, comparable to microeconomic textbooks of Varian's. Especially, if you have an interest in Macroeconometic practices (books such as Ray Fair's...), Blanchard's is much better than Mankiw's, I believe. First edition contained the exciting (but short...) section on identification problem and differentiation between causality and correlation. Those issues are of much more importance than they look when you actually "do" something with the macroeconmic issues.
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