This collection of essays on
the teaching of economics will be published on 15th
September 2012, the fourth anniversary of the Lehman
Brothers bankruptcy. Pre-order available from Amazon (cover price £14.99).
Advance comments:
Superb! Diane
Coyle has catalysed what is long overdue: candid
self-questioning by economists of a discipline that did not
anticipate the crisis and has barely changed since despite
its self-evident shortcomings. Some spectacularly good
reads. Economics can't stay the same after this book.
Will Hutton,
Principal of Hertford College Oxford, Observer columnist
and chair The Big Innovation Centre
With outstanding essays
from the likes of Andy Haldane, John Kay and Andrew Lo,
this book should be read by anyone interested - or anxious
- about what economists do and how economics is taught.
Tim
Harford, author of
"The Undercover Economist" and "Adapt"
This volume will set the
agenda for the debate of the next decade by economists and
policy makers trying to avoid another financial crisis. The
self-critical chapters by top-tier economists and hands-on
practitioners provide fascinating insights into what went
wrong and how the economics profession should set about to
reform itself.
Dr
DeAnne Julius CBE,
Chairman of Chatham House and former member of the Bank of
England's Monetary Policy Committee
Contributors are: Paul Anand, Wendy Carlin, Jagjit Chadha,
David Colander, Diane Coyle, Roger Farmer, Benjamin
Friedman, Edward Glaeser, Andrew Haldane, Dirk Helbing,
Harold James, John Kay, Stephen King, Alan Kirman, Jonathan
Leape, Andrew W. Lo, Michael McMahon, Paul Ormerod, Dave
Ramsden, Bridget Rosewell, Paul Seabright, Steve
Schifferes, John Sloman, Alison Wride.