Economics Lipsey And Chrystal 12th Edition

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Sep 10, 2012. ECONOMICS by Lipsey & Chrystal. Twelfth (12th) Edition. Oxford University Press. Course Units and Description. Unit Name & Content. Teaching Week. (beginning the week of. September, 2012). Introduction to course and course overview. Introduction and basic concepts.

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The goal of this book has always been to provide readers with a solid introduction to the economic issues facing the world today, using the methods economists use to study those issues, and the policy problems that those issues create. This revision includes updated information on such key issues as health care, distribution of income, unemployment, labor, and monetary pol...more
Published July 12th 1999 by Addison Wesley Publishing Company (first published January 28th 1973)
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Lipsey made Economics so easy to digest and going to my Economics class back in college was not so bad after all.
My first (and still very useful) econ 101 reference
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Born
Richard George Lipsey

August 28, 1928 (age 90)
OccupationEconomist
Spouse(s)Assia Gutmann (divorced)Diana Lipsey
AwardsOrder of Canada

Richard Lipsey And Alec Chrystal Economics 12th Edition

Richard George Lipsey, OCFRSC (born August 28, 1928) is a Canadian academic and economist. He is best known for his work on the economics of the second-best, a theory that demonstrated that piecemeal establishing of individual first best conditions would not necessarily raise welfare in a situation in which all first best conditions could not be satisfied, an article that he co-authored with Kelvin Lancaster, a mathematical economist of high standing.[1] He is currently Professor Emeritus of Economics at Simon Fraser University.

Early life and education[edit]

Born in Victoria, British Columbia, he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1951 from the University of British Columbia, a Master of Arts degree in 1953 from the University of Toronto, and a Ph.D. in 1956 from the London School of Economics.[citation needed]

Career[edit]

From 1955 to 1963, he held the positions of Assistant Lecturer, Lecturer, Reader and Professor at the London School of Economics. From 1963 to 1969, he was a Professor of Economics, Chairman of the Economics Department, and Dean of the School of Social Studies at the University of Essex in England. Returning to Canada, he held a brief position as a Visiting Professor at the University of British Columbia, before being appointed the Sir Edward Robert Peacock professor of economics at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario in 1970. He was the Irving Fisher Visiting Professor at Yale University from 1979 to 1980. From 1983 to 1989, he was a Senior Economic Advisor at the C.D. Howe Institute, the economic and social think tank in Toronto. In 1989, he was appointed Professor of Economics at Simon Fraser University and is currently a Professor Emeritus. He is also a co-founder of Simon Fraser University's ACT (Adaptation to Climate Change Team), an initiative that works to assist effective adaptation to climate-related challenges through policy development and awareness-raising.

Lipsey wrote the econometric follow up article to William Phillips' original article that introduced the curve that became known as the Phillips Curve, which held that a tradeoff existed between unemployment and inflation. At the 1968 American Economic Association meetings Milton Friedman countered Lipsey's and Phillips' arguments in what was perhaps one of the great arguments in economics. Recently Lipsey co-edited with William Scarth a three volume compilation of many of the most important articles on the Phillips curve.

He is an Officer of the Order of Canada[2] and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and the Econometric Society. In 2005, he won the gold medal for achievement in research[3] from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

He is also the author or co-author of several economics textbooks including Positive Economics (Economics published by Oxford University Press in its 13th edition in March 2015 with a co-author, Alec Chrystal, added[4]). His book and growth, co-authored with Kenneth Carlaw and Clifford Bekar, Economic Transformations:General Purpose Technologies and Long Term Economic Growth won the 2006 Schumpeter Prize for the best writing on evolutionary economics over the previous two years. He was co-author, with Gordon R. Sparks and Peter O. Steiner, of Economics, a standard Canadian university textbook now in its 13th edition and now co-authored with Christopher Ragan.

Personal life[edit]

He was the second husband of Assia Gutmann (later Wevill); they had met while she was enrolled in the University of British Columbia, Vancouver and later divorced.[5][6]

References[edit]

  1. ^Lipsey, R. G.; Lancaster, Kelvin (1956). 'The General Theory of Second Best'. Review of Economic Studies. 24 (1): 11–32. doi:10.2307/2296233. JSTOR2296233.
  2. ^Order of Canada citation
  3. ^SSRCH citation
  4. ^ISBN978-0-199-67683-5
  5. ^Lipsey, Richard (1997). Microeconomics, growth and political economy. Elgar. p. xiv and footnote 4, page xxxv.
  6. ^'Haunted by the ghosts of love'. The Guardian. London. April 10, 1999. Retrieved January 9, 2007.

External links[edit]

  • ACT (Adaptation to Climate Change Team) at Simon Fraser University
  • Simon Fraser University's City Program has a podcast of a presentation by him called, Buying Happiness: What does the good life cost?
  • Richard Lipsey. 'Yes, we saw the climate changing, but what were we to do?' Globe and Mail (BC Edition) 11 October 2007: A27
  • Heather Scoffield. 'The Man Who Wrote The Book' Globe and Mail (Ontario Edition) 3 June 2006: B6.
  • Richard Lipsey/Simon Fraser University. 4 Jun 2006. Richard Lipsey's Home Page
  • 'Canadian Who's Who 1997 entry'. University of Toronto Press. Archived from the original on 2007-12-24.
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