Poor Economics
Author: Banerjee, Abhijit
ISBN: 9780718193669
Publisher: Penguin Press
Year First Published: 2012
Pages: 320
Dimensions: 198mm x 130mm x 19mm
Format: Paperback / softback
Description
An eye-opening investigation into life below the poverty line that turns received thinking on its head
Winner of the FT Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award 2011
Why would a man in Morocco who doesn't have enough to eat buy a television?
Why do the poorest people in India spend 7 percent of their food budget on sugar?
Does having lots of children actually make you poorer?
This eye-opening book overturns the myths about what it is like to live on very little, revealing the unexpected decisions that millions of people make every day. Looking at some of the most paradoxical aspects of life below the poverty line - why the poor need to borrow in order to save, why incentives that seem effective to us may not be for them, and why, despite being more risk-taking than high financiers, they start businesses but rarely grow them - Banerjee and Duflo offer a new understanding of the surprising way the world really works.
ISBN: 9780718193669
Publisher: Penguin Press
Year First Published: 2012
Pages: 320
Dimensions: 198mm x 130mm x 19mm
Format: Paperback / softback
Description
An eye-opening investigation into life below the poverty line that turns received thinking on its head
Winner of the FT Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award 2011
Why would a man in Morocco who doesn't have enough to eat buy a television?
Why do the poorest people in India spend 7 percent of their food budget on sugar?
Does having lots of children actually make you poorer?
This eye-opening book overturns the myths about what it is like to live on very little, revealing the unexpected decisions that millions of people make every day. Looking at some of the most paradoxical aspects of life below the poverty line - why the poor need to borrow in order to save, why incentives that seem effective to us may not be for them, and why, despite being more risk-taking than high financiers, they start businesses but rarely grow them - Banerjee and Duflo offer a new understanding of the surprising way the world really works.