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Filthy Lucre

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Filthy Lucre

by Joseph Heath

HarperCollins Publishers Ltd | April 12, 2010 | Trade Paperback

Economists have a bad reputation. Not only do they assume that everyone is selfinterested and amoral, they are almost always cheerleaders for the free market. As a result, most people who do not already share their beliefs ignore everything that economists have to say. This is a problem. Even among the highly educated, economics is a minefield of fallacies and errors. Among those who know little about the subject-a group that includes the average taxpayer and consumer, as well as most journalists, political activists and politicians-almost every widely held belief is false. The level of economic illiteracy is stunning.
      Filthy Lucre aims to level the playing the field and, in this time of enormous market volatility and unprecedented instability, raise our level of economic literacy. Drawing on everyday examples to skewer the six favourite economic fallacies of the right and then the left, we learn why the right wing so wrongly believes that capitalism is the natural order of things, that any tax cut is a good tax cut, and that personal responsibility can solve any problem. And, contrary to how the left feels, why we must resist the urge to fiddle with prices, why the pursuit of profit is not such a bad thing, and why, despite efforts to improve or even fix wages, some jobs will always suck.

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From the Publisher

Economists have a bad reputation. Not only do they assume that everyone is selfinterested and amoral, they are almost always cheerleaders for the free market. As a result, most people who do not already share their beliefs ignore everything that economists have to say. This is a problem. Even among the highly educated, economics is a minefield of fallacies and errors. Among those who know little about the subject-a group that includes the average taxpayer and consumer, as well as most journalists, political activists and politicians-almost every widely held belief is false. The level of economic illiteracy is stunning.
      Filthy Lucre aims to level the playing the field and, in this time of enormous market volatility and unprecedented instability, raise our level of economic literacy. Drawing on everyday examples to skewer the six favourite economic fallacies of the right and then the left, we learn why the right wing so wrongly believes that capitalism is the natural order of things, that any tax cut is a good tax cut, and that personal responsibility can solve any problem. And, contrary to how the left feels, why we must resist the urge to fiddle with prices, why the pursuit of profit is not such a bad thing, and why, despite efforts to improve or even fix wages, some jobs will always suck.

About the Author

Joseph Heath is an associate professor in the department of philosophy at the University of Toronto. He is the author of Communicative Action and Rational Choice and The Efficient Society, a Maclean’s and Globe and Mail bestseller,which was also selected as one of the best books of 2001 by the Globe and Mail.

Trade Paperback

352 Pages, 5.05 x 8.25 x 0.87 in

April 12, 2010

HarperCollins Publishers Ltd

English


1554683742
9781554683741

From the Critics

"This is a terrific book, courteous, clear, witty and fair. . . . Heath has an almost [Adam] Smithian sense of the sophistication of human motivation."
-THE GLOBE AND MAIL()

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