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Phishing for Phools
Book

Phishing for Phools

The Economics of Manipulation and Deception

Princeton UP, 2015 Mehr

automatisch generiertes Audio
automatisch generiertes Audio

Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Innovative
  • Applicable

Recommendation

Aside from the alarming claims that economists George A. Akerlof and Robert J. Shiller make about the drug approval process in the United States, the scams and lures they describe won’t surprise you. They argue that traditional and behavioral economists overlook or severely downplay the impact that manipulators, swindlers, con artists and outright liars have in the free market economy. These “phishers” distort markets and affect your decisions as a consumer, voter, patient and investor. Akerlof and Shiller describe an entirely new paradigm for economics that might help you see the next big scam – so you can avoid or even profit from it. But they offer something more useful than horror stories: an overlooked but important factor to consider in economic theory. Though they may underestimate the thoughtfulness of the average American, when Nobel Prize-winning economists propose a new idea, you pay attention. getAbstract recommends their analysis to economists, psychologists and all those interested in protecting themselves from scams.

Take-Aways

  • Free market economies contain many traps for the unwary.
  • Ubiquitous “phishing” – tricks, scams, enticements and false promises – distort the system.
  • Advertisers use data and experimentation to hit you where you’re weakest.

About the Authors

George A. Akerlof is a professor of public policy at Georgetown University. Robert J. Shiller is an economics professor at Yale University. Both are Nobel laureates in economics.


Comment on this summary or Diskussion beginnen

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    E. G. 10 months ago
    very informative
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    R. E. 5 years ago
    A very good book to know the basic of how to negotiate and the main tools that all of us could use.