图书标签: 经济学 行为经济学 心理学 BehavioralFinance Psychology economics RobertShiller 经济
发表于2024-12-26
Animal Spirits pdf epub mobi txt 电子书 下载 2024
Review
White House Budget Director Peter Orszag is a numbers guy, a propeller head as President Obama would say. But as David Von Drehle and I write in this week's print version of Time, Orszag has been spending his time recently reading not about spreadsheets, but about psychology. In particular, he has been reading a new book by the economists George Akerlof and Robert Shiller called Animal Spirits: How Human Psychology Drives The Economy, and Why It Matters For Global Capitalism. . . . We are, it turns out, slaves to the Animal Spirits. They have brought us to our knees. And now they are the only things that can save us.
(Michael Scherer, Time.com's "Swampland" )
In their new book, two of the most creative and respected economic thinkers currently at work, George Akerlof and Robert Shiller, argue that the key is to recover Keynes's insight about 'animal spirits'--the attitudes and ideas that guide economic action. The orthodoxy needs to be rebuilt, and bringing these psychological factors into the core of economics is the way to do it. . . . The connections between their thinking on the limits to conventional economics and the issues thrown up by the breakdown are plain, even if they were unable to make every link explicit. Even more than Akerlof and Shiller could have hoped, therefore, it is a fine book at exactly the right time. . . . Animal Spirits carries its ambition lightly--but is ambitious nonetheless. Economists will see it as a kind of manifesto.
(Clive Crook Financial Times )
Animal Spirits is a welcome addition to our Hannitized national economic debate, in which anyone who advocates government spending risks being labeled a socialist. . . . Animal Spirits is most compelling when the authors summon all the key behavioral patterns to explain vast, complex phenomena such as the Great Depression. . . . Animal Spirits . . . [is] aimed squarely at the general reader, and rightly so: Macroeconomics is now everybody's business--the banks are playing with our money.
(Andrew Rosenblum New York Observer )
[A] lively new financial crisis book.
(James Pressley Bloomberg News )
The two superstars have produced a truly innovative and bold work that attempts to show how psychological factors explain the origins of the current mess and offer clues for possible solutions. At a time when plummeting confidence is dragging down the market and the economy, the authors' focus on the psychological aspect of economics is incredibly important.
(Michael Mandel BusinessWeek )
What Sigmund Freud did for the study of the mind, George Akerlof and Robert Shiller are doing for economics. Freud, healer or fake--take your pick--built a career and a field of medicine on the idea that people are driven by irrational forces. Akerlof, professor of economics at the University of California, Berkeley and winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize in economics, and Shiller, the Yale economist who is the eminence grise of the housing meltdown, argue that massive government market intervention programs are the only way to turn fear into enthusiasm for spending and investing--the 'animal spirits' that are an essential part of recovery. . . . Akerlof and Shiller pick up on the idea of the emotional impetus to investment. With elegant reasoning and lovely prose, they demonstrate that we'll all be wallowing in misery unless governments around world, especially the in the G7 nations, help to return markets to optimism. . . . Animal Spirits is a fine discussion of the last few decades of development of economic theory, especially monetary economics.
(Andrew Allentuck The Globe & Mail )
Another contribution to the human-nature-ensures-economics-is-irrational school of thought. But, unlike many of the rants against people trying to make an honest profit, this is a measured examination of how the present crisis is explained in economic terms. And so it should be. George Akerlof is a Nobel prizewinner, Robert Shiller teaches at Yale and is the author of Irrational Exuberance, which should give you an idea of this one's approach. This fascinating work uses economics to explain real-life issues, such as real estate price cycles, to key policy problems, such as the relationship between inflation and employment.
(Stephen Matchett The Australian )
With Animal Spirits we hone in on how incentives and narratives can be created to channel the human psychological factor into collectively healthy directions, and how to be aware of the fictions we tell ourselves about how we wish the world and greed and financial security worked. [Animal Spirits] sheds light on complex issues and leaves readers with a better grasp of undercurrents and--most importantly--a rediscovered belief in principles of common sense and caution.
(Daily Kos )
The new book from George Akerlof and Robert Shiller, Animal Spirits, has been getting a lot of press of late, and quite rightly: it's really good. It's not only very readable; it also offers a compelling vision of a very different type of macroeconomics--one where behavioral considerations are front and center, rather than simply providing what Clive Crook calls 'ad hoc modifications' to the standard, ridiculously oversimplified and unrealistic, model. . . . [I]f you read only one book on this subject, make it Animal Spirits.
(Felix Salmon, Portfolio.com )
As George Akerlof and Robert Shiller show in a new book Animal Spirits, this is no freak storm. It may mark the long-awaited encounter between psychology and economics. . . . Akerlof and Shiller's book is probably the first macroeconomic exploration of the subject that is accessible to those interested in the subject but who don't have the academic training to understand the detailed argument.
(Mint )
Review
This book is a sorely needed corrective. Animal Spirits is an important--maybe even a decisive--contribution at a difficult juncture in macroeconomic theory.
(Robert M. Solow, Nobel Prize-winning economist )
Robert J. Shiller is the Stanley B. Resor Professor of Economics at Yale University. He is the recipient of the 2000 Commonfund Prize, awarded for Best Contribution to Endowment Management Research, for Irrational Exuberance. He is also the author of Market Volatility and Macro Markets, which won the 1996 Paul A. Samuelson Award.
貌似解释了一些问题,又感觉不够本质
评分经济学家的批评与自我批评
评分Akerlof同志总是剑走偏锋啊。
评分为什么房地产市场具有周期这章不错。
评分引人入胜,角度新,但是逻辑有点弱。
1、有时候,我们被它麻痹,有时候它又赋予我们能量,使我们振作,克服恐惧感和优柔寡断。 2、他们把怀疑搁置一旁,而当每个人都这样做时,资产的价值就会升高,而且可能还会继续上涨。只要人们保持信任感,他们的冲动就不明显。一旦信心消失,浪潮消退,决策冲动就暴露无遗。 ...
评分经济及经济学家的失灵 本杰明•M•弗里德曼 现在,几乎没有人不承认,美国的主要金融机构和由其支配的金融市场近年来表现得非常糟糕。银行和其他的贷款公司在抵押贷款相关投资中遭受的巨额损失是金融失灵表面上的证据——国际货币基金组织最新估计的数额已超过4万亿美元...
评分阿克洛夫是因为试图理性地去衡量经济领域中的不理性行为而得的诺贝尔奖,而罗伯特希勒在中国更负盛名是因为他那本《非理性繁荣》的书。 这本书拖了很久刚看,是因为近期回国和朋友交流中又被朋友力荐了一把。 简要地把有感触的点记下来,算个小笔记吧。 首先说一下Animal Spiri...
评分来自: 石头时代(For that moment.....) 2014-08-22 14:09:56 波斯纳(R.A. Posner,1939- ),1959年在耶鲁大学获得文学士学位,1962年在哈佛大学获得法学士学位,1968年赴斯坦福大学任教,1969年任芝加哥大学教授,1981年任美国联邦第七巡回区上诉法院法官。主要著作有:...
评分经济学领域关于人性的讨论越来越普及了,罗伯特希勒用动物精神这个词传神的解释了什么是人的动物精神和非理性,分为五个原理,下面是五个原理的解释。 1. 信心及其乘数,信心这个词是指那些不能用理性决策来涵盖的行为,它在宏观经济学中起到重要作用。 a) 当人们有信心时,...
Animal Spirits pdf epub mobi txt 电子书 下载 2024