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Literature Library


Economics in One Lesson

Economics in One Lesson

Henry Hazlitt wrote this book following his stint at the New York Times as an editorialist. His hope was to reduce the whole teaching of economics to a few principles and explain them in ways that people would never forget. It worked. He relied on some stories by Bastiat and his own impeccable capacity for logical thinking and crystal-clear prose.

He was writing under the influence of Mises himself, of course, but he brought his own special gifts to the project. As just one example, this is the book that made the idea of the "broken window fallacy" so famous. Concise and instructive, it is also deceptively prescient and far-reaching in its efforts to dissemble economic fallacies that are so prevalent they have almost become a new orthodoxy.

This is the book to send to reporters, politicians, pastors, political activists, teachers, or anyone else who needs to know. It is probably the most important economics book ever written in the sense that it offers the greatest hope to educating everyone about the meaning of the science.

Many writers have attempted to beat this book as an introduction, but have never succeeded. Hazlitt's book remains the best. It's still the quickest way to learn how to think like an economist. And this is why it has been used in the best classrooms for more than sixty years.

Contents:

  • Preface to the New Edition
  • Preface to the First Edition
  • Part One: The Lesson
  • Part Two: The Lesson Applied
    • The Broken Window
    • The Blessings of Destruction
    • Public Works Mean Taxes
    • Taxes Discourage Production
    • Credit Diverts Production
    • The Curse of Machinery
    • Spread-the-Work Schemes
    • Disbanding Troops and Bureaucrats
    • The Fetish of Full Employment
    • Who's "Protected" by Tariffs?
    • The Drive for Exports
    • "Parity" Prices
    • Saving the X Industry
    • How the Price System Works
    • "Stabilizing" Commodities
    • Government Price-Fixing
    • What Rent Control Does
    • Minimum Wage Laws
    • Do Unions Really Raise Wages?
    • "Enough to Buy Back the Product"
    • The Function of Profits
    • The Mirage of Inflation
    • The Assault on Savings
    • The Lesson Restated
  • PART THREE: The Lesson After Thirty Years
  • The Lesson After Thirty Years
  • A Note on Books
  • Index
Updated 1/21/2013