bởi Marianne Brown
‘Công bố thu nhập’ được ca ngợi như cuộc cách mạng đối với kinh tế Việt Nam
THE WEALTH OF NATIONS by Adam Smith
THE ANNUAL LABOUR of every nation is the fund which originally supplies it with all the necessaries and conveniencies of life which it annually consumes, and which consist always either in the immediate produce of that labour, or in what is purchased with that produce from other nations.
According, therefore, as this produce, or what is purchased with it, bears a greater or smaller proportion to the number of those who are to consume it, the nation will be better or worse supplied with all the necessaries and conveniencies for which it has occasion.
Adam Smith-Wealth of Nations
Dr Eamonn Butler – The Condensed Wealth of Nations and The Incredibly Condensed Theory of Moral Sentiments
Adam Smith’s pioneering book on economics, The Wealth of Nations (1776), is around 950 pages long. Modern readers find
it almost impenetrable: its language is flowery, its terminology is outmoded, it wanders into digressions, including one seventy pages in length, and its numerous eighteenth-century examples often puzzle rather than enlighten us today.
And yet, The Wealth of Nations is one of the world’s most important books. It did for economics what Newton did for physics and Darwin did for biology.
Book: Adam Smith – Condensed Wealth of Nations
ECONOMETRICS
The term econometrics is believed to have been crafted by Ragnar Frisch (1895-1973) of Norway, one of the three principle founders of the Econometric Society,
rst editor of the journal Econometrica, and co-winner of the
rst Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1969. It
is therefore
tting that we turn to Frischs own words in the introduction to the
rst issue of Econometrica for an explanation of the discipline.
Book: Hansen-Econometrics-2012
Growth Econometrics
Tác giả: Steven N. Durlauf, Paul A. Johnson and Jonathan R. W. Temple
This paper provides a survey and synthesis of econometric tools that have been employed to study economic growth. While these tools range across a variety of statistical methods, they are united in the common goals of first, identifying interesting contemporaneous patterns in growth data and second, drawing inferences on long-run economic outcomes from cross-section and temporal variation in growth.
Book: Durlauf Johnson Temple-Growth Econometrics-2004