I know it's a rather open-ended question, and that economics encompasses a lot of things. But I've never known a thing about the subject, and indeed it terrifies me, with all the stocks and bonds and options and other speaking in tongues. I know only the very basics (supply and demand, the need for currency and trade specialization, stuff like that). How can I get educated on the subject? I've even tried Simple English Wikipedia, but that's not really a reliable source (BTW, check out http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_Mechanics for a laugh. Whatever physicist wrote it got about halfway through before he forgot whom he was writing for--or succumbed to temptation--and started using Greek symbols and equations).
Basically, I'm looking for a book that offers a reasonably nonpartisan, simple introduction to economics, assuming such a thing exists. Ideally, I'm thinking something akin to Larry Gonick's Cartoon Guides. More complex than "Pete and Polly spend their first dollar," less complex than "Keynesian implications of current trends in Micronesia." Something that takes it slow, introduces terms one-by-one and explains them fully, and won't put me into the fetal position with a barrage of jargon. Does anyone know of such a book?
Basically, I'm looking for a book that offers a reasonably nonpartisan, simple introduction to economics, assuming such a thing exists. Ideally, I'm thinking something akin to Larry Gonick's Cartoon Guides. More complex than "Pete and Polly spend their first dollar," less complex than "Keynesian implications of current trends in Micronesia." Something that takes it slow, introduces terms one-by-one and explains them fully, and won't put me into the fetal position with a barrage of jargon. Does anyone know of such a book?
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