The Making of an Economist, Redux
Economists seem to be everywhere in the media these days. But what exactly do today's economists do? What and how are they taught? Updating David Colander and Arjo Klamer's classic "The Making of an Economist," this book shows what is happening in elite U.S. economics Ph.D. programs. By examining these programs, Colander gives a view of cutting-edge economics--an
...morePaperback, 268 pages
Published
November 17th 2008
by Princeton University Press
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This is a follow-up to Colander and Klamer's first book of the (almost) same name. I read them back-to-back, which I think was a good idea.
Again, this was just a hugely useful read for anyone considering graduate school in economics. As a follow-up, it was also interesting because of its decision to re-survey economists from the original study to see whether or not their views had changed. It also was able to compare the survey results of graduate students in the 1980s to those in...more
Again, this was just a hugely useful read for anyone considering graduate school in economics. As a follow-up, it was also interesting because of its decision to re-survey economists from the original study to see whether or not their views had changed. It also was able to compare the survey results of graduate students in the 1980s to those in...more
This book provided me with a lot of insight into what graduate school in economics is like. Though much of it is above my head because of my limited background in economics, it still answered a lot of questions I had and gave me a sense that graduate studies in economics may not be the path I seek. Though economics has much to offer, and may well be the most technical and math-oriented of the social sciences, I'm concerned about how theoretical PhD programs are nowadays. PhD programs are gear...more
I read this book shortly after having read the original Making of an Economist (1990) by Klamer and Colander, which I liked a lot. In fact, it was precisely because I liked the original book so much that I read this one shortly after. I was excited and curious as to what had changed.
The original book was written more than 25 years ago so when I read it I approached it from a somewhat sociological and historical perspective. I could relate to many of the feelings the students referre...more
The original book was written more than 25 years ago so when I read it I approached it from a somewhat sociological and historical perspective. I could relate to many of the feelings the students referre...more
Note: I didn't add the same book twice. They wrote "The Making of an Economist" in 1990, then did another book in 2004 with the same methodology. They're both enlightening.
A thought provoking survey of economics graduate students around 2004. A good read for those considering graduate school or thinking about how graduate curriculum in economics should be structured.
Part of my dissatisfaction with this book may stem from the fact that the one I got from the library is the one published around 1989 and not the "Redux". I read several websites that recommended it as helpful to anyone considereing graduate study in economics. There was some information that was useful about this, and the culture and environment of economics Ph. D. students and the economics departments of major universities. I personally just didn't get what I was looking for out ...more
Colander’s survey of top graduate econ programs is mandatory for anyone considering an econ PhD, and holds interest for those who want insight into the evolution of economics in the 20 years since Colander’s original book. Colander’s conversational interviews with grad students are particularly fascinating, as they wrestle honestly with their thoughts on what economics can-and cannot-accomplish.
James
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Recommends it for:
1) Consiering graduate study in economics 2) Interest in how economists are being trained
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Economist. Detailed resume available at:
http://community.middlebury.edu/~colande...
More about David C. Colander...
http://community.middlebury.edu/~colande...
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