In the course of preparing for the class, I stumbled upon a poem by R A Mundell in his book ‘Man and Economics’ published in the mid-sixties. We are now living in a time when almost the prices of all goods are driven by the market to touch dizzy heights; RBI is so obsessed with inflation in its recent monetary policy announcement yesterday. Although inflation is manageable still our central bank wants to dampen inflationary expectation and in line with global monetary tightening, it is also sucking excess liquidity from the economy by hiking CRR to 7 percent. Shall we go to Mundell’s articulation which goes to disprove the conventional notion that economics is a dry subject and economists are the driest of the lot.
Free goods, scarce goods
Goods made for market
Public goods, private goods
Goods made in Chile
There are necessaries, luxuries
Snob goods of Veblen
There are war goods and peace goods
Goods sent to Vietnam
There are present goods, future goods
Consumer goods and capital
Wholesale goods and wholesome goods
Goods not for children
There are stolen goods, hot goods
Used goods and services
Intermediate goods and final goods
Goods made for retail
Dry goods, Hong Kong goods
Import goods with the taxes
Traded goods, home goods
Goods made with axes
Substitutes, complements
Bread, Butter and cheese
Superior goods, inferior goods
Goods made for deep freeze
Outputs, inputs
Goods and factors
Inventions and patents
Plays by actors
Goodness!
Wednesday, August 1, 2007
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1 comment:
Economics and dry!!. Its like the term "dry wine" for those who are unused to drinking wine and think Port or Sherry (the sweeter versions) are actually wine.
Economics then is like wine which is bitter at the first sip for the uninitiated but hell it does get you intoxicated.
I have been drunk on it since a long time. All starting with the concept of "Dig a pit and fill it up".
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