Visible Hand: A Wealth of Notions on the Miracle of the Market

To most people, the word “economics” sounds like homework. In Visible Hand, Wall Street Journal op-ed editor Matthew Hennessey brings basic economic principles vividly to life in plain English, without resorting to numbers, graphs, or jargon. This isn't Fed policy or the stock market. This is the essential stuff: supply and demand, incentives and tradeoffs, scarcity and innovation, work and leisure. A teenager should be able to discuss these things intelligently. Sadly, too few of us can explain them even in adulthood. Visible Hand equips readers with the essential vocabulary necessary to understand and explain how we make the choices we do. In Hennessey's hands, economics is far from the dismal science. It's the sparkling art of decision making. No homework necessary.

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Visible Hand: A Wealth of Notions on the Miracle of the Market

To most people, the word “economics” sounds like homework. In Visible Hand, Wall Street Journal op-ed editor Matthew Hennessey brings basic economic principles vividly to life in plain English, without resorting to numbers, graphs, or jargon. This isn't Fed policy or the stock market. This is the essential stuff: supply and demand, incentives and tradeoffs, scarcity and innovation, work and leisure. A teenager should be able to discuss these things intelligently. Sadly, too few of us can explain them even in adulthood. Visible Hand equips readers with the essential vocabulary necessary to understand and explain how we make the choices we do. In Hennessey's hands, economics is far from the dismal science. It's the sparkling art of decision making. No homework necessary.

16.95 In Stock
Visible Hand: A Wealth of Notions on the Miracle of the Market

Visible Hand: A Wealth of Notions on the Miracle of the Market

by Matthew Hennessey

Narrated by Andrew Fallaize

Unabridged — 5 hours, 27 minutes

Visible Hand: A Wealth of Notions on the Miracle of the Market

Visible Hand: A Wealth of Notions on the Miracle of the Market

by Matthew Hennessey

Narrated by Andrew Fallaize

Unabridged — 5 hours, 27 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$16.95
(Not eligible for purchase using B&N Audiobooks Subscription credits)

Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


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Overview

To most people, the word “economics” sounds like homework. In Visible Hand, Wall Street Journal op-ed editor Matthew Hennessey brings basic economic principles vividly to life in plain English, without resorting to numbers, graphs, or jargon. This isn't Fed policy or the stock market. This is the essential stuff: supply and demand, incentives and tradeoffs, scarcity and innovation, work and leisure. A teenager should be able to discuss these things intelligently. Sadly, too few of us can explain them even in adulthood. Visible Hand equips readers with the essential vocabulary necessary to understand and explain how we make the choices we do. In Hennessey's hands, economics is far from the dismal science. It's the sparkling art of decision making. No homework necessary.


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

01/10/2022

Wall Street Journal opinion editor Hennessey evangelizes free markets in this accessible if slanted primer on economics. Acknowledging at the outset that he’s not a trained economist and doesn’t “have a PhD in anything,” Hennessey illustrates economic principles with real-world examples—for instance, explaining “diminishing marginal utility” with an account of eating cotton candy at the county fair (“At the third bite, the fun is over”)—and name-checks thinkers including Friedrich Hayek and Joseph Schumpeter without explaining their contributions to the field. (Adam Smith gets the in-depth treatment, however.) Instead, he draws on pop culture and memories of working in his father’s New Jersey bar to explain how incentives, pricing, scarcity, and other economic concepts reveal “the hidden impulses and involuntary actions that move lives.” Throughout, he defends market capitalism as the economic system that has done the most “to improve people’s material circumstances, at both the individual and societal levels,” and critiques socialism as a “nice-on-paper philosophy that has always and everywhere diminished human flourishing.” Hennessey’s sense of humor and lucid prose appeal, but he undermines his case by downplaying the struggles of poor Americans and refusing to acknowledge the structural advantages enjoyed by wealthy ones. Readers who don’t already agree with Hennessey won’t be convinced. (Mar.)

From the Publisher

What we badly need right now is someone to remind us of what economic freedom is and does. Matthew Hennessey’s Visible Hand is a wise reminder that free markets are essential to human flourishing. In an engaging and highly amusing style he boils economic concepts down to their essence. Buy this for any son or daughter who needs to know what American capitalism is, what it isn’t, and why its departure would bring great ill.”Peggy Noonan, Wall Street Journal columnist

“Matthew Hennessey makes the case for liberal democracy and American capitalism in plain English—and he does it with a sense of humor, too. Nothing dismal here. Econ 101 should always be this much fun.”—Larry Kudlow, former director of the National Economic Council

“Matthew Hennessey brings to economics the sensibility of a man who grew up helping to tend bar at his father’s saloon in New Jersey: He has no interest in putting on airs, only in telling you the story. In Visible Hand he has produced the most completely enjoyable book on economics I’ve ever encountered. Economics? Enjoyable? Did I just write that? Because of Matt, I did.”—Peter Robinson, Murdoch Distinguished Policy Fellow at the Hoover Institution

“As a libertarian, I don’t like mandates, but Visible Hand should be required reading for every American. It will restore faith in the power of capitalism to increase opportunity for all of us, especially those born without wealth and privilege. For too long, economics has been the province of writers of gray prose and makers of two-dimensional supply-and-demand charts. Hennessey uses personal experience, history, and popular culture to create a thrilling story about how the world actually works. I’m going to make my sons—a Millennial and a Zoomer—read Visible Hand, which explains how individualism, free markets, choice, and entrepreneurial risk make us richer, happier, and more fulfilled."—Nick Gillespie, editor at large, Reason

“This delightful and entertaining book makes the ideas behind economics accessible to all. It also reminds both novices and econ wonks why economic reasoning is so important and critical to understanding the world today.”—Allison Schrager, Manhattan Institute Senior Fellow      

Product Details

BN ID: 2940178029190
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 07/12/2022
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

Introduction

I am not an economist. I’m telling you that now, here at the beginning, because you have a right to know what kind of person you’re dealing with.

This is a book about economics, broadly speaking, and some would say I’m out of my depth. Fair enough. I’m not licensed. I don’t have a PhD in economics. I don’t have a PhD in anything. The gatekeepers of the vast edifice of economic knowledge tend not to look kindly on the opinions of the uncredentialed. They like to keep it complicated. They prefer to dress economic things up in opaque terminology and technical jargon, stashing it all on a high college shelf, well out of the reach of the average person.

This book is not for them.

I don’t pretend to be making a contribution to the academic literature. This isn’t a dissertation or a textbook. It’s just one guy’s view of the world through market-colored glasses. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.

There’s more you should know: I’ve never worked in business, banking, finance, or—until relatively recently—a large private company. I couldn’t tell you a single useful thing about accounting other than that assets equal liabilities plus equity on the balance sheet and that people who study accounting in college tend to nab high-paying jobs right out of the gate. I don’t know how to read an earnings report and I’m useless with a spreadsheet. Stocks don’t interest me much, apart from the possibility that they will pay for my retirement. Cryptocurrency might as well be professional lacrosse for all I care about it, which is not very much. I don’t think the world revolves around career, money, bond prices, or the oil market.

After reading a list of all my non-qualifications, you may be wondering why I have written a book on economics at all. I did it because I suspect many people are afraid of economics, or confused and intimidated by it, just like I once was. For most of my life I avoided the topic entirely. Then I woke up one day and realized that all I’d been doing my whole life was acting like an economist: responding to incentives, weighing trade-offs, making decisions at the margin, and calculating the utility of everything from investing in my education to helping myself to a second scoop of strawberry ice cream. So this is a book about economics for people who, broadly speaking, don’t like economics. Or think they don’t.

I’m the sort of fellow who thinks American-style capitalism works pretty damn well most of the time, especially when alternatives are considered. It has its quirks, it has its shortcomings, it even has its failures, but free markets have over the past three centuries lifted billions of people out of poverty in every corner of the globe. That’s not a meaningless statement. Real people, as alive as you or me, who would otherwise have lived solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short lives, instead lived good lives, fruitful lives, healthy lives, prosperous lives—all thanks to the material improvements made possible by free markets.

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