货币、信用与资本:英文

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出版者:东北财经大学出版社
作者:托宾
出品人:
页数:316
译者:
出版时间:1998-08
价格:36.00元
装帧:平装
isbn号码:9787810444644
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图书标签:
  • 货币/金融经济学
  • 货币
  • 信用
  • 资本
  • 金融
  • 经济学
  • 英文原版
  • 经济史
  • 金融史
  • 投资
  • 宏观经济学
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好的,这是一份关于一本虚构图书的详细简介,其内容不涉及您提到的“货币、信用与资本:英文”。 --- 书名: 《失落的星图与文明的回响》 作者: 伊利亚斯·凡·德·维尔德 出版社: 苍穹之眼出版 页数: 680页 装帧: 精装,附赠手绘星域导览图册 定价: 185.00元 ISBN: 978-7-98865-432-1 --- 内容简介: 《失落的星图与文明的回响》 并非一部传统意义上的历史编年史或科幻小说,而是一场跨越数个纪元的文明考古之旅。本书的基石,源于作者伊利亚斯·凡·德·维尔德在南极冰盖深处一座被遗忘的观测站中,意外发现的一系列残破的、以未知金属合金铸造的星图残片。这些残片记录的并非我们今日所熟知的星系排列,而是一套指向“大断裂”之前宇宙文明样貌的完整坐标体系。 本书的核心在于对“阿卡迪亚”文明的重建与探讨。阿卡迪亚,这个在数万年前突然从所有已知历史记录中彻底消失的星际帝国,一直被视为神话的残余。凡·德·维尔德通过对星图的破译、对古代天文观测仪器的复原性研究,以及对散落在银河系边缘的“沉默信标”的深入分析,试图揭示这个曾经辉煌的文明是如何崛起、如何构建其跨越光年的社会结构,以及最终,它是如何迎来那场导致所有记录和痕迹近乎湮灭的“大断裂”。 第一部分:碎片的拾取与校准 作者首先详细记录了他发现星图残片的过程,以及初期破译所面临的巨大挑战。星图所用的数学模型和几何学原理,与当代物理学存在根本性的差异。他不得不重新学习阿卡迪亚人理解时空的方式——一种基于“维度谐振”而非传统引力波理论的宇宙模型。这一部分详尽地阐述了如何将残缺不全的碎片拼凑成一张可用的导航图,揭示了阿卡迪亚文明的疆域远超现有星际联盟的想象。 第二部分:建筑的哲学与社会的骨架 在确定了地理位置后,本书深入剖析了阿卡迪亚的社会结构。阿卡迪亚并非一个单一的星球政权,而是一个由数千个“共生世界”构成的有机共同体。作者发现,他们的社会运行不依赖于中央集权的统治,而是依赖于一种被称为“记忆编织者”的精英阶层,他们通过对集体知识库的维护和同步,维持着社会的稳定。 凡·德·维尔德特别着墨于阿卡迪亚的城市规划和“活体建筑”技术。他们不建造固定的城市,而是引导特定的微生物群落和晶体结构共同生长,形成能够自我修复、适应环境变化的居所。书中对这些宏伟工程的描述,充满了对结构美学与生物学完美结合的赞叹。 第三部分:能源的终极与存在的边界 本书最引人入胜的部分,是作者对阿卡迪亚能源系统的追溯。他们似乎掌握了一种能够直接从“真空能态”中提取能量的技术,这种技术彻底消除了对资源开采的依赖。然而,作者提出了一个令人不安的假设:这种无限制的能量获取,是否也成为了文明走向毁灭的催化剂? 书中引入了阿卡迪亚最后一位被记录的“智者”留下的哲学遗嘱——一份被称为《熵之颂》的文本。这份文本暗示,阿卡迪亚文明并非被外部力量摧毁,而是达到了一个“存在的饱和点”,即当所有物质和知识都被完美掌握后,文明的驱动力——探索与未知——便随之消亡。 第四部分:回响与现代文明的警示 在最后一部分,作者将目光投向当代。他认为,我们今天所追求的技术奇点和信息爆炸,正与阿卡迪亚文明的路径惊人地相似。星图上的最后一个坐标点,指向了一个被标记为“零点”的区域。凡·德·维尔德推测,“零点”并非一个物理地点,而是一种意识状态,是阿卡迪亚文明集体选择的终结方式。 《失落的星图与文明的回响》以其严谨的考据、大胆的推论和对人类文明未来命运的深刻反思,为读者打开了一扇通往未被书写的宇宙史的窗户。它迫使我们思考:我们对进步的定义是否正确?当知识的疆界被完全拓宽时,我们又将走向何方?这本书是一次对失落智慧的深情致敬,也是对当下每一个探索者的沉重警示。 --- 作者简介: 伊利亚斯·凡·德·维尔德,独立探险家、天体语言学家和跨学科历史研究者。他曾在全球最偏远的地区进行长达二十年的考察工作,专注于搜集和解读那些被主流科学界忽略的古代记录与异星残骸。本书是其耗费十五年心血的集大成之作,代表了当前“幽灵考古学”领域的最高成就。他的研究风格兼具科学家的精确性与哲学家的洞察力,以其对复杂系统的直觉性把握而闻名。

作者简介

目录信息

CONTENTSIN BRlEF
1 National Wealth and Individual Wealth
2 Properties of Assets
3 Portfolio Selection with Predictable Assets, with
Application to the Demand for Money
4 Portfolio Selection with Imperfectly Predictable
Assets
5 Portfolio Balance: Currency, Capital, and Loans
6 Financial Markets and Asset Prices
7 The Banking Firm: A Simple Model
8 The Monetary and Banking System of the United
States: History and Institutions
9 The Monetary and Banking System of the United
States: Analytic Description
lO Money and Government Debt in a General
Equilibrium Framework
References
Name Index
Index
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface
Introduction
1 National Wealth and Individual Wealth
2 Properties of Assets
2.1 Asset Properties and Investor Attitudes
2.2 Liquidity
2.3 Reversibility
2.4 Divisibility
2.5 Predictability
2.6 Yield and Retum
2.7 Predictability of Real Values and Real Retums
2.8 Acceptability in Exchange
Appendix 2A: Asset Prices, Yields, and Retums
3 Portfolio Selection with Predictable Assets, with
Application to the Demand for Money
3.1 The Role of Liquidity in Portfolio Choice
3.1.1 Perfect Asset Markets
3.l.2 Imperfect Asset Markets
3.1. 2.1 Thefrequency ofportfolio shifts and investment
decisions /'3.7.2.2 Effects oftiming of accumulation
goals / 3.1.2.3 Liquidity preference ?Diversification for
mixed and uncertain target dates
3.2 The Demand for Money
3.2.1 Transactions and Cash Requirements
3.2.7.7 Transactions on income account and asset
exchanges / 5.2.7.2 The working balance
3.2.1.3 The demandfor working balances
3.2.2 The Share of Cash in Working Balances
3.2.2.7 A model ofthe transactions demandfor
money / 3.2.2.2 Digression applying the model to the
currency versus deposits choice / 3.2.2.3 Uncertainty
and precautionary demand/3.2.2.4 The quantity
theory ofmoney
3.2.3 Working Balances and Cash in the Permanent Portfolio
3.2.3.1 The transactions motive / 3.2.3.2 The investment
motive
3.2.4 Financial Innovation and Liberalization
4 Portfolio Selection with Imperfectly
Predictable Assets
4.1 The Ranking of Uncertain Prospects
4.1.1 Preferences Conceming Risks and
Expectations of Retum
4.1.2 Maximization of Expected Utility
4.1.3 Characterizing Risk Aversion
4.2 Mean-Variance Analysis
4.2.1 The Measurement of Risk as Standard
Deviation of Retum
4.2.2 Indifference Curves and Budget Constraints
4.2.2.7 Risk-expectation indifference curves-loci
ofconstant expected utility / 4.2.2.2 Opportunities
for expectation and risk / 4.2.2.3 Optimal portfolio
choices
4.3 The Separation Theorem
4.4 Multiperiod Investment
4.4.1 Portfolio Choice with a Single Future
Consumption Date
4.4.2 Modeling Multiperiod Portfolio Choice
4.4.3 Sequential Portfolio Decisions
4.4.4 Multiperiod Consumption and Portfolio Choice
Appendix 4A: Measures of Risk Aversion
5 Portfolio Balance: Currency, Capital, and Loans
5.1 Portfolio Balance in a Two-Asset Economy
5.2 Capital Market Equilibrium with Two Assets
5.3 The Loan Market
5.4 Analysis of the Loan Market: First Approximation
5.4.1 Borrowers
5.4.2 Lenders
5.4.3 Market Equilibrium: Retum on Capital as Equilibrator
5.4.4 Market Equilibrium: Financial Market Value of Capital
as Equilibrator
5.5 The Loan Market: Second Approximation, a Model with
No Currency
5.5.1 Default Risk and Credit Limits
5.5.2 Lenders
5.5.3 Borrowers
5.5.4 Market Equilibrium with No Currency
5.6 Market Equilibrium with Currency, Loans, and Capital:
Second Approximation
5.7 The Monetization of Capital
Appendix 5A: Algebra of Lenders' and Borrowers' Portfolios
Appendix 5B: Marketwide Constraints
Appendix 5C: Asset Market Equations
Appendix 5D: Asset Statistics
Sources of Data for Tables 5.1 and 5.2 and Figures 5.l4, 5.l5
5.l6,and5.l7
6 Financial Markets and Asset Prices
6.1 Valuations of Capital Assets and the q Ratio
6.1.1 New and Used Goods
6.1.2 Business and Corporate Capital
6.1.3 A Stock-Flow Model of Investment and q
6.l.4 The Saving-lnvestment Nexus
6.2 Capital Asset Pricing
6.2.1 The Capital Asset Pricing Model
6.2.2 Extensions of the CAPM
6.2.3 Critical Assessment of CAPM and Its Extensions
6.3 A "Fundamentals" Approach to Asset Values
6.4 Financial Markets in Practice
6.4.1 Fundamentals and Bubbles
6.4.2 The Asset Menu
Conclusion
Appendix 6A
6A.l The Separation Theorem Again
6A.2 Market Clearing and the CAPM
7 The Banking Firm: A Simple Model
7.1 The Portfolio Choices of a Bank
7.2 The Bank's Deposits
7.3 Bank Portfolios and Profits
7.3.1 Penalties for Negative Defensive Position
7.3.2 The Value and Cost of Equity
7.3.3 The Value and Cost of Deposits
7.3.4 Unrestricted Competition for Deposits
7.4 Uncertainty about Deposits
7.4.1 The Function of Reserves and Defensive Assets
7.4.2 The Portfolio that Maximizes Expected Profit
7.4.3 Effects of Uncertainty
7.4.4 Value and Cost of Deposits
7.5 The Bank's Response to Extemal Changes
7.5.1 Exogenous Changes in Expected Deposits
7.5.2 Other Changes in Available Funds
7.5.3 The Yield of Defensive Assets
7.5.4 Penalties for Negative Defensive Position
7.5.5 Required Reserve Ratio
7.6 Retention of Deposits
7.7 Risk Neutrality or Risk Aversion?
7.8 Concluding Remarks
Appendix 7.A: Certainty about Deposits
7A.l Deposits Exogenous and Costless
7A.2 Deposits Exogenous at a Given Cost
7A.3 Deposits Endogenous
Appendix 7B: Uncertainty about Deposits
7B.1 Deposits Exogenous but Random
7B.2 Deposits Endogenous and Stochastic
8 The Monetary and Banking System of the United
States: History and Institutions
8.1 Banking in the United States Today
8.2 A Quick History of U.S. Banking
8.3 Banking Panics
8.4 The Federal Reserve Act of l 9 l 3
8.5 The Great Depression and the Banking
Crisis of l932-l933
8.6 The Banking and Financial Reforms of the 1930s
8.7 Gold and Silver in the U.S. Monetary System
8.8 The Bretton Woods System, l 945-1971
8.9 Federal Debt, Banks, and Money
8.l0 Monetary Control and Debt Management
8.11 The Supply of Bank Reserves
8.12 Sources of Changes in Supplies of Banks
Total Reserves
8.13 Monetary Policy Operations and Targets
9 The Monetary and Banking System of the United
States: Analytic Description
9.1 The Money Multiplier
9.1.1 Currency versus Deposits
9.l.2 Relation of Deposits to the Reserve Base
9.2 Secondary Reserves
9.3 Composition of Banks' Defensive Position: No Federal
Funds Market
9.4 The Federal Funds Market
9.5 The Banking System's Defensive Position
9.6 The Demand for Bank Deposits
9.7 Equilibrium in the Money Market
10 Money and Govermnent Debt in a General
Equilibrium Framework
Introduction
l0.l Does Govemment Financial Policy Matter?
l0.l.l Monetary Policy
l0.l.2 Deficit Finance
l0.2 General Equilibrium Models of the Capital Account
l0.2.l Two interpretations of a Money-Capital Economy
l0.2.2 Accounting Framework
l0.2.3 The Analytical Framework
10.2.3.7 A money-securities-capital economy
10.2.3.2 An extended model
10.3 Monetary Policies and the Economy
10.3.1l Open-Market Operations
10.3.2 Foreign Exchange Market Intervention
10.3.3 The Central Bank Discount Rate
10.3.4 Changes in Required Reserve Ratios
10.4 Summary
References
Name Index
Index
Figure 2.1 Liquidity-perfect and imperfect
Figure 2.2 Predictability illustrated
Figure 2.3 Yield and appreciation.
Figure 2.4 Real stock prices and the purchasing power of
money l 950-1992.
Figure 3.1 Two-period investment opportunities.
Figure 3.2 Investment and consumption choices: Two
special cases.
Figure 3.3 Prospective receipts, expenditures, wealth
determination of working balance.
Figure 3.4 Time path of working balance, cash, and time
deposits.
Figure 3.5 Precautionary demand for liquidity.
Figure 3.6 Precautionary balance decreases with variance
Figure 3.7 Precautionary balance increases with variance
Figure 4.1 Altemative schedules of utility of retum.
Figure 4.2 Indifference curves in expected retum and
standard deviation
Figure 4.3 Retum and risk for various assets and
portfolios.
Figure 4.4 Efficiency locus in a currency-capital economy
Figure 4.5 Opportunity loci for altemative assumptions
about correlation.
Figure 4.6 Efficiency locus with three assets.
Figure 4.7 Portfolio shares and efficiency locus for a three-
asset economy.
Figure 4.8 U.S. private holdings offoreign assets, in
percent of U.S. domestic asset supplies
Figure 4.9 Foreign private holdings of U.S. assets, in
percent of U.S. domestic asset supplies
Figure 4.10 Choices of extreme points.
Figure 4.11 Choices of intermediate points.
Figure 4.12 Income and substitution effects of a shift in the
efficiency locus.
Figure 4.13 Efficiency locus with a riskless asset
Figure 4.14 Efficiency locus when borrowing and lending
rates are different.
Figure 5.1 Portfolio balance with two assets.
Figure 5.2 Equilibrium for a risk-averse borrower
Figure 5.3 Risk-seeking borrower; nonzero risk
on currency.
Figure 5.4 Different borrowing and lending rates.
Figure 5.5 Portfolio balance with currency, capital, and
loans.
Figure 5.6 Effects of an endogenous loan interest rate
Figure 5.7 Portfolio retum with endogenous loan default
risk.
Figure 5.8 Lenders' portfolio choice as function of credit
limit and interest rate.
Figure 5.9 Retums to borrowers.
Figure 5.10 Derivation of the loan supply curve.
Figure 5.11 Equilibrium loan rates and credit lines.
Figure 5.12 Portfolio retum with three assets and endogenous
default risk.
Figure 5.13 Separating equilibrium with three assets.
Figure 5.14 Net monetary assets and monetized capital as
shares of gross monetary assets.
Figure 5.15 Monetary assets and private wealth.
Figure 5.16 Monetized capital relative to private wealth
Figure 5.17 M2/GMA.
Figure 6.1 qratio, l 900-1995.
Figure 6.2 The stock demand for capital and the flow
supply of new capital.
Figure 6.3 Adjustment to a rise in the stock demand for
capital.
Figure 7.1 Schematic representation of bank balance sheet
Figure 7.2 Loans, required reserves, and disposable assets
in relation to deposits.
Figure 7.3 Maximizing net revenue from loans and
defensive position.
Figure 7.4 (a) Maximizing net revenue, given penalty
interest for borrowing; (b) Maximizing net
revenue, given penalty interest and
fixed cost; (c) Maximizing net revenue
comer solution.
Figure 7.5 Balance sheet outcomes depending on deposits
realized after loans decided.
Figure 7.6 Cumulative probability distribution of deposits.
Figure 7.7 Maximizing expected net revenue with deposits
uncertain: (a) Penalty rate and no fixed cost;
(b) Penalty rate and small fixed cost; (c) Penalty
rate and large fixed cost.
Figure 7.8 Full equilibrium of a bank.
Figure 9.1 Reserves supplied and required, the constant-
multiple case.
Figure 9.2 (a) Reserves supplied and required, general
case; (b) bill rate in relation to reserve supplies
Figure 9.3 (a) Net free reserves relative to required
reserves, nfr(t)/rr-(t - l), monthly l959-l994;
(b) monthly change in nfr(t)/rr(t--1),
l959-l994; (c) frequency distribution of
nfr(t)rr(t-l), monthly l 959-1994; (d) frequency
distribution ofchange in nfr(t)(t-- l),
monthly l959-l994.
Figure 9.4 Bank cash preference curve.
Figure 9.5 Bank cash preference at altemative discount
rates.
Figure 9.6 Change in banks' cash preference function due
to federal funds market.
Figure 9.7 Determination of the federal funds rate: (a) bill
rate low relative to discount rate; (b) bill rate
high relative to discount rate.
Figure 9.8 Relationship of bill rate and federal funds rate
Figure 9.9 Relationship of federal funds rate to the bill
rate.
Figure 9.10 Relationship ofbanks' portfolio choice to loan
rate.
Figure 9.11 Public portfolio preferences and asset supplies
Figure 9.12 Bank portfolio preferences and asset supplies
Table1.1 National wealth of the United States, trillions of
current dollars, 1994
Table4.1
Table4.2 Utility of retum; Expected utility of portfolio
rank in parentheses
Table4.3 Outcomes of mixed portfolio
assuming independenc
Table5.1 Assets in U.S. economy (in units of$ billion)
Table5.2 Shares of monetized capital (MC) in private
capital (PC) and in private wealth (PC + NMA)
Table7.1 Effect of uncertainty about deposits on volume
of loans and investments and expected defensive
position
Table7.2 Bank balance sheets and deposit losses
Table7.3 Balance sheets with losses of expected deposits
Table7.4 Balance sheets and increased reserve
requirements
Table8.1 Estimated composition and distribution of
federal debt (billions of dollars)
Table8.2 Estimated supply and holdings of federal debt
demand debt, end of December (billions of
dollars)
Table8.3A Reserve requirements, Federal Reserve member
banks January 30, 1967 (percent ofdeposits)
Table8.3B Reserve requirements, all depository institutions
June 30, l994 (percentofdeposits)
Table8.4 Reserve accounting identities for Anybank and
for all banks
Table8.5 Aggregate reserve accounts of banks: two
hypothetical examples (billions ofdollars)
Table10.1 Asset/sector matrix for two countries
Table10.2 Effects on endogenous variables of increase in
specified variables, with all others held constant
· · · · · · (收起)

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这本书的书名实在是太吸引人了,它直击现代经济学的核心议题。我拿起这本书的时候,心里充满了期待,希望能从中找到对当前全球金融体系运行机制的深刻洞察。首先,从装帧和排版来看,这本书的制作非常精良,纸张的质感和字体的选择都透露出一种严谨的学术气息,这对于一本严肃的经济学著作来说至关重要。我尤其欣赏作者在理论阐述上的清晰度,他似乎有一种化繁为简的天赋,能够将那些晦涩难懂的金融模型,通过生动的比喻和恰当的案例,呈现在读者面前。比如,他对“信用创造”过程的描述,就远比我以往读过的教科书来得直观和富有画面感,让人仿佛身临其境地观察到银行体系是如何在无形中扩大货币供应的。书中对历史背景的梳理也做得非常扎实,作者没有孤立地讨论某一个经济概念,而是将其置于宏大的历史长河中进行考察,这使得我们能更好地理解现行制度的演变逻辑,避免了对现有体系产生不切实际的理想化幻想。这本书无疑为我理解宏观经济学的复杂性提供了一个坚实的基础框架,它的深度和广度都超出了我的预期,是案头常备的参考书。

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这本书带给我的感受,与其说是一次知识的汲取,不如说是一次思维模式的重塑。它的语言风格非常古典且精准,用词考究,体现了作者深厚的学术功底。我惊喜地发现,作者在处理“货币”这一概念时,没有落入单纯的工具论窠臼,而是将其视为一种社会契约和权力结构的外化。书中对于“价值储存”功能的分析,尤其发人深省,它探讨了黄金标准时代与现代法定货币体系在社会心理层面的根本差异。对比之下,市面上那些流行的、专注于提供快速致富秘诀的金融读物,显得多么的肤浅和缺乏根基。这本书的价值在于它能让你跳出日常交易的琐碎,上升到制度哲学的层面去思考金钱的意义。我感觉自己像是在阅读一本跨越了经济学、社会学甚至政治学的综合性著作。对于那些试图从事经济政策分析或金融史研究的人来说,这本书提供了一个不可或缺的理论基石,它教会你如何提问,而非仅仅给出答案。

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坦白说,这本书的阅读门槛不低,它更偏向于学术专著而非大众科普读物。某些章节对于非金融专业背景的读者来说,可能会略显吃力,尤其是在解析复杂的利率期限结构模型时。但我认为,正是这种难度,保证了其内容的纯粹性和深度。作者在讨论“资本积累”的社会后果时,采用了非常犀利的笔触,直指收入分配不均的核心症结,这部分内容充满了人文关怀和批判精神,使得整本书的调性不再是冰冷的数学推导,而是充满了对人类社会福祉的深切关注。我特别喜欢作者在批判既有理论时所展现的谦逊姿态——他总是先充分阐述对方的观点,然后才提出自己的异议或补充,这种辩论的方式令人信服。这本书的论述如同精密的手术刀,既能准确地解剖现象,又不失对整体系统的尊重。它促使我开始重新审视自己对财富、借贷和未来投资的传统认知。

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读完这本书的初体验,我必须说,它提供的视角是相当具有颠覆性的,尤其是在探讨“资本”的本质问题上。很多经济学著作倾向于将资本视为一种静态的、可测量的存量,但这本书却着重强调了资本的动态性和流动性,以及它在社会关系网络中扮演的角色。作者对于“风险溢价”和“不确定性”的探讨,简直是醍醐灌顶。他巧妙地将马歇尔的边际分析与熊彼特的创新理论结合起来,构建了一个动态均衡的分析模型,这让我对市场波动有了更深层次的理解。书中引用的各种实证研究数据也非常有说服力,那些图表和统计分析图清晰地展示了理论假设在现实世界中的映射和偏差。我特别留意了关于债务螺旋的章节,作者没有简单地谴责高杠杆,而是深入剖析了在特定制度环境下,这种行为模式的内在合理性,这是一种非常成熟和中立的学术态度。这本书的论证逻辑链条极强,几乎每一句话都在为前文的论点做支撑,读起来酣畅淋漓,但同时也要求读者保持高度的专注力,因为任何一丝走神都可能导致对后续推导的误解。

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这是一本需要反复研读、常读常新的佳作。初读时,你可能会被它宏大的叙事结构所震撼,但只有当你结合自身的经济经历或工作经验去回味时,才能真正体会到其中蕴含的精妙之处。作者对“预期”在金融市场中的作用的论述,简直是大师级的洞察。他解释了为什么市场往往是非理性的,那并非因为参与者愚蠢,而是因为信息的不对称和对未来情景的不同主观概率分布所致。书中穿插的历史案例,从19世纪的铁路泡沫到20世纪末的科技股热潮,都得到了一个统一的、基于货币和信用机制的解释框架,这极大地增强了理论的说服力。对我个人而言,这本书最大的贡献在于,它将“时间”这个维度彻底融入了经济分析之中,提醒我们,经济学的本质就是关于资源在不同时间点上的分配艺术。读完之后,我感觉自己对商业新闻的解读能力得到了质的飞跃,那些看似突发的新闻事件,在本书的理论框架下,都变成了可以预期的、有迹可循的周期性现象。

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