| Part 1 | Introduction: Thinking Like an Economist |
| Chapter 1 | Economics and Economic Reasoning |
| Chapter 2 | The Production Possibility Model, Trade,
and Globalization |
| Chapter 3 | Economic Institutions |
| Chapter 4 | Supply and Demand |
| Chapter 5 | Using Supply and Demand |
| | |
| Part 2: | Microeconomics |
| | I. MICROECONOMICS: THE BASICS |
| Chapter 6 | Describing Supply and Demand: Elasticities |
| Chapter 7 | Taxation and Government Intervention |
| | |
| | II. FOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY AND
DEMAND |
| Chapter 8 | The Logic of Individual Choice: |
| | The Foundation of Supply and Demand |
| Chapter 9 | Production and Cost Analysis I |
| Chapter 10 | Production and Cost Analysis II |
| | |
| | III. MARKET STRUCTURE |
| Chapter 11 | Perfect Competition |
| Chapter 12 | Monopoly |
| Chapter 13 | Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly |
| | |
| | IV. REAL-WORLD COMPETITION |
| Chapter 14 | Game Theory, Strategic Decision Making,
and Behavioral Economics |
| Chapter 15 | Real-World Competition and Technology |
| Chapter 16 | Antitrust Policy and Regulation |
| | |
| | V. FACTOR MARKETS |
| Chapter 17 | Work and the Labor Market |
| Chapter 17W | Nonwage and Asset Income: Rents, Profits,
and Interest |
| Chapter 18 | Who Gets What? The Distribution
of Income |
| | |
| | VI. APPLYING ECONOMIC REASONING
TO POLICY |
| Chapter 19 | Market Failure versus Government
Failure |
| Chapter 19W | Politics and Economics: The Case of Agricultural Markets |
| Chapter 20 | Microeconomic Policy, Economic Reasoning, and Beyond |
| Chapter 21 | International Trade Policy, Comparative Advantage, and Outsourcing |