As someone who has managed to fuck up so tremendously as to never take an economics class in high school, where does /his/ recommend starting on reading about economics? Definitely going to take an intro class when classes start again.
>>1578253
Basic economics and economics in one lesson.
>>1578253
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economics
>>1578253
https://courses.byui.edu/econ_150/econ_150_old_site/Lesson_01.htm#Section_01
>>1578720
>An important reason to study the Book of Mormon is to learn of the circumstances that brought about the people's downfall. If we understand the pride cycle, we may learn how to prevent it in our own lives.
what the fuck
It started off so well, concise without oversimplifying, briefly going into the abstract before seamlessly progressing into what seemed to be a well structured sequence of topics in order of relevance. What went wrong?
Henry Hazlitt's Economics in One Lesson
>>1578940
Those are two biased sources fwiw take them with a fairly large grain of salt
I would recommend tim Harford undercover economist for a more centrist take. I would then say getting a copy of an intro textbook like mankiw principles of economics.
>>1578964
mankiw is also pretty biased
>>1578253
You can pretty much learn everything you need from youtube tutorials. There are probably some lessons uploaded or even intro university lectures.
>>1578984
Everyone is biased in some way snd you can go on mankiws blog to see his biases, hes pretty right wing. But his textbook is standard basic economics and covers all the main bases in a wsy that is about as objective as youll get, hence it being one of the most widely used undergrad textbooks around
>>1578964
>Yeah they are a bit too biased for my liking, you're better off learning about the deficit spending and fiat money so we get richer while you stupid goyim get poore-......I mean yes good guy Keynesianism works best because it was come up with by an Anglo
>>1579071
look lads, a modern day cicero at work
>>1579676
Not an argument
>>1579071
Not an argument
Well, I watched lectures from Khan Academy, it has basic economics 101 as well as finance. You learn about micro and macro, basic theory, and how calculations are made. I'll give you that it focuses primarily on Keynes, and is US centered, but it's useful in most circumstances, and will give you a basic understanding. From there just start reading finance centered publications, and use Investopedia when you are lost. I read Marketwatch, the wall Street journal, and Reuters.
>>1578253
read "gapitalism is evil and we should all share :DDD" by garl barx