Freakonomics : A Rogue Economist Explores The Hidden Side Of Everything 
(Steven D. Levitt, Stephen J. Dubner)
  
To begin with, this book is not for the plain dull witted economics   student. Economics has long been regarded as a dry subject with not   much life with it. Steven Levitt, the winner of the John Bates Clark   award for the best economist under 40 has attempted to change all that.   In this book, Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side   of Everything; Steven D Levitt, along with co-author Stephen J Dubner,   makes the reader ponder the economics in a much real world issue like   'If crack dealers make so much money, why do they still live with their   mothers?', rather than plain commentary on fluctuating interest rates.      Levitt has proposed a few interesting theories in this book, but as he   has admitted, he is not much of a writer himself. So he turned to   Stephen J Dubner, who wrote about Levitt in The New York Times. Thus   was born Freakonomics.      Tying up topics so distant to economics, like the relation between   School Teachers and Sumo wrestkers, Levitt closes in on how incentives   are so important for the modern life. Cringing a bit to statistics, and   a bit of rationalism, the duo has also reasoned out an explanation to   the falling crime rate in the US.      With impressive research, exciting and thought provoking questions   about seemingly obvious stuff, and mixing up diverse mixes to bring the   reader to the fundamental economics concept behind the fact, Steven   Levitt's Freakonomics is definitely an interesting and a must read.  
 
  
 
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