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Economic Facts and Fallacies
Economic Facts and Fallacies

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Author: Thomas Sowell
Publisher: Basic Books
Category: Book

List Price: $26.00
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 55 reviews
Sales Rank: 535

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 272
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.2 x 0.9

ISBN: 0465003494
Dewey Decimal Number: 330
EAN: 9780465003495
ASIN: 0465003494

Publication Date: December 31, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: New - Fast shipping from trusted wholesaler with many exclusive publisher contracts.

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Economic Facts and Fallacies exposes some of the most popular fallacies about economic issues-and does so in a lively manner and without requiring any prior knowledge of economics by the reader. These include many beliefs widely disseminated in the media and by politicians, such as mistaken ideas about urban problems, income differences, male-female economic differences, as well as economics fallacies about academia, about race, and about Third World countries. One of the themes of Economic Facts and Fallacies is that fallacies are not simply crazy ideas but in fact have a certain plausibility that gives them their staying power-and makes careful examination of their flaws both necessary and important, as well as sometimes humorous. Written in the easy-to-follow style of the author’s Basic Economics, this latest book is able to go into greater depth, with real world examples, on specific issues.



Customer Reviews:   Read 50 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Sowell Has the Facts and the Theory, but not the Answers   January 29, 2008
 280 out of 385 found this review helpful

I preface my review of Thomas Sowell's Economic Facts and Fallacies with two semi-personal accounts. First, many years ago my young wife and I took the subway to Boston Common to a Fair Play for Cuba demonstration (this was before we drove Castro into the USSR's arms with a trade embargo and other hostilities). Pete Seeger sang a Spanish Civil War freedom song, and when he was done, he said "We might have lost the war, but we had all the good songs." The crowd laughed, but I was dumb-struck. I swore that I would never be satisfied having good songs, especially if this got in the way of winning the battle for human rights and dignity. The point is not to be a Good Person with High Ideals. The point is to contribute to making a better society.
Second, all my life I have been a strong admirer of John Stuart Mill (I wrote a chapter of my Ph.D. dissertation on his model of individual utility). One of his most courageous acts was to be arrested for distributing birth control information in the poor neighborhoods of London. Why did he do this? Well, at the dawn of the Industrial Revolution in England, numerous "utopian socialists" had devised plans for human betterment, especially for the elimination of poverty through intentional communities. The great economist Thomas Malthus' Essay on Population purported to show the futility of poverty relief, arguing that increasing the consumption of the masses would simply lead to a higher birth rate, hence more pressure on food sources, leading to a return to poverty, only with a larger population. We know now that Malthus was wrong (Google "demographic transition" and "agricultural productivity"), but his argument seemed cogent at the time. Indeed, economics was called the "dismal science" because economists like Malthus and Ricardo continually developed ingenious arguments as to why social betterment was impossible. However, John Stuart Mill saw the fallacy in Malthus's argument: if increased consumption were accompanied by a means for birth control, then the masses could enjoy a higher standard of living. I admire Mill because he accepted a dismal economic analysis because he thought it correct, and then tried to solve the social problem involved (poverty) even given the veracity of the economic argument.
Thomas Sowell is a serious economist and a fine writer. There is not a single argument in this book that I think is either incorrect or even disingenuous. Everyone interested in economic and social policy should read this, and his other writings. Sowell is best as showing how statistics can mislead. For instance, he says "It is an undisputed fact that the average real income...of American households rose by only 6 percent over the entire period from 1969 to 1996...But it is an equally undisputed fact that the average real income per person in the United States rose by 51 percent over that very same period." (p. 125) Both are true because average household size decreased dramatically over the period, with more elderly couples and fewer children per married couple in the later period.
Nota bene: commentators who give the household change while ignoring the individual change are slimebags. You may say that they are well-intentioned, but that does not change the fact that they are liars out to mislead the uniformed. Sowell often manages to reveal the liars and slimebags for what they are. Moreover, this is a service to us all, for how are we to identify and solve social problems if we do not know what they are?
My only serious criticism of Sowell is that he is rather more like Thomas Malthus than like John Stuart Mill in temperament. He repeatedly attempts to say that a social problem is less serious than liberals believe, or that a problem cannot be solved by a social intervention. Sowell's deep understanding of the capitalist system is not deployed to generate novel, effective, solutions to problems. In this, he differs from his mentor, Milton Friedman, whose Capitalism and Freedom contained numerous creative interventions, including the negative income tax and school vouchers.
To whet the reader's appetite, here are a few of Sowell's positions. (1) Rent control is a stupid way to help the poor, because it drives down the supply of affordable housing; (2) Racial discrimination is not the cause of income differences between blacks and whites, which are virtually equal when correcting for IQ, education, experience, and other demographic variables; (3) the same is true for the role of gender discrimination in accounting for the lower incomes of women as opposed to men; (4) Slavery, racism, and discrimination are not the cause of the social pathologies associated with poor black inner-city neighborhoods; rather the causes lie in a variant of black culture inherited from traditional southern poor white culture; (5) Poverty in the third world is not caused by imperialism or wealth in the rich countries.
In each of these, and several other areas, I think Sowell's arguments are correct, and should be take serious when proposing vigorous social policies for creating a more equal and fair distribution of the world's resources and produced wealth.



5 out of 5 stars Excellent Reference...   January 22, 2008
 110 out of 120 found this review helpful

I got this book to check out Sowell's take on the "Vanishing Middle Class." In just a few paragraph's he is able to completely turn that notion on it's head... and show why the oft repeated claim is jibberish. I now know this book will be an excellent resource for fighting commonly held economic fallacies. Yesterday I read the chapter on Men vs. Women pay. The commonly held belief is that women don't make as much as a man because of discrimination. While keeping an open minded view that discrimination could come in to play, Sowell delivers an extremely convincing alternative argument for the discrepancy in pay. This book really is an eye opener.


5 out of 5 stars If this is anything like   December 28, 2007
 31 out of 80 found this review helpful

I'm a regular reader of Thomas Sowell's online columns & a huge fan of any of his writings. I'd recommend to anyone interested that they read the reviews of "Basic Economics"(or better yet, the book itself!) and/or see any of Sowell's columns/essays (easy to find w/ any online search) to get a good idea of the author's reasoned, grounded, and wise philosophy. Mr. Sowell possesses a truly great mind, accompanied by an honest character, and an academic integrity second to none. Were I ever to meet this man, I'd prostrate myself before him with a Wayne & Garth-like, "I'm not wor-r-r-rthy!". "Basic Economics" is a truly readable primer & I cannont wait to see "Economic Facts and Fallacies"!


3 out of 5 stars Check for the Appropriateness of Comparisons Before Drawing Conclusions   March 17, 2008
 24 out of 36 found this review helpful

Economists are driven crazy by the misleading conclusions that journalists and politicians draw from using numbers in the wrong way. Dr. Sowell uses this book as an opportunity to challenge some of the conclusions that abound concerning cities, male-female incomes, academia, middle-class incomes and size of the group, racial differences, and characteristics of the third world versus the developed countries. It also points out that these errors have consequences in misallocating resources that could be better applied elsewhere.

If you have never sat through a class on what it takes to make a valid comparison, this book is one long essay on that point. That's the meta-message.

The micro-messages relate to suggesting that problems aren't as large and serious as they seem from frequently quoted statistics. I thought that Dr. Sowell was at his best in describing mismeasurements about middle class income in Chapter 5.

In several of the other chapters, especially Chapter 3, it seemed to me like he was over arguing about statistics at the expense of drawing the right conclusion from looking at the context of what is going on. There seemed to be a desire to show virtuosity that appeared to get in the way of answering the question posed in the chapter. Of course, it's absurd to say that if half of an employer's employees are women that management positions should also be 50 percent female. But if the management positions are only held by women 13 percent of the time, it does seem like something else might be going on (including possible discrimination against women). Dr. Sowell would prefer to leave the argument at the apples and oranges stage.

Some of the historical comparisons are interesting (such as how the number of highly educated women in the workforce has changed in the last 110 years). Parents who resent the high tuition their children's colleges charge will resent those charges even more after understanding more how those high prices are reached and maintained.

The book would have been a lot better if it had included a more solid description of what questions we should be asking and answering in each of these areas to understand what's going on. Without that fully developed foundation, even after reading this book many will be at sea in understanding what's going on in society and the world.




2 out of 5 stars Not as Good as I was Led to Believe   April 18, 2008
 24 out of 38 found this review helpful

While I may agree with most of the conclusions in this book, and agreement generally seduces four and five star reviews, at best this book deserves three stars for trying but two for falling short. Sowell, rightly wants to "torture" the data in order to reveal the truth, a truth that is very much at odds with common perceptions based on intentionally misleading superficial interpretations of the same data. While he does a much better job than most, he still falls well short of his objective. And worse, he knows it and intentionally disguises it. For that, I subtract one star.

For example, he (merely) asserts that changes in the marriage patterns of women largely accounts for changes in their relative pay. Perhaps, but more equal pay may very well have motivated significant changes in their behavior. Incentive based behavioral changes would surely be consistent with economic theory. He shows that while there might not be many women in careers like engineering, with other factors held equal, their equal pay demonstrate that women do earn as much as men. Perhaps, but employers desperately seeking the appearance of equality should likely have driven the salaries of scare women engineers beyond the pay of equivalent men.

In the case of hedonic quality adjustments and their critical effect on measures of inflation, he lists reasons why simple measures of price inadequately measure inflation, knowing full well that many of the factors he mentions are already incorporated into inflation measures as a result of the Boskin commission. He never mentions Boskin. Similarly, he creates a list of people that are rich but don't earn much, like the housewives of rich husbands, and then asserts that they account for "hundreds of thousands" of workers who are mistakenly classified as poor. "Hundreds of thousands" may sound like a lot but mathematically it's essentially zero. The list goes on. While Sowell searches for a more accurate interpretation of the data, at the same time he intentionally disguises flaws and weakness in his own analysis. A much fairer approach, and for me, a more persuasive one, would be to reveal and admit to the shortcomings of his own work.

Typical of his work is his chapter on income, which I found especially weak, despite agreeing with its conclusions. Given the current debate on income inequality, I would have thought this should have been the most important chapter. His analysis in this chapter can best be described as "thought salad" - a fact here and another quasi-related fact there, but never a more comprehensive picture of the "mix adjusted" data. He completely overlooks what is probably one of the most significant factors causing the appearance of flat wages, the dramatic shift in the demographics of the work force to what have traditionally been below average wage earners (first generation immigrants, minorities, women, single mothers, children of unwed mothers, etc). If you want to show that wages have increased over time when adjusted for demographic mix shifts, for example, then show the changes in wages rates for each demographic. If necessary, put the data table in an appendix. The book has no such appendices because he really hasn't analyzed the data. He merely reports factoids from other people's work. Why? Because he hopes the reader will carry a few of those factoids into the world. Ok, even if they're true factoids, that's still propaganda and not "four star" work. For me, it damages the credibility of the work.

Nevertheless, I would recommend everyone read this because there aren't many other works trying to use the data to reveal the truth, even if he is less straightforward then I would prefer. In the end, I can't help but wonder if the data the government collects isn't either unwittingly or intentionally obfuscated because it sure is misused and it sure is hard to use properly as evidenced by the fact that no one, not even Sowell, seems able to mix-adjust the data to the satisfaction of a critical layman, like myself.


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