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- Freakonomics
- Àú ÀÚ Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner
- ÃâÆÇ»ç HarperTorch
- °¡ °Ý $27.95(336 Pages)
- ÃâÆÇÀÏ 2006³â 10¿ù

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The Big Idea
In the 1990s, violent crime
rose in America and experts predicted it would continue to rise phenomenally.
And then, suddenly, the crime rate fell. Experts then said this was because of
better gun control laws, better policing, and the economic boom. But the
theories were wrong. The real reason was that 20 years earlier, abortion became
legal. And children who would have been born in adverse environments and thus
were more likely to become criminals, were not being born anymore.
This is what ¡°Freakonomics¡± by economist Steven D. Levitt and
journalist Stephen J. Dubner is all about. It looks at the world and how it
works by exploring ¡°the hidden side of everything.¡± It challenges conventional
wisdom and proves that it is often wrong. It asks fresh, interesting questions
most economists wouldn¡¯t even think about, such as: If drug dealers have so much
money, why do they still live with their moms? Or which is more dangerous, a gun
or a swimming pool?
Steven D. Levitt is a prominent
American economist best known for his work on crime, in particular on the link
between legalized abortion and crime rates.
Winner of the 2003 John Bates
Clark Medal, he is currently the Alvin H. Baum Professor of Economics at the
University of Chicago and the director of the Becker Center on Chicago Price
Theory at the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business. He is one of
the most well known economists amongst laymen, having co-authored the
best-selling book Freakonomics (2005). Levitt was chosen as one of Time
Magazines "100 People Who Shape our World" in 2006.

























