Tim Harford, aka The Undercover Economist, is coming out with a new book called Fifty Inventions That Shaped the Modern Economy.
New ideas and inventions have woven, tangled or sliced right through the invisible economic web that surrounds us every day. From the bar code to double-entry bookkeeping, covering ideas as solid as concrete or as intangible as the limited liability company, this book not only shows us how new ideas come about, it also shows us their unintended consequences — for example, the gramophone introducing radically unequal pay in the music industry, or how the fridge shaped the politics of developing countries across the globe.
It’s based on his BBC podcast 50 Things That Made the Modern Economy.
Fun fact that I just discovered: Harford and I share the same birthday, both date and year.
Tags: books economics Fifty Inventions That Shaped the Modern Economy podcasts Tim Harford
via kottke.org
Fifty Inventions That Shaped the Modern Economy