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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Douglas A. IrwinPublisher: Princeton University Press Imprint: Princeton University Press Edition: New edition Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.397kg ISBN: 9780691058962ISBN 10: 0691058962 Pages: 280 Publication Date: 11 January 1998 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Language: English Table of ContentsReviewsAgainst the Tide...reviews thinking on free trade from ancient times to the present day. It is encyclopedic in its scope, yet it is very well written and accessible to nonspecialists, fair to the critics of free trade while leaving no doubt that the author finds their argument fatally flawed. -- Bruce Bartlett, The Wall Street Journal Few economic debates have raised more emotion over the last two centuries than that between the champions of free trade and the advocates of protectionism. Irwin chronicles this controversy in great detail... The debate is still very much alive today--from EEC to NAFTA, to the campaign rhetoric in this year's presidential primaries. -- Publishers Weekly An entertaining, informative account of the emergence of the concept of free trade ... full of new insights and unexpected delights... A work that is not only interesting and inspiring but of great practical use. -- Paul Krugman, Journal of Economic Literature Against the Tide is an impressive intellectual achievement. As the history of an economic idea, it pays less attention to the political and economic setting in which different theories were promoted than to their analytical rigour... A delightful as well as an educational read. It should be a set text for anyone interested in trade policy. -- The Economist Against the Tide is an impressive intellectual achievement. As the history of an economic idea, it pays less attention to the political and economic setting in which different theories were promoted than to their analytical rigour.... A delightful as well as an educational read. It should be a set text for anyone interested in trade policy. --The Economist An entertaining, informative account of the emergence of the concept of free trade ... full of new insights and unexpected delights.... A work that is not only interesting and inspiring but of great practical use. --Paul Krugman, Journal of Economic Literature Few economic debates have raised more emotion over the last two centuries than that between the champions of free trade and the advocates of protectionism. Irwin chronicles this controversy in great detail. . . . The debate is still very much alive today--from EEC to NAFTA, to the campaign rhetoric in this year's presidential primaries. --Publishers Weekly Against the Tide...reviews thinking on free trade from ancient times to the present day. It is encyclopedic in its scope, yet it is very well written and accessible to nonspecialists, fair to the critics of free trade while leaving no doubt that the author finds their argument fatally flawed. --Bruce Bartlett, The Wall Street Journal One of Choice's Outstanding Academic Titles for 1996 This learned and thought-provoking essay charts the evolution of free trade as idea and policy from ancient antecedents to the formulation of a mature theorization by Adam Smith, and from the views of the classical economists to the Keynesian revolution and beyond. Irwin's message is that, despite its critics over the centuries, free trade has been and remains the basis for the most effective and successful economic policies throughout the world. (Kirkus UK) Against the Tide...reviews thinking on free trade from ancient times to the present day. It is encyclopedic in its scope, yet it is very well written and accessible to nonspecialists, fair to the critics of free trade while leaving no doubt that the author finds their argument fatally flawed. -- Bruce Bartlett, The Wall Street Journal Few economic debates have raised more emotion over the last two centuries than that between the champions of free trade and the advocates of protectionism. Irwin chronicles this controversy in great detail... The debate is still very much alive today--from EEC to NAFTA, to the campaign rhetoric in this year's presidential primaries. -- Publishers Weekly An entertaining, informative account of the emergence of the concept of free trade ... full of new insights and unexpected delights... A work that is not only interesting and inspiring but of great practical use. -- Paul Krugman, Journal of Economic Literature Against the Tide is an impressive intellectual achievement. As the history of an economic idea, it pays less attention to the political and economic setting in which different theories were promoted than to their analytical rigour... A delightful as well as an educational read. It should be a set text for anyone interested in trade policy. -- The Economist Against the Tide...reviews thinking on free trade from ancient times to the present day. It is encyclopedic in its scope, yet it is very well written and accessible to nonspecialists, fair to the critics of free trade while leaving no doubt that the author finds their argument fatally flawed. -- Bruce Bartlett The Wall Street Journal Few economic debates have raised more emotion over the last two centuries than that between the champions of free trade and the advocates of protectionism. Irwin chronicles this controversy in great detail... The debate is still very much alive today--from EEC to NAFTA, to the campaign rhetoric in this year's presidential primaries. Publishers Weekly An entertaining, informative account of the emergence of the concept of free trade ... full of new insights and unexpected delights... A work that is not only interesting and inspiring but of great practical use. -- Paul Krugman Journal of Economic Literature Against the Tide is an impressive intellectual achievement. As the history of an economic idea, it pays less attention to the political and economic setting in which different theories were promoted than to their analytical rigour... A delightful as well as an educational read. It should be a set text for anyone interested in trade policy. The Economist Author InformationDouglas A. Irwin is Professor of Economics at Dartmouth College. He is the editor of Jacob Viner: Essays on the Intellectual History of Economics (Princeton). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |