![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Bananas lead to a look at the effects of multinational companies on “host economies,” and a personal story about a spice being “taken for granted” leads Chang to extrapolate on unpaid care work, which isn’t included in GDP calculations but “would amount to 30–40% of GDP” if it were. via the slave trade, and how free market economics only grant freedom to some. Chang ( Economics: The User’s Guide), a professor of economics at SOAS University of London, blends culinary facts and economic expertise in this rollicking guide that makes “economics more palatable by serving it with stories about food.” “Economics has a direct and massive impact on our lives,” Chang writes, and, in an effort to make knotty concepts accessible to a wide audience, he explains economic theory with culinary anecdotes: okra’s use in gumbo gives way to a discussion of how the vegetable was brought to the U.S. ![]()
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