Does anyone have a recommendation for a textbook in introductory
Macroeconomics that is not oriented to establishing/using the aggregate
demand/aggregate supply framework?
Last semester I used Case, Fair, and Oster, but wasn't too happy with
it. Even though it does not start with AD/AD, still it builds toward it
and students can feel that orientation.
I prefer an approach closer to Keynes and without emphasis on the price
level. Samuelson/Nordhaus has been mentioned to me but the last edition
has data only going to 2008 and feels behind the times (the publisher
says that the next edition will be 2014, presumably available in 2013).
Thanks, Paul
--
==== Editor since 1977 of */Research in Political Economy/
<http://www.emeraldinsight.com/books.htm?issn=0161-7230>* | *webpage
<http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/%7Ezarembka>*:
/*Revitalizing Marxist Theory for Today's Capitalism*/, with R. Desai
/*The National Question and the Question of Crisis*/*
/*The Hidden History of 9-11
<http://www.sevenstories.com/book/?GCOI=58322100606640>*/ (2nd ed.,
Seven Stories Press)
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