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Microeconomics Made Simple and Easy: Microeconomics was Never This Simple

by Nina J. Sharma
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Current price ₹1,324.00
Original price ₹1,466.00
Original price ₹1,466.00
Original price ₹1,466.00
(-10%)
₹1,324.00
Current price ₹1,324.00

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Book cover type: Paperback
  • ISBN13: 9798198284500
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Subject: N/A
  • Publisher: Independently Published
  • Publisher Imprint: Independently Published
  • Publication Date:
  • Pages: 194
  • Original Price: USD 14.95
  • Language: English
  • Edition: N/A
  • Item Weight: 232 grams
  • BISAC Subject(s): Economics / Microeconomics

There are economics textbooks that will test your patience before they test your knowledge. They open with definitions before you have a reason to care about them. They deploy graphs before the human situation behind the graph has been established. They treat the reader as a student to be examined rather than a person to be persuaded.
This book takes a different view.
Microeconomics Made Simple and Easy is written for the person who suspects that economics matters - to their career, their finances, their understanding of the news, their ability to make better decisions - but has never found a treatment of the subject that respects both the material's depth and the reader's time.
Every concept in this book is introduced through a real situation before it is given a name. Every chapter covers exactly one idea, completely, before moving to the next. No prior knowledge is assumed. No mathematics is required. The only prerequisite is curiosity and the willingness to follow an argument to its conclusion.
By the final page, you will not merely have encountered the core ideas of microeconomics. You will understand why they matter, where they appear in daily life, and how to use them to think more clearly about the choices - personal, professional, and political - that shape your world.
Whether you are a student approaching economics for the first time, a professional who wants to understand the forces shaping your industry, or simply a curious person who has always suspected there was more logic in the world than the surface suggests, this book was written for you.
What microeconomics actually studies
Economics splits into two broad branches. Macroeconomics looks at the big picture: GDP, inflation, unemployment, national debt. It asks questions like "Why do some countries grow rich while others stay poor?"
Microeconomics is different. It zooms in. It studies the decisions of individual people, households, and firms - and how those decisions interact in markets. It asks: why does the price of a concert ticket rise when a popular artist comes to town? Why do landlords sometimes let apartments sit empty rather than lower the rent? Why does a supermarket sell two sizes of coffee, and why is the large one almost always a better deal per milliliter?
These are not abstract questions. They are the logic hiding in plain sight, all around you, every single day.
The one tool you actually need
Economists have a secret. Beneath all the mathematics, beneath all the models and jargon, there is a single question driving virtually all of microeconomic thinking:
Given this situation, what would a reasonable person do?
That is it. That is the whole toolkit.
When an economist looks at a market, they ask: what are the incentives here? What does a reasonable buyer want? What does a reasonable seller want? What happens when those two sets of wants collide? You do not need calculus to answer those questions. You need curiosity, and the willingness to follow the logic wherever it leads - even when it leads somewhere surprising.
How this book is structured
Each chapter covers exactly one idea. That idea is introduced with a real story or scenario before any theory appears, because the human situation always makes more sense than the abstraction. A diagram or simple illustration follows where it genuinely helps. Then the concept is named - and only then.
By the end, you will have a working understanding of microeconomics that lets you read a news article about rising housing costs and immediately understand what is happening, or hear an argument about the minimum wage and know which parts are well-reasoned and which parts are muddled.
No memorisation required. No prior knowledge assumed. Just one idea at a time, until they all connect.
Let's begin.

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