Synopses & Reviews
What do economists know that business executives find useful? Economics
ought to be indispensable for business decision-makers because it deals with the issues executives face daily: what to pro duce, how and how much, at what price, how best to use resources (time, labor, capital), how to understand markets. Why, then, do managers often think that economists' theories are ivory-tower and impractical? Perhaps because most economics texts are mystifying, jargon-rid den, and written from every perspective
except that of the line manager.
In Executive Economics: Ten Essential Tools for Managers, Shlomo Maital brings economics down to earth, back to the hard day-to-day decisions that executives have to make. He shows how all decisions can be organized around two key questions: What is it worth? What must I give up to get it? Answering these questions depends upon finding and maintaining the right relation in the "triangle of profit" -- cost, price, and value.
Each of Executive Economics ten chapters focuses on one or more legs of the triangle of profit, defines a decision tool, and illustrates how it can be used to improve the quality of executive decisions. Drawing on recent examples from both Fortune 500 firms and smaller companies, Maital shows why economics main contribution is to deepen executives' understanding of the structure of their costs, and to explain why some of a business's highest expenses are those that never appear on a check stub or in a profit-and-loss statement.
Executive Economics is written for executives, about executives, and by an author who has both taught executives at MIT's Sloan School of Management for over a decade and served as a consultant to small and large businesses. It is must reading for executives who need simple, effective decision-making tools to give them an edge in today's competitive global economy.
About the Author
Shlomo Maital lives and teaches in Israel, and has a seasonal appointment as Visiting Professor at MIT's Sloan School of Management. He is author of Minds, Money and Markets: Psychological Foundations of Economic Behavior (1982) and Economic Games People Play (1984).
Table of Contents
Lester C. Thurlow For almost a decade, Shlomo Maital has been a superb teacher in MIT's executive education program. Anyone reading this book will also give him superb ratings. The reading is fun, the information is accessible, and the reader will go away both wiser and a better business person.A. George Schillinger Polytechnic University Shlomo Maital brings economics to life, and leaves executives with insights and decision tools that would be difficult to acquire as rapidly and with as much pleasure elsewhere. He does this in part by using a wealth of striking and instructive historical examples to make his concepts clear.Charles B. Housen CEO, Erving Industries, Inc. Maital has forced me back to my undergraduate days where my economics studies dominated, but I now realize how important those theories are to making my decisions successful.
Executive Economics is refreshing and supportive of important executive decision-making techniques and I recommend it as an excellent economic primer.