A Richer Life
How Economics Can Change the Way We Think and Feel
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Penguin Books Ltd
Published:7th May '15
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

In this powerful analysis of the way we live now, Philip Roscoe shows how we have been seduced by economic reason. His solutions, some radical, others straightforward, urge us to think and act more humanely - and less economically - towards one another.
From government policies to personal decisions - such as buying a house, educating our children, or caring for our sick - economic principles govern both our range of choices and how we choose between them. This book presents a critique that shows how economics invades our most intimate decisions, and what the real alternatives might be.
A Richer Life: How Economics Can Change the Way We Think and Feel by Philip Roscoe is a radical, inspiring, agenda-setting critique that shows how economics invades our most intimate decisions, and what the real alternatives might be.
'A brilliant critique'Robert Skidelsky, prize-winning biographer of John Maynard Keynes
'Impressive . . . important . . . very thoughtful and thought-provoking'Ha-Joon Chang, author of 23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism
'A splendid denunciation of the dismal science . . . a fine book, on the side of the angels'Guardian
'A powerful description of the many ways we have lost our bearings as a society . . . makes the case that economics has left us impoverished as human beings . . . a powerful and engaging read'Sunday Times
'Very readable and entertaining'Independent
Is a promotion at work worth more than time with family? Does the price of cheap socks compensate for their being made by children? Might a new lover be better than the one you have? How do we choose when what we want is bad for someone else? In fact, in a world as complicated as ours, how do we choose at all?
Over the course of the 20th century economics has become our most trusted science of decision-making. From government policies to personal decisions - such as buying a house, educating our children, caring for our sick or even meeting a spouse - economic principles govern both our range of choices and how we choose between them. But economics is not a perfect science. It is political and far from impartial, and yet its values - ownership, efficiency, cost benefit and self-interest - now threaten to usurp all others. At a time when the most urgent problems require collective action, economics is perhaps our greatest obstacle to change.
Written with humour, wisdom and...
A brilliant critique -- Robert Skidelsky, prize-winning biographer of John Maynard Keynes
Impressive. Important, very thoughtful and thought-provoking -- Ha-Joon Chang, author of '23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism'
A splendid denunciation of the dismal science [of economics]. . . A fine book, on the side of the angels * Guardian *
Very readable and entertaining. Roscoe bemoans the power of economics . . . using some intriguing examples to make his case * Independent *
Roscoe is right to remind us that the habit of seeing all our problems in economic terms has fatally narrowed the range of motives to which politicians appeal . . . that the relentless drive to attach a market price to everything is undermining the realm of human values. His most important conclusion is that we must confine the economists to the asylums - universities, for instance - where they can do no harm -- Roger Scruton * Prospect *
An engaging read, and apowerful description of the many ways we have lost our bearings as a society.A Richer Life makes the case that economics has left us impoverished as human beings * Sunday Times *
Roscoe makes a convincing case for the way economics has commodified and devalued aspects of our lives . . . exposing the flawed assumptions in the economic theories of some respected thinkers. He gives us a fresh and incisive critique of a doctrine still shaping our society * Observer *
Wide-ranging and readable. Roscoe makes many interesting points about how we judge governments by market standards . . . via an insightful account of some of the problems of mainstream economics. A very engaging, erudite and illuminating account * Times Higher Education *
It is true that we sometimes take economists too seriously, and that westerners may have lost something in their rush to replace community values with the individualistic ritual of market exchange. But Roscoe's more powerful argument is that we now approach sex and love in the way we might shop for a low-cost holiday on a price comparison website * Financial Times *
A Richer Life's vision of a future world where we are each governed by economics is quite alarming. Despite the gloom, Roscoe concludes that economic-thinking shouldn't be dumped. It just needs to leave behind the dispassionate science. * Scotsman *
ISBN: 9780241972724
Dimensions: 198mm x 129mm x 35mm
Weight: 500g
304 pages