
Misbehaving
The Making of Behavioral Economics
by Richard H. Thaler
Editorial review
Thaler's intellectual memoir is the best one-volume history of behavioral economics from the inside. He is funnier than most economists and substantially more honest about the role of professional ego in academic disputes.
AI-generated summary
Nobel laureate Richard Thaler tells the story of how a small, scrappy field built itself from a list of empirical anomalies — behaviors traditional economic models could not account for — into a discipline that now influences governments, firms, and how we model human beings.
Key takeaways
- 1
Real economic agents differ systematically from the 'Econs' of textbook models.
- 2
Endowment effects, mental accounting, and fairness preferences are robust and consequential.
- 3
Disciplines change when anomalies accumulate faster than the dominant theory can absorb them.
- 4
Most ideas are rejected first by their own field, then later canonized by it.
The right reader
Anyone interested in how academic fields change. A great companion to Lewis' 'The Undoing Project.'
What it touches
How it reads
Personal, witty, historical.
Reading difficulty: Moderate



