Principles of Microeconomics
Author:N. Mankiw
Edition:9th Edition
The fundamental concepts of microeconomics are introduced through the analysis of how individuals, firms, and governments make decisions in the presence of scarcity. It explores supply and demand, market structures, consumer behavior, and the role of incentives, while examining how policies, externalities, and market outcomes shape efficiency, equity, and economic well-being.

Chapters
- Chapter 1: Ten Principles of Economics→
- Chapter 2: Thinking Like an Economist→
- Chapter 3: Interdependence and the Gains from Trade→
- Chapter 4: The Market Forces of Supply and Demand→
- Chapter 5: Elasticity and Its Application→
- Chapter 6: Supply, Demand, and Government Policies→
- Chapter 7: Consumers, Producers, and the Efficiency of Markets→
- Chapter 8: Application: The Costs of Taxation→
- Chapter 9: Application: International Trade→
- Chapter 10: Externalities→
- Chapter 11: Public Goods and Common Resources→
- Chapter 12: The Design of the Tax System→
- Chapter 13: The Costs of Production→
- Chapter 14: Firms in Competitive Markets→
- Chapter 15: Monopoly→
- Chapter 16: Monopolistic Competition→
- Chapter 17: Oligopoly→
- Chapter 18: The Markets for the Factors of Production→
- Chapter 19: Earnings and Discrimination→
- Chapter 20: Income Inequality and Poverty→
- Chapter 21: The Theory of Consumer Choice→
- Chapter 22: Frontiers of Microeconomics→