The best innovation in economic education that I have seen in my career. A smorgasbord of ideas that refresh our old concepts, moving our standard discourse from dismal to light, from a dehumanized science to a spirited vision of the world.
Christian Gollier a founder and former long term Director of the Toulouse School of Economics
The text takes a refreshing new approach to giving students their first encounter with economics, with lots of data and intuitive interesting examples, but without sacrificing the key ingredients of the distinctive way economists look at the world.
Stephen Wright, Professor of Economics at Birkbeck College
Answers an important but, astonishingly, unfilled need, for an economics text that is respectful of the world as we find it. This means a focus on both the historical foundations of current institutions and trends, but also an awareness of current empirical evidence on economic phenomena. It asks a lot of students but it also rewards their effort with a sense of empowerment
Peter Matthews, Chair of the Department of Economics at Middlebury College
a brilliant way to introduce students to economics: it combines state of the art economic theory with a big-picture perspective on modern development
Nikolaus Wolf, Professor of Economics at Humboldt University of Berlin
Adopting CORE gives us a competitive edge, demonstrating our commitment to cutting edge and student-focused content and delivery
Marco Gundermann, Programme Director Economics Suite of Programmes, Cardiff School of Management at the Cardiff Metropolitan University
advances the teaching of Economics, providing a new path to the somewhat petrified pedagogical Micro-Macro structure we have become too accustomed to. I have had very positive responses from students regarding the CORE material I have used so far. I am adopting more of the CORE chapters this coming year and will run a fully CORE first year Micro module next year
Peter Backus, University of Manchester
While conceding nothing in terms of teaching first year students key techniques, CORE addresses historical context and key contemporary debates that have for too long been neglected in the standard first year economics curriculum
Colin Jennings, Programme Director of the BA/BSc Political Economy Programme at King's College London
Overhauling the way economics is taught ought to produce students more able to understand the modern world. Even better, it should improve economics itself
The Economist
CORE promises to be the biggest shake-up since Paul Samuelson's Economics became the standard bearer for introductory texts in 1948
The Times
The members of the CORE team deserve credit for responding to the critics of economics without pandering to them. They have produced a careful but engrossing curriculum that will hopefully draw more young people into economics, and encourage them to continue their studies. (At University College London, students who took the CORE course did better in subsequent economics classes than earlier cohorts who took a more traditional introductory course.)
The New Yorker
When 'political economy' became just 'economics', the shift came at the cost of its links to other social sciences. CORE authors explain the attempts to shift the paradigm in economics teaching and, in doing so, hope that students of the CORE course will become citizens better equipped to address the pressing problems of today.
The Wire