Foundations of Economics, 9th Edition, AP® Edition © 2021

This program introduces students to economic principles they can use to navigate the financial decisions of their futures. The 9th Edition continues to fine-tune its content:

  • More concise points with engaging digital features.
  • Supports College Board course descriptions for AP® Macroeconomics and AP® Microeconomics.
  • Accompanied by Pearson’s MyLab® platform with eText.
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AP Economics Program with Digital Integration

Foundations of Economics, 9th Edition, is an engaging, practice-oriented approach to understanding core economic principles and applying them in the real world.

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Fine-tuned content for building foundational economics knowledge

The 9th Edition brings newly distilled economics points to life with interactive and digital features that create excitement and engagement.

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Contemporary economic examples are relevant to students’ modern lives.

Updated examples provide students with clarity and currency by reflecting recent events. Each chapter opening box is answered by an Eye On box that helps students see the economic factors behind a key global issue. Examples include the current gig economy, climate change and the Green New Deal, and a new section on employability.

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New chapter features have an enhanced focus on outcome-driven teaching and learning.

  • Diagrams make consistent use of color to show the direction of shifts, and detailed, numbered captions guide students step by step through actions to help them learn difficult concepts.
  • Material is presented in graphs, words, and tables to help students who are apprehensive about working exclusively with graphs.
  • The text leaves room for flexibility for educators who want to cover the material in a different order.

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The program is hosted on interactive MyLab® Economics from Pearson.

Designed specifically for economics students and instructors, it uses adaptive learning technologies that provide a personalized study experience, while supporting instructors with valuable data about the strengths and weaknesses of each student.

AP Economic Teaching Solutions

  • Core Concepts 
  • Eye On boxes helps students see that economics is a foundation of the world.
  • Notable content updates to macroeconomics
  • Notable microeconomics content updates
  • Engaging Digital Interactives

Fine-tuned content focuses on core concepts while also reflecting the current economy.
  • Help students focus on key concepts
    Each chapter concentrates on approx. 3 to 4 ideas and revisits them throughout the text, to help students navigate the material and focus on key concepts.
  • Updated examples
    Updated examples provide students with clarity and currency by reflecting recent events.
  • New and updated discussions of important issues
    New and updated discussions of important issues help students better understand and embrace economics.
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Eye On boxes offer fresh examples to help students see that economics is an important foundation of the modern world.
  • Eye on the U.S. Economy
    Eye on the U.S. Economy relates examples to current and recent events.
  • Eye on the Global Economy

    Eye on the Global Economy puts these events in global context.

  • Eye on the Past
    Eye on the Past offers historical economic perspectives. 
  • Eye on Your Life

    Eye on Your Life shows students how to apply economic principles to their lives.

  • New boxes in the 9th edition focus on U.S. protection

    New boxes in the 9th edition focus on U.S. protection; how the sharing economy intensifies competition; minimum wage; and Fintech in loans markets and payments.

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Notable content updates to macroeconomics sections:
  • Chapter 21, “GDP: A Measure of Total Production and Income”
    Chapter 21, “GDP: A Measure of Total Production and Income,” covers using big data for real-time, high-frequency monitoring and “nowcasting” real GDP.
  • Chapter 28, “Money, Interest, and Inflation”
    Chapter 28, “Money, Interest, and Inflation,” examines the Modern Monetary Theory movement and why it’s incorrect.
  • Chapter 31, “The Short-Run Policy Tradeoff”
    Chapter 31, “The Short-Run Policy Tradeoff,” tries to solve the persistent low inflation puzzle.
  • Chapter 32, “Fiscal Policy”
    Chapter 32, “Fiscal Policy,” looks at tax cuts, infrastructure spending, and increasing deficit.
  • Chapter 34, “International Finance”
    Chapter 34, “International Finance,” includes the rise of protectionism and mercantilism.
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Notable microeconomics content updates.
  • Chapter 1, “Getting Started”
    Chapter 1, “Getting Started,” contains a new section focusing on employability, including the job skills students can develop by studying economics and jobs available to economics majors.
  • Chapter 6, “Efficiency of Fairness and Markets”
    Chapter 6, “Efficiency of Fairness and Markets,” replaces material on gouging with content on scalping.
  • Chapter 10, “Externalities”
    Chapter 10, “Externalities,” discusses climate change and the Green New Deal.
  • Chapter 12, “Private Information and Healthcare Markets”
    Chapter 12, “Private Information and Healthcare Markets,” streamlines and simplifies explanation of the lemons problem.
  • Chapter 19, “Markets for Factors of Production”
    Chapter 19, “Markets for Factors of Production,” covers the gig economy (like Uber) and its effects on the labor market, plus falling wages of lower educated and/or less skilled people.
  • Chapter 20, “Economic Inequality”
    Chapter 20, “Economic Inequality,” reviews the implications for income distribution.
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Digital Interactives included in MyLabs Economics are dynamic, engaging activities that promote critical thinking and application of key economic principles.
  • Progressive Levels
    Each Digital Interactive has progressive levels where students can explore, apply, compare, and analyze a topic.
  • Encourage Student Engagement
    Digital Interactives can be assigned and graded within MyLab, or used as a lecture tool to encourage engagement, classroom conversation, and group work.
  • Access assignments, rosters, and resources
    You can also link from Blackboard Learn, Brightspace by D2L, Canvas, or Moodle to MyLab Economics. Access assignments, rosters, and resources, and synchronize grades with your LMS gradebook.
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Take a deeper look into Foundations of Economics AP Edition’s features

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Program Overview

Get to know Foundations of Economics AP Edition  with MyLab® Economics with Pearson eText

Online Platform for your AP Economics Instruction

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MyLab® Economics from Pearson empowers  teachers to reach every student by combining trusted author content with digital tools and a flexible platform. MyLab personalizes the learning experience and improves results for each student. 

Correlation for AP®

Our solutions for AP® are designed to support and correlate the College Board's Course and Exam Descriptions for each corresponding course.

View Correlation

More about Foundations of Economics

  • Table of Contents

    PART 1: INTRODUCTION
    1. Getting Started
    2. The U.S. and Global Economies
    3. The Economic Problem
    4. Demand and Supply

    PART 2: A CLOSER LOOK AT MARKETS
    5. Elasticities of Demand and Supply
    6. Efficiency of Fairness and Markets 

    PART 3: HOW GOVERNMENTS INFLUENCE THE ECONOMY

    7. Government Actions in Markets
    8. Taxes
    9. Global Markets in Action 

    PART 4: MARKET FAILURES AND PUBLIC POLICY
    10. Externalities
    11. Public Goods and Common Resources
    12. Private Information and Healthcare Markets 

    PART 5: A CLOSER LOOK AT DECISION MAKERS
    13. Consumer Choice and Demand
    14. Production and Cost 

    PART 6: PRICES, PROFITS, AND INDUSTRY PERFORMANCE
    15. Perfect Competition
    16. Monopoly
    17. Monopolistic Competition
    18. Oligopoly 

    PART 7: INCOMES AND INEQUALITY
    19. Markets for Factors of Production
    20. Economic Inequality 

    PART 8: MONITORING THE MACROECONOMY
    21. GDP: A Measure Of Total Production and Income
    22. Jobs and Unemployment
    23. The CPI and the Cost of Living 

    PART 9: THE REAL ECONOMY
    24. Potential GDP and the Natural Unemployment Rate
    25. Economic Growth
    26. Finance, Saving, and Investment

    PART 10: THE MONEY ECONOMY
    27: The Monetary System
    28: Money, Interest, and Inflation 

    PART 11: ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS
    29. Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand
    30. Aggregate Expenditure Multiplier
    31. The Short-Run Policy Tradeo

    PART 12: MACROECONOMIC POLICY
    32. Fiscal Policy
    33. Monetary Policy
    34. International Financeff

  • Robin Bade Bio
    Robin Bade was an undergraduate at the University of Queensland, Australia, where she earned degrees in mathematics and economics. After a spell teaching high school math and physics, she enrolled in the PhD program at the Australian National University, from which she graduated from in 1970. She has held faculty appointments at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, at Bond University in Australia, and at the Universities of Manitoba, Toronto, and Western Ontario in Canada.
    Her research on international capital flows appears in the International Economic Review and the Economic Record. Robin first taught the principles of economics course in 1970 and has taught it (alongside intermediate macroeconomics and international trade and finance) most years since then. She developed many of the ideas found in this text while conducting tutorials with her students at the University of Western Ontario.
  • Michael Parkin Bio
    Michael Parkin studied economics in England and began his university teaching career immediately after graduating with a BA from the University of Leicester. He learned the subject on the job at the University of Essex, England's most exciting new university of the 1960s, and at the age of 30 became one of the youngest full professors. He is a past president of the Canadian Economics Association and has served on the editorial boards of the American Economic Review and the Journal of Monetary Economics.
    His research on macroeconomics, monetary economics, and international economics has resulted in more than 160 publications in journals and edited volumes, including the American Economic Review, the Journal of Political Economy, the Review of Economic Studies, the Journal of Monetary Economics, and the Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking. He is author of the best-selling textbook, Economics (Pearson), now in its 12th edition.
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AP® is a registered trademark of the College Board, which was not involved in the production of, and does not endorse, these products.

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