17 Books for Economics Personal Statements 2022

Which books should you read for your economics personal statement?

After reading this post you will have some ideas for books to read, depending on your specific interests.

There are books for different areas of economics, including game theory, public economics, mathematics in economics, development and more.

First, for a complete guide to economics personal statements, including other supercurricular activities and how to write and structure your statement, click the blue button (paid resource):

Books by category

General

Economics Rules by Rodrik

The Economist’s View of the World by Rhoads

Game theory

Thinking Strategically/The Art of Strategy by Dixit and Nalebuff

Co-opetition by Brandenburger and Nalebuff

Mathematics in economics

Mastering Metrics by Angrist and Pischke

The Drunkard’s Walk by Mlodinow

Development economics

Banker to the Poor: Micro-lending and the Battle Against World Poverty by Yunus

Development as Freedom by Sen

Economic history

The Ascent of Money by Ferguson

Why Nations Fail by Acemoglu and Robinson

History of economic thought

The Worldly Philosophers by Heilbroner:

Macroeconomics

Austerity by Alesina, Favero and Giavazzi:

The Subprime Solution by Shiller

Behavioural economics

Misbehaving by Thaler

Inequality

The Price of Inequality by Stiglitz

Environmental economics and public economics

Growth for Good by Terzi:

Fragile Futures by Tanzi:

Other questions

Why put books in the personal statement?

First of all there are personal benefits derived from reading. You can understand new ideas which you can apply to the real world and achieve personal enjoyment from reading.

For the purposes of personal statements, reading can act as a signal that you study beyond the standard curriculum. So you would be a motivated student at university.

How should I use books in a personal statement?

It is not a good idea just to name-drop the book, without any further discussion. How can the person reading your statement tell if you have actually read it?

The best way to discuss a book is to mention your own opinion of or takeaway from the book. Do you agree with the book? Did you find anything particularly surprising or interesting? Does the book help explain other phenomena you have observed, or link to something else?

So, when reading a book, I highly recommend making some notes on key ideas or points from the book and your own thoughts. You can then return to these points in the future or come back to them when writing your statement.

To read more about economics university applications (personal statement, supercurriculars and Oxbridge applications), click the link here.