Reviews

Small Is Beautiful: Economics as if People Mattered by Ernst F. Schumacher

django018's review against another edition

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challenging informative

3.0

jetia13's review

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2.0

charmingly outdated. tbh i didn't read it in its entirety.

bluestarfish's review against another edition

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4.0

"Small is Beautiful" is such a resonant phrase, and I have heard it for years before finally reading Schumacher's classic book. It is a very refreshing take on economics as if people mattered (as per the subtitle) and does a great job of pointing out some of the absurd assumptions that were rife in the 1970s. What makes it a little bit more hard to read now is that those same assumptions still seem to be in play and that's just depressing. I found the analysis of private ownership and its relationship to the work done by individuals particularly helpful. And I also found it reassuring that some of the ideas Schumacher talks about in the book he and others put into practise and that e.g. Practical Action is still going strong and doing great things.

Talking about this book with someone their overwhelming memory is of it being about coal! I didn't find this to be the case at all, even though coal is mentioned! Some of the chapters are based on talks Schumacher did so there's some slight repetition of ideas and content between the chapters but I found this more helpful than annoying as the variation helped make the ideas clearer in my head. I am glad to have finally read this book.

hamroach's review

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5.0

Wonderful.

mvrettou's review

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challenging informative inspiring reflective slow-paced

3.5

morlyre's review against another edition

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challenging informative medium-paced

3.0

A seminal, if somewhat dated take on people-centred-economics. 

thejdizzler's review

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5.0

Wow. Really enjoyed this one. Schumacher really highlights a key insight about economics: namely that all the labor-saving in the world isn't going to give dignity to the people that you're trying to help if that labor-saving just leaves them unemployed. Intermediate technology is the name of the game, even more so because of our impending fossil-fuels crisis.

copsey16's review

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informative slow-paced

1.0

pransu_123's review against another edition

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4.0

This book lives upto its name. A 252 pages long book written and published 4 decades back discusses ideas and issues that is relevant to modern day as well. From talking about as basic as education and development to as complex as Nuclear energy, the book surprisingly also talks about a lot of things that we even discuss about in the current world and provides suggestions on how we can solve current issue. This book is just beyond what it claims to its subtitle "a study of economics as if people mattered" as it discusses aspects beyond the ideas of the so called conventional economics.

The only thing that made me a bit sad about the book was at one point it got a bit boring and got a bit vast. Otherwise, Clearly a Masterpiece

zona's review against another edition

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4.0

3,7/5