: Whether it is a Chicago sex worker or a potential terrorist, behavior is driven by specific incentives—financial, social, or moral.

: By looking at datasets that traditional economists might ignore, the authors find patterns that reveal how the world actually works, rather than how we wish it would.

In their 2009 sequel, , economist Steven Levitt and journalist Stephen Dubner continue their exploration of the "hidden side of everything". While their first book established that people respond to incentives, this installment dives into more controversial and global territory, from the economics of street prostitution to radical solutions for climate change. The Rogue Economist’s Toolkit

Super Freakonomics 🔥

: Whether it is a Chicago sex worker or a potential terrorist, behavior is driven by specific incentives—financial, social, or moral.

: By looking at datasets that traditional economists might ignore, the authors find patterns that reveal how the world actually works, rather than how we wish it would. Super Freakonomics

In their 2009 sequel, , economist Steven Levitt and journalist Stephen Dubner continue their exploration of the "hidden side of everything". While their first book established that people respond to incentives, this installment dives into more controversial and global territory, from the economics of street prostitution to radical solutions for climate change. The Rogue Economist’s Toolkit : Whether it is a Chicago sex worker