Pop economics books, which purport to offer the surprising explanations behind seemingly ordinary events, are more popular than ever. You’ve probably heard of or read Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner’s Freakonomics, their new sequel SuperFreakonomics, or Tim Harford’s The Undercover Economist, but allow me to throw in a plug for a similar book you may not have come across.
Tyler Cowen‘s book Discover Your Inner Economist will be of special interest to those of us who like to travel, and in particular, those who like to sample local fare while on the road.
If you have to choose to have dinner in either Stockholm or Belize City, Cowen says, you’ll get much better food for the money in Belize. To Cowen, if a restaurant is located in a bad neighborhood, or is successful even in a poor country, the food must be really good. “Iron bars on the windows,” he writes, “and barbed wire on the fences, however bad for the residents or your own safety, are both good signs for the food.”
Experience tells us that he’s right, too. On the road, the food is often best, and cheapest, at out-of-the-way establishments. More than that, it is a worthwhile experience to share a meal with locals, and the proprietors of restaurants are often extra welcoming to those who choose their hard-to-reach establishment over all the others. Talking to a local is almost always the best way to find these hidden gems.
Cowen has gleaned another bit of wisdom from his expertise in economics, expanding on the old “money isn’t everything” cliché. “The critical economic problem is scarcity,” he says. “Money is scarce, but in most things the scarcity of time, attention, and caring is more important.”
For more, check out the Travel section of Tyler’s popular blog Marginal Revolution.