The reader is left wondering just who this person really is, how they came up with the ideas they are being lauded for, what they think of their ideas now, where they see the discipline going in the next little while, and so on. Who’s Who manages, ironically, to strip out the personal in its biographical summary, in essence, losing the ‘Who’.
..." In future editions of this book and the further volumes to come, I'd love to see a focus on the characters behind different approaches to economics and their reasons for taking their contrarian positions to the mainstream---Foley, Nell, Solow and Velupillai, as well as more traditional mainstays of the profession.