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- BOOKS, Page 72Funny Money
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- A TENURED PROFESSOR by John Kenneth Galbraith Houghton Mifflin;
- 197 pages; $19.95
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- American economists are writers of humorous fiction, as the
- U.S.-budget fantasies attest, but John Kenneth Galbraith's
- droll, mannered novels are funny on purpose. In his first, The
- McLandress Dimension (1963), the Harvard professor introduced
- a concept that measured the time -- often a matter of
- milliseconds -- that public figures spend thinking of matters
- unrelated to themselves. The new novel, his third, explores the
- equally valuable IRAT, or Index of Irrational Expectations, a
- quantification of the collective wrongheadedness of the stock
- market. Harvard technocrat Montgomery Marvin, known for his
- seminal study of refrigerator pricing, invents IRAT and becomes
- exceedingly rich. He thus affronts the self-satisfied Cambridge
- community, where "no one has ever been known to repeat what he
- or she has heard at a party, only what he or she has said." This
- is the mandarin author's slyest satire yet.
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