'In his wide-ranging tour of the field of health economics, Mark Pauly packages decades of economic theory and evidence into practical insights for today's healthcare managers. Rather than telling managers what to do, he lays out the economic underpinnings of the core concepts in healthcare markets, providing managers with a framework for decision-making as well as guidance for how to manage in the face of uncertainty and imperfect information. The text provides new insights on perennial challenges in healthcare markets, including understanding the difference between cost and value, the tradeoffs facing health insurers in designing products, the challenges in organizing healthcare delivery, and how to make sense of our complex system of buying and selling pharmaceuticals. This is essential reading for the managers and policymakers whose decisions shape our healthcare system.' Kate Bundorf, J. Alexander McMahon Distinguished Professor of Health Policy and Management, Duke University