Könyv The Scarcity Mindset G. B. Langford

The Scarcity Mindset

How the Psychology of Not Enough Distorts Thinking and Keeps You Financially Stuck

Szerző: G. B. Langford
Nyelv: Angol
Kötés: Puha kötésű
Elérhetőség: Várható készletfeltöltés
Küldés 04. 06. 2026
6 388 Ft
Financial struggle is not a character flaw. Science proves it steals your thinking power.If you have...

Információk a könyvről

Szerző
Nyelv
Angol
Kötés
Könyv - Puha kötésű
Kiadva
2026
oldal
244
EAN
9798199292801
Enbook ID
52749903
Súly
333
Méretek
152 x 229 x 13

Teljes leírás

Financial struggle is not a character flaw. Science proves it steals your thinking power.

If you have ever felt trapped in a cycle of financial stress, made decisions that seemed reasonable in the moment but made things harder later, or found yourself unable to focus at work because of money worries you could not shake, this book explains precisely why that happens and why it has nothing to do with your intelligence, discipline, or values. Grounded in the landmark scarcity research of behavioural economist Sendhil Mullainathan and cognitive psychologist Eldar Shafir, this is the most rigorous and compassionate account of the psychology of financial constraint available to the general reader.

This book is for adults who are living with financial constraint, who have lived through it, or who work alongside people who do. It is for the reader who is tired of being told that better budgeting habits or a more positive mindset will fix what decades of research now shows is a cognitive problem produced by the scarcity itself. It is also for professionals in social work, financial counselling, and policy design who want the research foundation rather than the simplified version.

What this book covers:

  • How financial worry imposes a measurable bandwidth tax on the brain, reducing fluid intelligence and working memory in ways that researchers have compared to losing a full night of sleep
  • Why tunneling, the cognitive narrowing that scarcity produces, is a locally rational adaptation with globally costly consequences
  • How juggling, the constant short-term reallocation of scarce resources, makes long-term planning cognitively unavailable rather than simply unappealing
  • Why slack, the financial cushion of having more than is immediately needed, functions as a cognitive resource with documented effects on decision quality
  • How the scarcity trap works: the mechanism by which rational responses to constraint reinforce the conditions that produced the constraint
  • What the research shows about shame as an amplifier of the scarcity trap and why it receives so little attention in mainstream financial writing
  • How scarcity psychology operates beyond money, in time, social connection, and childhood development
  • What behaviourally informed policy interventions have genuinely reduced the bandwidth tax, and where the evidence is less settled than the headlines suggest

This is not a self-help programme. It does not tell you what to do with your money or suggest that the right mindset can overcome material constraint. What it offers is something rarer and more useful: a precise, evidence-grounded explanation of what resource scarcity actually does to the human mind, written for the reader who deserves honesty more than reassurance.