Sorry, of the economics textbooks I’ve read, I’ve either forgotten which ones I used, or they haven’t been updated since the 90s. And a lot of what I learned were from things like lectures, articles, and papers, instead of textbooks. I can only suggest some subfields in economics that seem especially interesting to me, and recommend that you start directly with graduate level textbooks (or review papers if textbooks don’t exist yet), because the undergraduate ones tend to oversimplify a lot of things.
game theory (both cooperative and non-cooperative, ETA: but see this comment for why cooperative game theory isn’t very widely known)
industrial organization
public choice theory
economics of property rights
theory of the firm
family economics
information economics
market/mechanism design
finance
microeconomics (for general concepts like comparative advantage, transaction costs, and deadweight loss)
Sorry, of the economics textbooks I’ve read, I’ve either forgotten which ones I used, or they haven’t been updated since the 90s. And a lot of what I learned were from things like lectures, articles, and papers, instead of textbooks. I can only suggest some subfields in economics that seem especially interesting to me, and recommend that you start directly with graduate level textbooks (or review papers if textbooks don’t exist yet), because the undergraduate ones tend to oversimplify a lot of things.
game theory (both cooperative and non-cooperative, ETA: but see this comment for why cooperative game theory isn’t very widely known)
industrial organization
public choice theory
economics of property rights
theory of the firm
family economics
information economics
market/mechanism design
finance
microeconomics (for general concepts like comparative advantage, transaction costs, and deadweight loss)
macroeconomics
micro foundations of macroeconomics
monetary theory
This is helpful, thanks!