Economics for Law offers a clear and rigorous introduction to microeconomic reasoning, specifically tailored for law students. Authored by Dr Anu Singh, this work explains how economic analysis shapes the framing, interpretation, and enforcement of legal rules, focusing on essential concepts such as incentives, efficiency, elasticity, and market structures. Through practical examples and stories—such as the Polluter Pays Principle and the Coase Theorem—the book makes abstract ideas concrete and relevant for legal contexts. Structured in eight chapters with learning objectives, summaries, and diagrams, it is an indispensable resource for LL.B. students, teachers, policymakers, and young legal professionals.