We Have a World-Class Mess . . . Now What? Amid the carnage of
bankruptcies, soaring unemployment, and millions of families losing
their homes during the financial crisis of 2007–2009 lay the bloody
corpse of a set of ideas that had underpinned the economics of the
previous thirty years. A system that had been delivering unprecedented
prosperity on a global scale suddenly teetered on the verge of
collapse. Capitalism was seemingly exposed as a house of cards. The
blame game became a new national pastime as doomsayers predicted the
end of America’s leadership of the world economy. We’re at a
crossroads, and decisions about how to reshape a discredited
capitalism will profoundly affect whether the coming years will be
ones of depression, stagnation, or renewed prosperity. Instant
analysis since the collapse of the financial system in the fall of
2008 has produced no end of ideas about what to do—ranging from
those of free market ideologues (let the market do its work and damn
the consequences) to extreme government interventionists determined to
keep the animal spirits of capitalism penned up. But if there is
anything worse than toxic financial assets it is toxic ideas. We need
to reject the old orthodoxies and conventional wisdoms. Matthew Bishop
and Michael Green take a step back and analyze what can be learned
from financial crises of the past—from the Tulip Craze of the
seventeenth century through the Great Depression of the 1930s,
Japan’s Great Deflation, and the Long-Term Capital debacle of the
1990s to the unprecedented interventions of the government during the
past year—to set the agenda for a reformed twenty-first-century
capitalism. The result is an enlightening perspective on what set us
on the road to ruin, as well as road signs to guide us back to
prosperity. --Why bubbles are the consequence of financial
innovations that generate economic breakthroughs, but why it would be
wrong to abandon these inventions of the financial engineers. The Road
from Ruin explains how stifling innovation and risk-taking comes at a
huge cost to future prosperity. --Why the economy needed a fiscal
stimulus to recover from the crisis. Bishop and Green show how
economic dogmatists of the Right, who opposed the stimulus, got it
wrong, but warn that those on the Left who want the stimulus to run
and run could usher in a new era of high inflation. --Why company
bosses became too focused on short-term results and did not see the
crisis coming. The Road from Ruin shows how we can get business
leaders to put the interests of society ahead of their own
pay-packets. --The danger of focusing on the financial symptoms of the
crisis without tackling the underlying economic causes, such as the
world operating on the dollar standard. Bishop and Green show why the
role of the dollar as the world’s reserve currency is not just a
problem for the rest of the world but for the United States as well.
--Why many of capitalism’s champions—especially the advocates of
the efficient market hypothesis—lost touch with reality. The Road
from Ruin provides insights into new ideas in economics that recognize
how the complexity and irrationality of the human beings who make up
the economy can be harnessed to build a better capitalism.
Remarkably, the issues we face today have presented themselves in one
form or another over the past three centuries. Matthew Bishop and
Michael Green skillfully draw both the lessons learned and
prescriptions for reform to prevent another catastrophic meltdown and
put America back on top.
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How to Revive Capitalism and Put America Back on Top
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780307464248
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Random House Digital Inc.
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter