Login
Register
Home || Search || About us || Blog || Contact us || Other book sites

Name: Crashed

Full title: Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World
Author: Adam Tooze
Year: 2018
Rank:

Rating:

Original Rating:

Popularity: 1.2
Genres/categories: Economics, Non Fiction, History, Politics, Business

Purchase/research links:
"An intelligent explanation of the mechanisms that produced the crisis and the response to it...One of the great strengths of Tooze's book is to demonstrate the deeply intertwined nature of the European and American financial systems." --The New York Times Book Review

From a prizewinning economic historian, an eye-opening reinterpretation of the 2008 economic crisis (and its ten-year aftermath) as a global event that directly led to the shockwaves being felt around the world today.


In September 2008 President George Bush could still describe the financial crisis as an incident local to Wall Street. In fact it was a dramatic caesura of global significance that spiraled around the world, from the financial markets of the UK and Europe to the factories and dockyards of Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America, forcing a rearrangement of global governance. In the United States and Europe, it caused a fundamental reconsideration of capitalist democracy, eventually leading to the war in the Ukraine, the chaos of Greece, Brexit, and Trump.

It was the greatest crisis to have struck Western societies since the end of the Cold War, but was it inevitable? And is it over? Crashed is a dramatic new narrative resting on original themes: the haphazard nature of economic development and the erratic path of debt around the world; the unseen way individual countries and regions are linked together in deeply unequal relationships through financial interdependence, investment, politics, and force; the ways the financial crisis interacted with the spectacular rise of social media, the crisis of middle-class America, the rise of China, and global struggles over fossil fuels.

Finally, Tooze asks, given this history, what now are the prospects for a liberal, stable, and coherent world order?
Similar books:

This Time Is Different
by Carmen M. Reinhart

The Alchemists
by Neil Irwin

A Short History of Financial Euphoria
by John Kenneth Galbraith

Money
by Felix Martin

The End of Alchemy
by Mervyn King

The Birth of Plenty
by William J. Bernstein

Reckless Endangerment
by Gretchen Morgenson

The Cash Nexus
by Niall Ferguson

Bad Money
by Kevin Phillips

Manias, Panics, and Crashes
by Charles P. Kindleberger

Why Nations Fail
by Daron Acemoglu

Goliath
by Matt Stoller

After the Music Stopped
by Alan S. Blinder

The Wealth and Poverty of Nations
by David S. Landes

The Rise and Fall of American Growth: The U.S. Standard of Living since the Civil War
by Robert J. Gordon

The Wages of Destruction
by Adam Tooze

Dark Money
by Jane Mayer

End The Fed
by Ron Paul

Meltdown
by Thomas E. Woods Jr.

I.O.U.
by John Lanchester