Thomas Piketty’s work has proved that unfettered markets lead to increasing inequality, and that without meaningful regulation, capitalist economies will concentrate wealth in an ever smaller number of hands, threatening democracy. For years, his newspaper columns have pierced the surface of current events to reveal the economic forces underneath.
Why Save the Bankers? collects these columns from the period between the September 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers and the November 2015 terrorist attacks in Paris. In crystalline prose, Piketty examines a wide range of topics, and along the way he decodes the European Union’s economic troubles, weighs in on oligarchy in the United States, wonders whether debts actually need to be paid back, and discovers surprising lessons about inequality by examining the career of Steve Jobs. Coursing with insight and flashes of wit, these brief essays offer a view of recent history through the eyes of one of the most influential economic thinkers of our time.
“Easy to follow for readers without much knowledge of economics, especially when [Piketty] picks apart topics that defy classical economic logic; in this he resembles Paul Krugman, who similarly writes clearly on complex topics . . . Helps make sense of recent financial history.” —Kirkus Reviews
“Anyone with an interest in politics, monetary policy, or international diplomacy will get a kick out of Piketty’s clear discussion.” —Shelf Awareness
“If you have been influenced by Piketty’s landmark work on inequality, make sure to read this next.” —Naomi Klein, author of The Shock Doctrine and This Changes Everything
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Release date
April 5, 2016 -
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Kindle Book
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- ISBN: 9780544663299
- File size: 1019 KB
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- ISBN: 9780544663299
- File size: 2589 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
March 21, 2016
Piketty, a French economist, applies the critique developed in his celebrated Capital in the Twenty-First Century to recent headlines in this punchy collection of essays. The short pieces, written for the newspaper Liberation, cover developments since the 2008 financial collapse: the efforts by the Fed and the European Central Bank (ECB) to stabilize Western banks, the advent of public debt crises in southern Europe, and the 2015 election of Greece's Syriza party. He hammers on several themes: the deepening inequality between workers with stagnating wages and super-rich executives and rentiers, the unfairness of raising taxes on low-income wage-earners while cutting taxes on capital incomes of the rich (Liliane Bettencourt, France's richest woman, is a frequent target for the minuscule tax she pays on her â¬15 billion fortune), the folly of ECB austerity policies that choke off growth and saddle governments with unpayable debt, and the need for European Unionâwide budget and tax policies to accompany the common euro currency. Piketty, the French Paul Krugman, has an extraordinary knack for translating the complexities of central bank finance, tax policy, regulation, and macroeconomics into lucid, down-to-earth language enriched by shrewd historical and cultural insights. This is a compelling challenge to economic orthodoxy. -
Library Journal
April 15, 2016
Superstar economist Piketty (economics, Paris Sch. of Economics) is author of the best-selling global phenomenon Capitalism in the Twenty-First Century, which emphasizes his work on wealth and income inequality. The essays in this impressive collection start in September 2008 following the collapse of Lehman Brothers and provide an examination of the Barack Obama presidency and the EU's debt crisis. Piketty brings together selections from eight years of columns in the French publication Liberation. These annotated pieces consider tech giant Steve Jobs's career and what it teaches us about economics and obligations which must be or must not be paid. Other writings probe the mysteries of the Carbon Tax; the Central Bank at work; French President Francois Hollande as a new Franklin D. Roosevelt for Europe; what it means to be free; and the how and what of federalism. An essay from Le Monde (the only essay not from Liberation) looks at the crisis in Europe on the night of November 13, 2015, when Islamic State-trained militants launched attacks against civilians in Paris. These excellent essays presuppose little knowledge of economics and provide an overview in nontechnical language of events in the news in Europe, which have relevance to the United States. VERDICT This book by one of the most important economic thinkers of our generation belongs in all economic and social history collections and should appeal to lay readers and subject specialists alike. [See Prepub Alert, 10/26/15.]--Claude Ury, San Francisco
Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Library Journal
November 15, 2015
Piketty's Capital in the Twenty-First Century is that rare phenomenon: a huge economic history, enfolding a critique of capitalism today, translated from the French and published by an academic press, that became a best seller here. In his first publication here since, Piketty collects eight years' worth of his monthly columns for Liberation, a leading French news magazine, starting with the collapse of Lehman Brothers. Annotated for up-to-date reading; with a 50,000-copy first printing.
Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
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- English
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