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The End of Globalization: Lessons from the Great Depression

The End of Globalization: Lessons from the Great Depression

List Price: $18.95
Your Price: $13.27
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A scary read
Review: As the world economy slows down, there are plenty of reasons to be concerned. There is more pressure for trade protection, anti-immigration sentiment in Europe and elsewhere increases, and anti-globalization protests erupt. With this background, this book about the great depression of the inter-war period provides a really terrifying precedent of what happens when the world economy collapses. It is fluidly written, and although there is a great deal of economic analysis of the problems of financial markets in the interwar era, it is really accessible to lay readers. If you are worried about the economic future, and want to scare yourself, this is the book to read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A scary read
Review: As the world economy slows down, there are plenty of reasons to be concerned. There is more pressure for trade protection, anti-immigration sentiment in Europe and elsewhere increases, and anti-globalization protests erupt. With this background, this book about the great depression of the inter-war period provides a really terrifying precedent of what happens when the world economy collapses. It is fluidly written, and although there is a great deal of economic analysis of the problems of financial markets in the interwar era, it is really accessible to lay readers. If you are worried about the economic future, and want to scare yourself, this is the book to read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Brilliantly written and scary
Review: This well written, documented and academic book reads like a novel. Author explains how the British global-led economy was structured in the 19th century, its weaknesses and how it unraveled in the 1920s and 1930s. He reviews monetary policies, banking instability in the pre- and Depression era, trade and its collapse, the rising reaction against international migration starting in the 1890s and culminating after World War I, the opposition between nationalism and capital that existed after 1929 and finally assesses if a new depression could occur again. Despite the dates, the events it describes look so familiar to us today that it sends shivers down the spine.

Written in 2001, the author was still optimistic in his conclusions saying that unlike the 1930s, nobody today was challenging global finacial orthodoxy. But since Ben Laden destroyed the World Trade Center, Argentina has collapsed like in the 1930s, Brazil is on the path to renege its debt just like in 1931, many scandals have shaken Corporate America, stocks have fallen to after-September 11 levels. Le Pen, a right-extremist was a contender to Chirac in the French presidential elections. Migrations have become a hot debate in Europe. The Bush Administration like the Hoover one puts barriers on international trade (steel), does not participate in multilateral debates (UN, Climate, International Court) damaging the system of multilateral organizations, debates and trade. These collapsed in the 1930s to be replaced by bilaterel relations with the known consequences: a global depression and a global war.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Brilliantly written and scary
Review: This well written, documented and academic book reads like a novel. Author explains how the British global-led economy was structured in the 19th century, its weaknesses and how it unraveled in the 1920s and 1930s. He reviews monetary policies, banking instability in the pre- and Depression era, trade and its collapse, the rising reaction against international migration starting in the 1890s and culminating after World War I, the opposition between nationalism and capital that existed after 1929 and finally assesses if a new depression could occur again. Despite the dates, the events it describes look so familiar to us today that it sends shivers down the spine.

Written in 2001, the author was still optimistic in his conclusions saying that unlike the 1930s, nobody today was challenging global finacial orthodoxy. But since Ben Laden destroyed the World Trade Center, Argentina has collapsed like in the 1930s, Brazil is on the path to renege its debt just like in 1931, many scandals have shaken Corporate America, stocks have fallen to after-September 11 levels. Le Pen, a right-extremist was a contender to Chirac in the French presidential elections. Migrations have become a hot debate in Europe. The Bush Administration like the Hoover one puts barriers on international trade (steel), does not participate in multilateral debates (UN, Climate, International Court) damaging the system of multilateral organizations, debates and trade. These collapsed in the 1930s to be replaced by bilaterel relations with the known consequences: a global depression and a global war.


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