See Inside!
  • How Markets Fail: The Logic of Economic Calamities by Cassidy: Book Cover

List Price

$28.00

Textbook Details

  • ISBN:
    0374173206
  • ISBN-13:
    9780374173203
  • PUB. DATE:
    November 2009
  • PUBLISHER:
    Farrar, Straus and Giroux

How Markets Fail: The Logic of Economic Calamities by Cassidy

$28.00 List Price
  • Overview
  • EditorialReviews
  • CustomerReviews
  • Features
  • marketplace

Customer Reviews

How Mainstream Economic Writers Failby Magneto

Customer Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

I don't wish to be unkind to Cassidy, but I keep waiting for a logically respectable refutation of genuine free markets to come forth and John Cassidy's How Markets Fail is yet an additional disappointment in reason.

Out of the chute, I was left slack-jawed by Cassidy's opener in the book; Alan Greenspan's now-famous testimony to Congress where he describes his change of heart and admits that...

Best Book I've Read in 2009by mrfreeze_ak

Customer Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

There is finally a book out that extends Keynes ideas about what to do when markets fail to how they fail in the first place. This books goes into a history of different economic writers and their ideas.

Now my problem is how to get my congressmen to read this book before they gut the Federal Reserve.

Terrific Book! One of the best explanations of the genesis of the current economic crisis.by nolitawatch

Customer Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

Very clear presentation of America's economic history from the Great Depression through the Great Recession. Cassidy uses language that general readers can appreciate to explain the economic theories, financial practices, and lack of governance that led to the near miss.


More Customer Reviews

Overview -

How Markets Fail

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: November 2009
  • Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
  • Sales Rank: 313,305

Synopsis

For fifty years, economists have been developing elegant theories of how markets facilitate innovation, create wealth, and allocate society's resources efficiently. But what about when they fail, when they lead us to stock market bubbles, glaring inequality, polluted rivers, and credit crunches? In How Markets Fail, John Cassidy describes the rising influence of "utopian economics"-the thinking that is blind to how real people act and that denies the many ways an unregulated free market can bring on disaster. Combining on-the-ground reporting and clear explanations of economic theories, Cassidy warns that in today's economic crisis, following old orthodoxies isn't just misguided-it's downright dangerous.

Publishers Weekly

Market disasters—and the cycle of delusions responsible—receive lively, engaging analysis by Cassidy (Dot.con), a journalist at the New Yorker. The author focuses primarily on the rise and fall of free market ideology and the mostly unrealistic ideal of a self-correcting marketplace. An excellent comprehensive history of the economic thought that led to this kind of utopian economics provides a refresher course in Adam Smith, Friedrich August von Hayek, Kenneth Arrow and Hyman Minsky. Both a narrative and a call to arms, the book provides an intellectual and historical context for the string of denial and bad decisions that led to the disastrous “illusion of harmony,” the lure of real estate and the Great Crunch of 2008. Using psychology and behavioral economics, Cassidy presents an excellent argument that the market is not in fact self-correcting, and that only a return to reality-based economics—and a reform-minded move to shove Wall Street in that direction—can pull us out of the mess in which we’ve found ourselves. (Nov.)

More Reviews and Recommendations

Biography

John Cassidy is a journalist at The New Yorker and a frequent contributor to The New York Review of Books. He is the author of Dot.con: How America Lost Its Mind and

Money in the Internet Era and lives in New York City.