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The bestselling
author reveals
how the U.S.
financial sector
has hijacked our
economy and put
America's global
future at risk
In American Theocracy,
Kevin Phillips warned us of the perilous
interaction of debt, financial recklessness, and the increasing cost
of scarce oil. The current housing and mortgage debacle is proof
once more of Phillips's prescience, and only the first harbinger of a
national crisis. In Bad Money, Phillips describes the consequences of
our misguided economic policies, our mounting debt, our collapsing
housing market, our threatened oil, and the end of American
domination of world markets. America's current challenges (and
failures) run striking parallels to the decline of previous leading
world economic powers-especially the Dutch and British. Global
overreach, worn-out politics, excessive debt, and exhausted energy
regimes are all chilling signals that the United States is crumbling
as the world superpower.
"Bad money" refers to a new phenomenon in wayward
megafinance-the emergence of a U.S. economy that is globally
dependent and dominated by hubris-driven financial services.
Also "bad" are the risk miscalculations and strategic abuses of new
multitrillion-dollar products such as asset-backed securities and
the lure of buccaneering vehicles like hedge funds. Finally, the
U.S. dollar has been turned into bad money as it has weakened
and become vulnerable to the world's other currencies. In all these
ways, "bad" finance has failed the American people and pointed
U.S. capitalism toward a global crisis. Bad Money is the perfect
follow-
up to Phillips's last book, whose dire warnings are now proving
frighteningly accurate.
Bad Money is perfectly timed for the present, as the foul stench of moldering debt and American decline lingers in the concrete canyons of Manhattan…Phillips is an entertaining writer. His prose is full of jabs and one-two combinations that keep things moving briskly.
More Reviews and RecommendationsKevin Phillips has been a political and economic commentator for more than three decades. A former White House strategist, he has been a regular contributor to the Los Angeles Times and National Public Radio, and has written for Harper's Magazine and Time. He is the author of ten books, including The New York Times bestsellers American Theocracy and American Dynasty.
Reader Rating:
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08/25/2009: In this brilliant book, Kevin Phillips, a long-time student of the USA, exposes Wall Street's greed, criminality and stupidity. He also exposes the governments which thought they had 'picked a winner' in Wall Street as a whole. They passed laws keeping finance outside the law and gave hedge funds a licence to create debts which acted as money.
The USA's bloated financial sector grew from 12% of GNP in the 1980s to 21% by 2005, at the expense of manufacturing industry, which fell from 25% to 12% of GNP. The market does not help industry by its bets on changes in asset prices.The problem is still Wall Street's toxic debts in banking, insurance, real estate and securities. From 1987 to 2006 the USA's total credit market debt rose from $11 trillion to $44 trillion, 340% of GDP. Wall Street has borrowed $15 trillion since 1983. Derivatives were $615 trillion in 2008, up from $14 trillion in 1993. Mortgage debt doubled to $10 trillion. Obama has cosseted, not controlled Wall Street, aiding even greater concentration of economic power. The bailouts rescued the five biggest commercial banks (Citigroup, JP Morgan Chase, the Bank of America, Wells Fargo and Wachovia), and the five biggest investment banks (Goldman Sachs, Bear Stearns, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch and Lehman Brothers), the top four mortgage firms and insurance giant AIG.But Obama has not required the banks to lend to the real economy. Instead, federal dollars are funding gross bonuses and salaries. Phillips goes on to show how the new seven sisters are not private US firms, but state-owned oil companies: Saudi Aramco, Gazprom (Russia), PetroChina, the National Iranian Oil Company, Petrobras (Brazil), Petronas (Malaysia) and Petroleum de Venezuela. They control 75% of world petroleum reserves. OPEC is moving towards pricing oil in euros not dollars.Phillips shows how the attack on Iraq led to soaring oil prices, transferring vast wealth from the USA and Britain to the oil-producing nations. He stresses the need for energy security and calls on Americans to abandon 'the hubris of military and financial imperialism', to strengthen their manufacturing industry and curb their bankers.I Also Recommend: How Rich Countries Got Rich . . . and Why Poor Countries Stay Poor, Bad Samaritans: The Myth of Free Trade and the Secret History of Capitalism, East Asian Development Experience: The Miracle, the Crisis and the Future, Origins of Development Economics: How Schools of Economic Thought Addressed Development, Joseph Stiglitz And The World Bank.
Reader Rating:
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07/18/2009: The author's incisive opinions and broad knowledge make this volume essential reading for thoughtful readers.