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ECONned: How Unenlightened Self Interest Undermined Democracy and Corrupted Capitalism [Paperback]

Yves Smith
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
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Book Description

18 Oct 2011 0230114563 978-0230114562 Reprint
Why are we in such a financial mess today? There are lots of proximate causes: over-leverage, global imbalances, bad financial technology that lead to widespread underestimation of risk.
But these are all symptoms. Until we isolate and tackle fundamental causes, we will fail to extirpate the disease. ECONnedis the first book to examine the unquestioned role of economists as policy-makers, and how they helped create an unmitigated economic disaster.
Here, Yves Smith looks at how economists in key policypositions put doctrine before hard evidence, ignoring the deteriorating conditions and rising dangers that eventually led them, and us, off the cliff and into financial meltdown. Intelligently written for the layman, Smith takes us on a terrifying investigation of the financial realm over the lasttwenty-five years of misrepresentations, naive interpretations of economic conditions, rationalizations of bad outcomes, and rejection of clear signs of growing instability.
In eConned, author Yves Smith reveals:
- why the measures taken by the Obama Administration are mere palliatives and are unlikely to pave the way for a solid recovery
- how economists have come to play a profoundly anti-democratic role in policy
- how financial models and concepts that were discredited more than thirty years ago are still widely used by banks, regulators, and investors
- how management and employees of major financial firms looted them, enriching themselves and leaving the mess to taxpayers
- how financial regulation enabled predatory behavior by Wall Street towards investors
- how economics has no theory of financial systems, yet economists fearlessly prescribe how to manage them

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Product details

  • Paperback: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan; Reprint edition (18 Oct 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0230114563
  • ISBN-13: 978-0230114562
  • Product Dimensions: 15.5 x 2.4 x 23.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 194,310 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Review

"The helplessness you feel, in the face of the demonic complexity of modern finance . . .set it aside, and pick up Yves Smith book ECONned.  Indignation and clarity and omnivorous knowledge come together in her writing, to explain how we, the taxpayers, are being meticulously fleeced.  Never go into an argument about the financial crisis unarmed again." - Stephen Metcalf, Slate Columnist "In ECONned, Smith blows the top wide open on the role that economists and policy makers had in enabling Wall Street greed and misdeeds. This fascinating book reads like a detective story uncovering the roots of our disastrous financial philosophy - the book must be read by everyone from Wall Street to Washington." - Nouriel Roubini, Professor of Economics at New York University and founder of RGE Monitor "Yves Smith has written a wonderful book which combines first hand knowledge of financial markets with a devastating attack on the scientific pretensions of economics. It is required reading by all those who want to dig below the surface of the worst economic collapse since the war to the intellectual and regulatory rottenness underlying it." - Lord  Skidelsky, author of Keynes: The Return of the Master "This book is a fascinating and insightful reminder that economics is like any other powerful tool.  It can be used to help understand the world and solve important problems - or to rationalize ridiculous behavior and overwhelm common sense.  Smith provides a brilliantly researched tour of good ideas gone bad." - Charles Wheelan, author of Naked Economics: Undressing the Dismal Science "Lost your job, lost your life savings, the country's going down the proverbial - want to know who did it? Yves Smith tells the tale of how bad economics created the foundations for the 'Madoff economy'. After you read the book, just collect your pitchforks and get ready to march on the University of Chicago or Wall Street or both! A refreshingly sane and honest analysis." - Satyajit Das, author of Traders, Guns & Money: Knowns & Unknowns in the Wonderful World of Derivatives "If you only read one book on the global financial crisis, it should be Econned by "Yves Smith", an entertaining, thorough and damning indictment of the way that Western economists, bankers and politicians together messed up - and are still messing up - the global financial and economic system." - Kevin Rafferty, South China Morning Post "ECONned by Yves Smith has three great merits: what it says is largely accurate, largely interesting, and largely new."  - Central Banking Journal "Econned is one of the most important books on the financial crisis.  Yves Smith understands both the Street and finance theory in a way that few writers do.  Her argument that short sellers provided critical fuel for subprime lending flips The Big Short's conventional wisdom on its head and belies Bernanke's arguments that the housing bubble was the result primarily of a global supply glut.  There is no other book with an appendix (Appendix II, no less!) that is a must-read for understanding the financial crisis. - Adam J. Levitin, Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center

Book Description

A highly praisedexamination of whytoday's economists cling to failed economic policies, and how they continue to put the world in jeopardy.

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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Tour de Force 11 April 2010
Format:Hardcover
Impossible to praise this book too highly.

For the millions of working tax payers stuck with levels of debt, public and private, it seems impossible to understand how so many of the smartest brains in the western world could have come together to produce a financial crash the like of which the world has never seen.

There are now several published accounts, written at both the personal and the technical level, of the ingenuity and greed with which bankers both in Wall Street and in London devised ever more complicated debt instruments from which enormous levels of apparent profit could be taken. Econned is different. Smith focuses not simply on the king's non-existent new clothes, but on the courtiers. How could so many people have persuaded themselves and each other that financial risk had been eliminated and endless wealth within reach?

The book traces the evolution of the origins of the crash from the end of the second world war to the collapse of the Berlin Wall and on to the completion of financial de-regulation under Clinton. It examines with wit and erudition how Adam Smith's ideas in The Wealth of Nations were cherry-picked and evolved into an ideology which came to dominate university economics departments all over the western world. It turns a baleful eye on the so-called science of economics itself, showing how, as ever more computing power became available, it came to be dominated by models which could never take full account of life as it really happens, and how increasingly it took over political debate, producing, incidentally, the pitiful level of debate in which the current British general election is now being couched.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The origins of the credit crunch 7 Oct 2010
By bayz
Format:Hardcover
This is a spectacular book about the financial crisis. As a lay person I thought the complexities of the credit crunch would be forever beyond my grasp, but this book not only explains what CDO, CDO², repos and CDS are, but why they were invented and how they were (mis)used in its penultimate chapter. There is even an appendix about how a fictional deal between a hedge fund manager, a broker-dealer, a CDO manager and a monoline insurer might have worked out.

The preceding chapters are devoted to the two main reasons of the collapse of this financial house of cards. First there is neoclassical economics. It is a theoretical construct based on the most implausible assumptions, such as perfect competition, perfect information, utility-maximizing individuals to achieve its goal of "proving" that markets are efficient. Financial economics adds to the mix with its simplistic probability distributions that should have modeled risk accurately. Based on this shaky theoretical foundation the complex financial products were bound to come apart.

There is another, ideological, reason, however, a kind of free market fundamentalism. Starting from neoclassical economics it argued that any government interference in markets is bad. (Trade unions should be banned too.) The unfettered market is the nec plus ultra of economic efficiency and by implication above any moral criticism. Smith retraces the origin of this ideology to the activities of right-wing think-tanks that sprang up in the mid-sixties. It is this mind set that drove the deregulations of the Reagan era and of which the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act is just another consequence and that enabled the unbridled growth of the financial services industry and ultimately the cultivation of its predatory nature.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars God help us 11 April 2010
By bucky
Format:Hardcover
The best book on what's gone wrong with economics,the economy and politics I have read so far.Written so well,even I think I can start to understand all the finance jargon. Basically we have been conned by the financial 'wizards',who have made a fortune and been bailed out and unfortunately politicians have done nothing to stop it happening all over again.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Econned 24 Jan 2012
By Rolf Dobelli TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
Neoclassical economists contend that the economy naturally seeks equilibrium, an optimal point where the supply of goods and services equals the demand. This intellectual view has encouraged politicians to deregulate markets to make them more competitive and efficient. But deregulation of financial markets has been a failed experiment in freeing banks and investment firms, says financial writer Yves Smith. She argues, convincingly, that the global financial crisis that began in 2007 has provided ample justification for greater regulation of banks and other related institutions. This book went to press in late 2009, prior to the 2010 passage of the Dodd-Frank Act, a sweeping reform of the US financial services industry that embodies some of the author's proposed changes. getAbstract suggests Smith's book to all those affected by the 2008 meltdown for its incisive description of the symptoms, causes of and cures for the financial crisis.
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