Amazon.co.uk Review
The leitmotif of Peter Jay's great
Road to Riches is a three-stage economic waltz. He describes the first dance step as an economic advance enabling more wealth to be created or more mouths fed or fed better. The second step finds administrators or kings or presidents (what Jay calls "external raiders") plundering the fruits of the creators. In the final stage, social or political solutions emerge to square the dance.
The 383-page book forms a partnership of sorts with the BBC series of the same name, which was also produced by Jay; however, The Road to Riches is so chalk-full of historical research that the television series bears only a passing resemblance to the book's content. Jay's work spans the entire civilisation and focuses on the creation of wealth by man over the ages. Jay has unearthed massive amounts of information the reaction from the reader to typically be, "Wow, I didn't know that". For example, evolutionary changes in man allowed him to stand erect, wield tools for capturing and preparing food, that then allowed for smaller teeth and the emergence of the voice box. This set the stage for the "perfection of the voice-box and hence for the anatomical basis of modern language on which the exercise of human creativity is so dependent". While the book ostensibly is about the rise of money, it is really a broad sociological survey of developments in mankind which led to various forms of political organisation and in turn led to various means of creating wealth. However, he sticks to his guns, and the three-step waltz is continually recurring, whether he is discussing the Roman and Greek empires, the transformation of the world through shipping, or the industrial revolution of the 18th century.
Jay has a flair for writing that makes dipping in and out of the book a pleasure. Even more important is Jay's tremendous ability to provide supporting anecdotes to prove his point without being overly scholarly or even worse, dull. --Bruce McWilliams
Book Description
The history of mankind's instinctive desire to create material wealth - an investigation from earliest times into the next millennium
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Product Description
Current unsettling events in the world economy give a special piquancy to an investigation at this moment into the story of mankind's economic history. ROAD TO RICHES is the story of the rise and fall of whole economies and nations, and the ascent of man as the only economic animal - as producer, consumer and accumulator of wealth. Ideas about the story of the wealth of man are constantly changing as scholars in the 1990s have concentrated their efforts in economic and global history. We want to know how the economic machine works and how far beyond our control it really is. It seems as though the answers are becoming more fluid just as the questions become more pressing. Peter Jay has spent his working life in both Britain and American, following and explaining the day-to-day twists and turns of fortune throughout the world. As he searches for deeper explanations of the forces that disturb our complacency and change our lives, he has felt the need to reach further back into history to find more enduring truths about complexities of economic patterns. ROAD TO RICHES is a live quest, in search of those special moments which Peter Jay calls 'OICs' as in 'Oh! I Seeeee!'
About the Author
Peter Jay has been the BBC's Economics editor since 1990. Educated Winchester and Christ Church, Oxford (1st class honours in PPE) he was also President of the Oxford Union. He spent six years in the Treasury before joining The Times in 1967 as Economics Editor. One of the founders of TV-am, he also presented LWT Weekend World for five years. Between 1977-79 he was British Ambassador in Washington.