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The Body Economic: Eight experiments in economic recovery, from Iceland to Greece Hardcover – 21 May 2013

4.6 out of 5 stars 21 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Allen Lane (21 May 2013)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1846147832
  • ISBN-13: 978-1846147838
  • Product Dimensions: 16.2 x 2.5 x 24 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 516,751 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

A powerful and important contribution to our future. Stuckler and Basu use statistics not to dehumanize people, but to bring them to life (Ha-Joon Chang, author of '23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism')

Explosive ... powerful. Backed by a decade of research, and based on reams of publicly available data... The Body Economic should come as a broadside, morally armour-plated and data-reinforced (Jon Henley Guardian)

A powerful indictment of the unnecessary suffering and rising mortality rates associated with austerity policies unsoftened by remedial social programmes. I hope the finance ministers read it, and try mixing with the ordinary people, who are the only ones who can bring about economic recovery (Harry Eyres Financial Times)

A surprisingly readable book with a compassionate tone. The inclusion of stories about ordinary individuals affected by austerity lends it a poignancy not typically found in economics literature (Iain Morris Observer)

Economist David Stuckler and epidemiologist Sanjay Basu have spent years correlating government policy and health statistics ... the data is as convincing as the stories are harrowing ... every country that has followed an economic crash with austerity has had a public health catastrophe (Richard Godwin Evening Standard)

Far too many books are described as seminal, but The Body Economic really could be ... Stuckler and Basu are in the vanguard of a movement to recast economics as a matter of life and death ... We should organise a massive love-bombing of Treasury and IMF officials with copies of The Body Economic (Amol Rajan Evening Standard)

The Body Economic is a bold synthesis of quantitative data, historical cases, personal narratives, and sociological and clinically informed analyses about the effects of investing, or failing to invest, in public health safety nets. In investigating the causes of adverse health outcomes in populations from the United States to the Soviet Union to Greece, Iceland, and the UK, David Stuckler and Sanjay Basu expose many of the myths and mystifications that prop up the regnant ideologies of fiscal austerity. Stuckler and Basu revive the great, progressive tradition of social medicine. Their work is important not just for all those who deliver health care services, but also for anyone who might, just might, one day be a patient (Paul Farmer, M.D., Kolokotrones University Professor, Harvard Medical School, and Founding Director, Partners in Health)

About the Author

David Stuckler is a Senior Research Leader at Oxford University; after completing his Master's in Public Health at Yale University and PhD at Cambridge University, he became a professor in political economy at Harvard University; he also currently holds research posts at London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and Chatham House. He has published over one-hundred peer-reviewed scientific articles in major journals on the subjects of economics and global health, and his work has featured on the cover of The New York Times and The Economist, as well as on BBC, NPR, and CNN, among others. Sanjay Basu is an Assistant Professor of Medicine and an epidemiologist at Stanford University. He has worked with Oxfam International and is a member of the New York Academy of Sciences. His work has featured in The New York Times and Wall Street Journal and he has written over 80 peer-reviewed articles.


Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
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Top Customer Reviews

Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
This book contains very interesting and meaningful statistics and the authors have certainly it a lot of time and energy into the various research studies. For me, the book had a few too many statistics and studies stuffed in there which made for difficult reading but the points raised are real eye openers which policy makers could stand to learn from.
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Format: Kindle Edition
Stuckler and Basu are preeminent epidemiologists who have conducted some of the most important analyses of the affects of recession-era economic policies on health outcomes, with papers regularly appearing in prestigious peer-reviewed medical journals such as The Lancet, PLoS Medicine, and British Medical Journal. I have glanced through many of their papers, and decided to read this book to get a better sense of the broader historical and political context of these studies. Nevertheless, I went into the book still somewhat expecting them to build chapters around their major papers (as many books do) which often leads to a contrived or disruptive narrative, as the authors try to force a thread through disparate works. This was fortunately not the case here. Instead, the book is divided into three sections, the first of which looks at historical economic events (The Great Depression, the transition of former Soviet states, the East Asian economic crisis), the second examining the recent great recession (focusing on contrasting experiences of Iceland and Greece), and the third looking at the contemporary austerity debates and experiences (with focus largely on the US and UK, though bringing in evidence from Sweden, Spain, Italy, etc.)

The writing is clear and engaging. The authors provide a concise, yet informative review of the economic debates that surrounded the response to the Great Depression, "Shock Therapy" for the Former Soviet States, Iceland's economic collapse, Malaysia's defiance of the IMF and therefore of the health consequences of the East Asian economic crisis, the political events and health effects surrounding Greece's recent bailout and austerity push, etc.
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Format: Hardcover
Saving money in times of scarcity is a theme passed along to most of us from our parents and grandparents. Many of us deeply value and respect individual frugality, even if it is not easily or effectively put into practice. Indeed, spending and saving wisely is a key foundation for individual and community prosperity. Somewhere along the way, however, large number of influential economists and politicians intuitively and understandably tried to apply this logic to governments at times of financial crisis. Thus was born the idea of "austerity", a fiscal principal of cutting back spending in order to avoid debt and deficits. The results over the last quarter century of global austerity policies were devastating on both economic growth and population health. The austerity policy "experiment", as epidemiologists David Stuckler and Sanjay Basu describe in their new book, The Body Economic, has led to large losses to both the economy and to population health.

As an epidemiologist and a physician myself, I see on a daily basis the real and deep morality to statistics and their accurate collection, interpretation, and discussion. Real people live and die on the basis of how we as citizens, policy makers, and clinical providers process data. Indeed, all of us, regardless of our professions, are confronted with statistics about life and death on a daily basis. What we or our policy makers rarely do, however, is analyze deeply these statistics and how they actually impact our lives. This is the heart of the approach that Drs. Stuckler and Basu take to analyzing economic policies at times of recessions: what do data tell us, beyond rhetoric and intuition and biases, about how governments should respond?
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
This book is essential reading for everyone who believes that the only way to approach the current recession is with austerity measures. The book shows how time and again every country who refused to introduce austerity measures and instead invested in social protection programmes are moving out of recession quicker, than those who did, while maintaining the health, education and every other social protection measure possible. This book should provide the blueprint / manifesto for all political parties that consider themselves Socialists and ably demonstrates why the IMF and its supporters have simply made the wrong decisions and are responsible for doing so much damage to the countries that have implemented their policies and are responsible for the deaths of so many people around the globe. I cannot stress that last point enough in my opinion the IMF is demonstrably responsible for the rising suicide rate in countries which have introduced austerity measures and should be held accountable for their actions.
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Format: Hardcover
David Stuckler, a Senior Research Leader at Oxford University, and Sanjay Basu, an Assistant Professor of Medicine at Stanford University, have produced a superb book on the costs of living with capitalism. They point out that today's second great depression is `a full-scale assault on people's health'. They compare and contrast the health effects of different economic policies.

They write, "The results of our research demonstrate that stimulus spending on specific public health programs actually helps to reduce debt by sparking new economic growth. Every $1 invested in these programs returns $3 back in economic growth that can be used to pay off debt. By contrast, those countries participating in steep short-term cuts end up with long-term economic declines."

Spending cuts reduce demand, adding to unemployment and debt. Even the IMF now says that austerity slows down economies, worsens unemployment, and hampers investor confidence.

IMF economists had assumed, without evidence, that each dollar of government spending, on whatever sector, in whatever country, created only 50 cents in growth, so public spending would shrink the economy, and cutting spending (deficits) would boost growth. The authors, using data from more than ten years, from 27 countries, found that every dollar of government spending created $1.7 in growth. Housing, health and education spending each created more than $3. They remark, "In the long term, the products of investments in education and health services were smarter and healthier workforces."

But military spending and bank bailouts created less than $1.
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