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The Great Divide Hardcover – 20 Apr 2015

4.3 out of 5 stars 15 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 464 pages
  • Publisher: Allen Lane (20 April 2015)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0241202906
  • ISBN-13: 978-0241202906
  • Product Dimensions: 16.2 x 4 x 24 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 286,905 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

About the Author

Joseph E. Stiglitz was Chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers 1995-7 and Chief Economist at the World Bank 1997-2000. He is currently University Professor at Columbia University, teaching in the Department of Economics, the School of International and Public Affairs, and the Graduate School of Business. He is also the Chief Economist of the Roosevelt Institute and a Corresponding Fellow of the Royal Society and the British Academy. He won the Nobel Prize for Economics in 2001 and is the bestselling author of Globalization and Its Discontents, The Roaring Nineties, Making Globalization Work, Freefall, The Price of Inequality and The Great Divide, all published by Penguin.


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Customer Reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
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Format: Hardcover
Three years ago, Stiglitz published ‘The Price of Inequality’. That was a book about the effect of globalization and the rise of the top 1 percent of society’s income earners. This year he published ‘The Great Divide’ which is a bit more of the same, but this recent book is more a collection of essays connected by the central theme that the divide between the top 1 percent (does it matter if it is 2 percent?) and the rest is growing so rapaciously that the middle class that has served an important socio-economic purpose up to the twentieth century is now disappearing.

In this book, Stiglitz hints at solutions. First, the top 1 percent must learn like the 1 percent of old, that it is no good to be at the top of the pyramid if there is no stable base. Inequality makes the position of the top 1 percent precarious. Stiglitz points to the various kinds of inequality enveloping American society (and gradually, global societies), not just the inequality of wealth but others such as inequality of education and political power, that is undermining the sustainable growth of a healthy economic society. On a more personal level, Stiglitz ruminates and examines issues such as the real reasons why Detroit is failing, and why he thinks Janet Yellen makes a better Federal Reserve than Larry Summers (the latter was anti-regulation and Stiglitz blames the financial crises of 2008 on the de-regulation of the financial institutions). He also cautions Japan against falling into the same inequality trap.

This book seems a nice reminder and a suitable addition to his previous book, but it also complements Anthony Atkinson's book – ‘Inequality: What Can Be Done?’ (2015 Harvard University Press)
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Format: Hardcover
This is a collection of articles and essays on the US economy by Joseph Stiglitz, probably the world’s most eminent economist. In this book, he tries to understand the current crisis and to offer remedies. How did the crisis happen?

It started with Reagan (and Thatcher) whose “reforms were followed by slower growth and heightened global instability, and what growth did occur benefited mostly those at the top.” They gave more powers to capital, which led directly to the 2008 crash.

10 million American families had their homes taken away from them between 2007 and 2013. In 2012 there were 6.6 million fewer jobs in the USA than there were in 2008. 23 million people who want to work full-time cannot get a job.

19.9 per cent of US children, 15 million, live in poverty. Among developed countries, only Romania has a higher rate of child poverty. 38 per cent of black children and 30 per cent of Hispanic children live in poverty.

By 2013, median wealth was 40 per cent down on 2007’s level. Adjusted for inflation, the typical male worker’s income was lower in 2011 than in 1986. In the first three years of the so-called recovery, 95 per cent of any increases in income went to the richest one per cent. This was class war, the one per cent hurting the 99 per cent. As speculator Warren Buffett said, “There’s been class warfare going on for the last 20 years and my class has won.”

Returns from speculation on Wall Street are taxed more lightly than any other forms of income. If the US government imposed the same level of tax on capital gains as it does on income, it could raise $2 trillion over ten years.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Exellent description of todays financial market economy and its consequences for for those living on wages and retirement pension. Some empirical data would have been useful addition.
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Format: Paperback
Cons:bb It should be noted that this is a collection of short essays which Stiglitz has published in various newspapers, magazines and journals in recent years. It is not a 'book' as such. It therefore does not go into much detail as no essay is more than a few pages long, which is quite disappointing. It does however make it extremely accessible to the economic layman. Due to the succession of essays published very close together, there is also an awful lot of repetition. I found myself regularly skipping big chunks as I had read them a few pages earlier in another similar essay.

Pros: Stiglitz puts forward his views on the global economy very strongly. One gets a very good idea of his views and where his politics and economics lie. Very interesting points on the structure of the global finance system, and the US one in particular, with a demolition of the interconnection between the US financial system and its political structure.
Definitely worth reading to get a basic understanding of the causes of the 2008 Crash.
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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
Very disappointing. A collection of articles, which in the main are very repetitive and are often quite short. Some of the essays veer close to polemic, as there's little space granted to constructing an argument based on theory or empirical research.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Mostly a collection of articles, somewhat repetitive on key messages, particularly on inequality.
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Brilliant work from a great mind
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A present but most welcome as giving an alternative perspective to the austerity model of economic incompetence.
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