The Unfair Trade
How Our Broken Global Financial System Destroys the Middle Class
The trillions of dollars that make up the flow of international finance—money that is often steered away from the people who deserve it the most—have not just undermined the lives of working and middle class Americans. It is a world-wide phenomenon that is changing the culture of Argentina; destroying the factory system in Northern Mexico, enabling drug cartels to recruit thousands of young men into their gangs; that has taken down the economies of Iceland, Ireland, Spain, Greece, and possibly Italy; and is driving American companies such as a 60-year-old family owned manufacturer of printed circuit boards to shutter all but one of its factories.
Veteran journalist Michael Casey has traveled the world—from China to Iceland, Spain to Argentina, Indonesia to Australia—recounting extraordinary stories about ordinary people from one continent to another whose lives are inextricably linked. By tracing the flow of money and goods across the world, he illustrates how an American homeowner’s life is shaped by the same economic and social policies that determine those of a low wage migrant worker on an assembly line in China. This combination of financial acumen, narrative-driven reporting, and compelling story-telling gives The Unfair Trade a unique human angle.
Casey shows that our economic problems are largely caused by political agendas that prevent the free market from encouraging fair competition and impeding the allocation of resources. Until governments work together to make this global system more efficient—until China removes incentives for its citizens to save excessively, for example, or the U.S. ends the de facto subsidies enjoyed by politically powerful banks—the global playing field will remain lopsided, job creation will lag, and our economies will be vulnerable to new crises.
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Release date
May 29, 2012 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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- ISBN: 9780307885326
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780307885326
- File size: 2287 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Kirkus
May 1, 2012
A Wall Street Journal managing editor and columnist explains how the distorted policies underlying the global financial system undermine the Average Joes of all nations. Simultaneously outraged, bitter, fearful and despondent, the middle class surveys the economic wreckage of the past few years with little but contempt for CEOs and other corporate elites. From a cab driver in Andalusia, a seamstress in Indonesia, an assembly worker in Shanghai, an ambulance driver in Mexico, and many others, the widely traveled Casey (Che's Afterlife: The Legacy of an Image, 2009) collects similar stories of middle-class disenchantment. The author attributes the world's middle-class misfortunes to the uneven playing field created by a mismatch of fossilized national policies with the fast-moving exigencies of globalization. The "perverse economic incentives" of this perilous new world account for the dangerous codependency of China and America. China's historic rise and outsized footprint has transformed beef-loving Argentines into soybean producers, helped turn Western Australia into one large mineral deposit, and sown chaos in Mexican manufacturing towns unable to meet "the China price." Meanwhile, the staid nation of Iceland recovers from an episode of banking madness that brought the country to its knees, and the survival of the European monetary union remains in serious question. In a world of banks too big to fail and politicians beholden to big-money contributors, ordinary citizens have borne the brunt of the economic pain. Rather than forcing them to pay any more of the costs of a broken system, Casey calls for a series of systemic national and international reforms, almost all of which require an unprecedented degree of cooperation, to help restore a trust and confidence dangerously shaken. A well-reported, deeply serious appraisal of the exceptional damage a dysfunctional system inflicts on unexceptional people.COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Booklist
May 15, 2012
Financial journalist Casey travels the world to research how we have failed to stop a powerful, globalized financial system that benefits a privileged few while subjecting everyone else to uncertainty and instability. We learn of the extreme working conditions of pliant and dependent Chinese employees in plants making technology products for American companies. American middle- and lower-income households, the backbone of the U.S. economy, bore the brunt of the 2008 housing-financial bust, and they suffered most of the eight million job losses since 2007 and most of the seven million foreclosures. Noting that globalization is an unstoppable train, Casey concludes with suggestions for reform, including a common approach to international financial regulation, transparency in global financial systems, a solution beyond Dodd-Frank regulation for winding down cross-border institutions, and measures that eliminate government policies benefiting one class of citizens in preference to another. All will not agree with Casey's analysis, but he offers valuable perspective on critical issues in this timely book.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)
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Formats
- Kindle Book
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- English
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