The Future of Capitalism
How Today's Economic Forces Will Shape Tomorrow's World
Lester Thurow(Author)
Allen & Unwin (Publisher)
Published on 1. April 1996
Book
Paperback/Softback
400 pages
978-1-86448-108-2 (ISBN)
Description
Capitalism stands alone, and apparently triumphant. Socialism is almost a memory. The social welfare state is under siege, if not already broke. But the economic, social and political forces heading into the 21st century are as paradoxical as they are irresistable. Will capitalism be able to adapt? Or will it be yet another unchallenged, and then suddenly obselete, ideology. Consider: * in all of Western Europe, net employment did not grow by a single job from 1973 to 1994 * the Japanese recession has gone on, with no end in sight, since 1989 * in mid-1994, Mexico had done everything by the book - balanced its budget, privatised more than 1000 state companies, chopped government regulations, joined Nafta and agreed to dramatically cut its tariffs and quotas. Six months later, its economy was in ruins. * in the 1980s, all of the earnings growth in the Us fell to the highest paid 20% of the workforce, with an amazing 64% of the growth going to the wealthiest 1%. the pay of the average Fortune 500 Ceo rose from 35 to 157 times that of the average production worker The dilemmas of 20th century capitalism are as much political as economic. Its d
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Sydney
Australia
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 230 mm
Width: 155 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-86448-108-2 (9781864481082)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Lester Thurow, bestselling author of Head To Head, The Zero-Sum Society, and Dangerous Currents, is a
leading commentator on the global economy and a shaping voice of Us economic policy. He is a professor of economics and former dean of Mit'S Sloan School of Management.
leading commentator on the global economy and a shaping voice of Us economic policy. He is a professor of economics and former dean of Mit'S Sloan School of Management.
Content
New game, new rules, new strategies; mapping the economic structure of the earth; plate one - the end of communism; plate two - an era of brain power industries; plate three - demography - growing, moving, getting older; plate four - a global economy; plate five - a multi-polar world; the forces remaking the economic surface of the earth; inflation - an extinct volcano; Japan - the major faultine across world trade and the Pacific Rim; economic instability; social volcanoes - religious fundamentalism and ethnic separatism; democracy versus the market; a period of punctuated equilibrium; operatiing in a period of punctuated equilibrium.