
Better, Stronger, Faster
Description
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Widely respected for his Newsweek and Slate coverage of the crash and the recovery, Daniel Gross shows that much of the talk about decline is misplaced. In the wake of the crash, rather than accept the inevitability of a Japan-style lost decade, America's businesses and institutions tapped into the very strengths that built the nation's economy into a global powerhouse in the first place: speed, ingenuity, adaptability, pragmatism, entrepreneurship, and, most significant, an ability to engage with the world. As the United States wallowed in self-pity, the world continued to see promise in what America has to offer?buying exports, investing in the United States, and adopting American companies and business models as their own. Global growth, it turns out, is not a zero-sum game.
Better, Stronger, Faster is an account of the remarkable reconstruction and reorientation that started in March 2009, a period that Gross compares to March 1933?as both marked the start of unexpected recoveries. As the U.S. public sector undertook aggressive fiscal and monetary actions, the private sector sprang into action. Companies large and small restructured, tapped into long-dormant internal resources, and invested for growth, at home and abroad. Between 2009 and 2011, as Europe struggled with a cascade of crises, the U.S. got back on its feet?and began to run.
Through stories of innovative solutions devised by policy makers, businesses, investors, and consumers, Gross explains how America has the potential to emerge from this period, not as the unrivaled ruler of the global economy but as a healthier leader and an enabler of sustainable growth.
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Content
- Intro
- Description
- Praise
- About Daniel Gross
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Chapter 1: The Rise of Decline
- Chapter 2: The Myth of American Decline
- Chapter 3: Faster: Policy
- Chapter 4: Better: Restructuring the Nation
- Chapter 5: Stronger: The Efficiency Economy
- Chapter 6: The Myth of International Irrelevance
- Chapter 7: The Myth of Not Making Stuff the World Wants
- Chapter 8: The World of New Exports
- Chapter 9: Inports
- Chapter 10: More Like North Dakota
- Chapter 11: Reshoring and Insourcing
- Chapter 12: The Efficient Consumer
- Chapter 13: Supersize Nation
- Conclusion: The Myth of American Decline
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Index
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