Marketcrafters
The 100-Year Struggle to Shape the American Economy
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- 16,99 €
Publisher Description
A revelatory and unexpected examination of the political economy of the past century—and an argument that policymakers in government, not the mythical “free market,” created the most dynamic economy the world has ever known.
For many decades, a sacred myth has ruled the minds of policymakers and business leaders: free markets, untouched by the soiled hands of government, bring us prosperity and stability. But it’s wrong. American policymakers, on the right and the left, have spent much of the past century actively shaping our markets for social and political goals. Their work behind the scenes and out of the headlines has served as a kind of “marketcraft,” resembling the statecraft of international relations.
Economist and writer Chris Hughes takes us on a journey through the modern history of American capitalism, relating the captivating stories of the most effective marketcrafters and the ones who bungled the job. He reveals how both Republicans and Democrats have consistently attempted to organize markets for social and political reasons, like avoiding gasoline shortages, reducing inflation, fostering the American aviation and semiconductor industries, fighting climate change, and supporting financial innovation.
In recent decades, the art of marketcraft has been lost to history, replaced by the myth that markets work best when they are unfettered and free. Hughes argues that by rediscovering the triumphs and failures of past marketcrafters, we can shape future markets, such as those in artificial intelligence and clean power production, to be innovative, stable, and inclusive.
Groundbreaking, timely, and illuminating, this is a must-read for anyone interested in economic policy, financial markets, and the future of the American economy.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Government interventions in markets are necessary to harness the "dynamism of American capitalism," according to this trenchant study. Profiling lesser-known activists, entrepreneurs, and government officials who shaped the American economy over the past century, Hughes (Fair Shot), chair of the advocacy group Economic Security Project, recounts how Jesse Jones, who was secretary of commerce under FDR in the early 1940s, established the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to stabilize markets by extending credit to businesses facing bankruptcy. Elsewhere, Hughes explains how labor organizer Katherine Ellickson's activism secured the passage of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965, and how in the late 1980s, Intel founder Robert Noyce convinced semiconductor manufacturers to pool their research (in exchange for government funding) so they could innovate faster and give America an edge in computing technologies. Cautioning against laissez-faire economics, Hughes details how Alan Greenspan's deregulation of the derivatives market during his tenure as chairman of the Federal Reserve contributed to the 2008 financial crisis. Hughes complements his remarkably unstuffy economic discussions with fine-grained character portraits, as when he traces Lina Khan's transformation from a brilliant but self-doubting Yale law student into a bold antimonopoly crusader as chair of the Federal Trade Commission under Joe Biden. It adds up to a vigorous defense of economic regulation.