What's the Economy For, Anyway?
Why It's Time to Stop Chasing Growth and Start Pursuing Happiness
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- $249.00
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- $249.00
Descripción editorial
In this funny, readable, and thought-provoking book based on the popular film of the same name, activists John de Graaf (coauthor of the bestselling Affluenza) and David Batker tackle thirteen economic issues, challenging the reader to consider the point of our economy. Emphasizing powerful American ideals, including teamwork, pragmatism, and equality, de Graaf and Batker set forth a simple goal for any economic system: The greatest good for the greatest number over the longest run. Drawing from history and current enterprises, we see how the good life is achieved when people and markets work together with an active government to create a more perfect economy-one that works for everyone.
Beginning by shattering our fetish for GDP, What's the Economy For, Anyway? offers a fresh perspective on quality of life, health, security, work-life balance, leisure, social justice, and perhaps most important, sustainability. This sparkling, message-driven book is exactly what those lost in the doldrums of partisan sniping and a sluggish economy need: a guide to what really matters, and a map to using America's resources to make the world a better place.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Following their documentary of the same name, De Graaf (coauthor of Affluenza) and Batker, director of Earth Economics, a firm that provides ecological economic analysis, pose a provocative question: what is the economy for if not to maximize the well-being of the citizenry? Seen in this light, GDP becomes a woefully inadequate tool for assessing economic health. Using the claim of Gifford Pinchot, first chief of the Forest Service, that we should strive for "the greatest good for the greatest number over the longest run," the authors argue that not only are we not on the right track, we're hardly in the race. De Graaf and Batker draw upon various indices for measuring individual and collective satisfaction and security including Maslow's Pyramid and the Chilean economist Manfred Max-Neef's taxonomy of human needs. They make a strong case for looking toward Europe and pockets of economic sustainability within America, to take "bold action" to reorient our markets to serve human needs, to build a "solidarity economy... capitalism with a human face." De Graaf and Batker's criticisms of big business, taxation, American universities, Obama's response to the financial meltdown are lucid; what comes as a pleasant surprise is that their solutions are no less clear and actionable.