Concrete Economics Concrete Economics

Concrete Economics

The Hamilton Approach to Economic Growth and Policy

    • 5.0 • 1 Rating
    • $27.99
    • $27.99

Publisher Description

“an excellent new book” — Paul Krugman, The New York Times

History, not ideology, holds the key to growth.

Brilliantly written and argued, Concrete Economics shows how government has repeatedly reshaped the American economy ever since Alexander Hamilton’s first, foundational redesign.

This book does not rehash the sturdy and long-accepted arguments that to thrive, entrepreneurial economies need a broad range of freedoms. Instead, Steve Cohen and Brad DeLong remedy our national amnesia about how our economy has actually grown and the role government has played in redesigning and reinvigorating it throughout our history. The government not only sets the ground rules for entrepreneurial activity but directs the surges of energy that mark a vibrant economy. This is as true for present-day Silicon Valley as it was for New England manufacturing at the dawn of the nineteenth century.

The authors’ argument is not one based on abstract ideas, arcane discoveries, or complex correlations. Instead it is based on the facts—facts that were once well known but that have been obscured in a fog of ideology—of how the US economy benefited from a pragmatic government approach to succeed so brilliantly.

Understanding how our economy has grown in the past provides a blueprint for how we might again redesign and reinvigorate it today, for such a redesign is sorely needed.

GENRE
Business & Personal Finance
RELEASED
2016
February 9
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
240
Pages
PUBLISHER
Harvard Business Review Press
SELLER
Perseus Books, LLC
SIZE
975
KB

Customer Reviews

SBO49 ,

Economic Policy Explained

This is a wonderful summary of economic policy pursued by the United States from the days of Alexander Hamilton to the present, an explanation of how China and the East Asian economies developed and a full-throated critique of the ideological based policies creating the bloated and parasitic financial sector central to the current US economy. All of this is done in a way that is understandable to the lay reader with a minimum of economist babble. This should be mandatory reading for every member of Congress and every member of the Federal Reserve (and all the staff economists). It is relatively brief and very readable. Anyone who wonders why the US economy seems to languish is a perpetual funk will find answers in the book.

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