SLOUCHING TOWARDS UTOPIA: AN ECONOMIC HISTORY OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
S**N
excellent
makes one feel on the right trajectory rather than day-2-day slide one feels in short term
A**Y
Enlightening
A brief sweep of modern political-economic history. The narrative is smooth for most of the part although a bit dense at the end.
L**N
Excellent for understanding our prosperity as compared with that of our ancestors and progeny.
Mr. DeLong marks our slouch towards utopia as beginning in the year 1870 and ending in 2010. Now, what does he mean by the term “slouching towards utopia.” Well, before the year, 1870, mankind was basically, just surviving. Whatever energy that was gained through increased agricultural production was put toward the production of more babies. Beyond that point, malnutrition would set in. Babies died and women could no longer ovulate. It was a one-to-one ratio so to speak and this had been going on since the beginning of time. It was the world written about by Thomas Malthus back in 1798.So, essentially, man’s existence had been rather miserable. And then, suddenly, in the year, 1870, production began to exceed consumption. Technology had created a situation such that humans in countries like the U.S. produced more food than needed so they could, well, just relax. They could have more babies and feed them or not.What made this possible? Well, according to Mr. DeLong, it was the corporation, global transportation, global communications, and falling trade barriers. With the corporations came the industrial research lab. Guys and gals could devote all their time inventing. Bradford calls it the invention of invention. If you look around your room, pretty much everything you see would be the result of these research labs. Its filled with stuff our ancestors wouldn’t dream of possessing and we accumulated with a fraction of the effort required by them simply to survive, utopia if you want to think about it that way.Of course, the corporation reproduces these inventions in mass numbers and can send them all over the world using steel shipping containers such that the movement of these products accounts for about one percent of a good’s retail value.The slouch towards utopia since 1870 has moved in fits and starts. Utopian began with a start that introduced trade on a global scale as never seen before and instant communication through the telegraph cable. Then came World War I followed by a spurt of growth and productivity followed by the depression and then World War II.Post-war economic growth has been tremendous bringing increased prosperity to most of the world. And then, 2010 when Barrack Obama had a choice to invest in America and bring it out of a financial crises caused by the very institutions responsible for its stability followed by the election of Donald Trump and a move backward away from increased prosperity to the opposite.This a book to read if you want to understand our prosperity as compared with our ancestors and possibly, our progeny.
I**X
The best economic history you will read.
This erudite and masterful economic history uses a framework to document and explain what the author calls the long 20th C, a period from 1870 to 2010 which experienced extraordinary economic and material wealth for everyone (at least in the Northern Hemisphere), yet only partially delivered what should by now have been a utopia by any prior standards.The period is chosen at its start the rate of economic growth rapidly increases, and for the first time, allows the population to escape from the Malthusian trap that was the lot of humans from prehistory, and certainly since the start of civilization. While before then the upsetting of our ape-evolved social hierarchies was the only way for individuals and groups to improve their lot by getting a larger share of resources, but by and large, elites controlled the social system in a variety of ways ensuring that most of the population remained poor and at the mercy of those elites. After 1870, the wealth rapidly improved for most of the population, although the inequality seemed to increase, except for 2 periods, most recently for the 30 years after WWII. However, since 2010, after the financial collapse of 2007, growth has returned to a slow, pre-1870 rate, and inequality has increased with a vengeance. The author uses the framework of Hayek (the market is all) and Polyani (other rights to wealth and status) is important to show how different political systems have managed their economies, with some moderate, but variable success. [ I well recall a British tv political show that at the beginning of the Thatcher era suggested that the government should stop trying to make teh population happier and focus on wealthier - a Hayekian ideal that was the start of the neoliberal in the US and Britain.] 2010 saw the end of any success of the neoliberal experiment, and populations have been turning back to authoritarian/fascist approaches, last seen between WWI and WWII, and what the socialist systems of the USSR and China evolved into.DeLong has no answer for the why's of this history, nor any prescription to get societies moving forward toward a utopia again. [This is unlike Piketty's "Capital in the Twenty-First Century". DeLong wisely just provides a rich, beautifully written, economic history that could easily become a required reading, and rather than like many historians make historical events seem inevitable with hindsight, he acknowledges that how the twists and turns of history have resulted are not clear and that he may even be an imperfect historian as events overlap with his experiences.For myself, I think that the struggle of individuals and groups to ascend our evolutionary-determined social pyramid explains some of why various systems resulted in wealth inequality, either stably or by revolution. Whatever the system, some will always do anything to ascend to teh top of the pyramid by whatever means they have - by force of arms, by a revolt of the masses, by wealth accumulation through commerce, and so forth.My only niggle is that the editors missed some errors - most notable that it was Edward VIII, not VII who abdicated the British throne, and it seems that autocorrect has changed some words that I do not think teh author intended. Hopefully, a 2nd edition will fix any errors and language. But these are niggles in what is a superb book and highly recommended.
C**R
Lively synthesis
Brad DeLong's "Grand Narrative" about the "long 20th century" is a fascinating account on two levels - professional and personal - of 140-year period from 1870 to 2010, and its salient economic aspects and inflection points, which dramatically explains how the world - especially the Global North - got from there to here. Throughout his narrative, he opposes the free Hayekian market and more social democratic and protective Polyanion schools, with side narratives on fascism and socialism.His writing style is anything but simple prose and is more a series of tendentious arguments peppered with academic jargon to lighten the message.Ultimately, the book follows a trajectory which is not, nevertheless, radical and in many ways echoes Robert Gordon's "The Rise and Fall of American Growth" in both message and selected timeframe.For me the most fascinating sections deal with the Great Recession and DeLong's analysis of the shortcoming of nearly all the major players in this crisis - what they got right partly and what they got wrong (largely). He, modestly, takes credit himself for some degree of the lack of preparedness of the economic profession for what took place in 2008 and beyond. In the book's conclusion, he tantalizingly indicates that as of 2020 a new Grand Narrative will have begun, yet to be written.DeLong's book, "Slouching towards Utopia" is a modest title for a tumultuous period of modern history and one almost wished he had been more spartan in his text through 2010 and had tried to surmise the period we are now entering. Perhaps this will follow in an updated edition or under a new title. But, the sequel to this present book will need to be more international still and examine a world with multiple competing economic approaches.
A**U
Estado del libro
El contenido del libro es muy interesante y la narrativa que quiere transmitir se entiende de forma clara. Es un libro enriquecedor.No obstante, la valoración que yo haré es sobre el rol de Amazon aquí: entrega y envío (para valoración del libro en sí hay mil webs de literatura).El libro llegó en general en buen estado pero la tapa venía doblada en una esquina. Sé que los libros de tapa blanda son delicados pero si te dedicas a enviar objetos, tendrías que asegurarte de que lleguen bien. El servicio fue rápido, pero la calidad es más importante.
C**O
Worth reading
My slight disappointment with this book is that I had expected that such a vast amount of work studying the economic history of the long 20th century would result in at least a few clues as to where we go from here. I would have welcomed more analysis of the impact of population increase and decline and also of the devastating growth of welfare dependency. Globalisation has enabled western governments to disguise increasing inequality by allowing the market to provide cheap material goods/luxuries as well as welfare to the wider populace which has fostered a something-for-nothing culture. What we used to value as a benefit (eg free health care, education) is now seen as a right. With prices rising as globalisation goes into reverse, welfare systems threatening to bankrupt many countries and demographics reducing the tax paying versus dependent population, not to mention the cost of dealing with global warming, how will governments square the circle? No idea but at least after reading this book I realise I am not alone. No-one has any idea.
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