In The Credit Crunch, Graham Turner predicted that banks would be nationalised and interest rates would be reduced too slowly to halt the crisis. His predictions were correct. His new book, No Way to Run an Economy, is the essential guide to the turbulent times ahead.
Turner recommended radical measures, such as quantitative easing, in early 2008 but argues that action has been taken too late and been too timid to make a real difference. He dissects the policy mistakes of the last 12 months including Obama’s doomed market-led response to the crisis and the obsession of central banks with the red herring of inflation.
There is no doubt the economy is still in serious trouble, but Turner shows that learning from the mistakes made so far can prevent a situation worse than that of the 1930s crisis.
Tabela de Conteúdo
List of Tables and Figures
Glossary
GFC Economics
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. From Bear Stearns to Recession
2. Learning from the Great Depression
3. Policy Mistakes in the 2008/09 Bear Market
4. Globalisation and the Race to the Bottom
5. Structural Causes of the Recession
6. A Flawed Economic System?
7. Obama’s Crisis?
8. Breaking with the Past
Notes
Index
Sobre o autor
Graham Turner is the founder of GFC Economics an independent economic consultancy which provides forecasting services for some of the world’s largest banks. He has worked in the financial sector for over 20 years and is the author of The Credit Crunch (Pluto, 2008) and No Way to Run an Economy (Pluto, 2009).