William Greider is the bestselling author of five previous books, including One World, Ready or Not (on the global economy), Who Will Tell the People (on American politics), and Secrets of the Temple (on the Federal Reserve). A reporter for forty years, he has written for The Washington Post and Rolling Stone and has been an on-air correspondent for six Frontline documentaries on PBS. Currently the national affairs correspondent for The Nation, he lives in Washington, D.C
Greider (Who Will Tell the People?) doesn't just tell us what's wrong with today's capitalism-e.g., stressed-out families, cheatin' CEOs-but offers some solutions. With a seven-city author tour. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Barbara Ehrenreich author of Nickel and Dimed What can we do
about capitalism? Plenty -- is Greider's answer in this beautifully
reasoned, visionary book.
John B. Judis The New York Times Book Review A bold and
ambitious attempt to remedy the lack of vision that has plagued the
American left since the decline of New Deal liberalism....For
anyone interested in serious economic and social reform, Greider's
effort is worth reading.
Vincent Boland FT Investor (Financial Times) Greider knows
his economics and his markets. He is not an anti-capitalist. This
makes his book persuasive.
The good news is, American capitalism has "solved the economic problem" of overcoming scarcity, says veteran journalist Greider, currently with the Nation. Most Americans live materially comfortable lives. The bad news: capitalism seems increasingly dysfunctional and alienating, and fundamentally conflicts with humanity's noneconomic values. Greider says we have the luxury and responsibility now to repair this, to transform the essential purpose of our economic system from the relentless pursuit of "more" to the fulfillment of "human needs." Greider (Secrets of the Temple) breaks from the standard left-wing critique in one critical respect: he believes the system will be changed not by activist government but by a variety of small-scale reformers working to transform the economic system from within. Greider reports on experiments in corporate governance, especially employee ownership and consultative decision making. He investigates initiatives in corporate financing, most significantly, the growing practice of socially responsible investing by union and pension funds. Toward ecological sustainability, Greider's proposals include industries' developing "closed-loop recycling that mimics nature." Arguing that current government policies amplify capitalism's distortions, Greider emphasizes redirecting government expenditures from corporate subsidies to long-term social investments. Greider is immoderately optimistic, but without illusions about the challenges these grassroots movements face. Wisely, he recommends local experiments before considering any grandiose plans. Greider concedes that people might perceive a "touchy-feely wishful thinking" in some of the reformers' projects, and that quality is not absent from the book, but his overall framework is fresh and valuable, and his reporting on specific efforts is resourceful and illuminating. Agent, Lynn Nesbit. 8-city author tour. (Sept.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
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