Matthew C. Klein is the economics commentator at Barron’s. Michael Pettis is professor of finance at Peking University’s Guanghua School of Management and a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
“This is a very important book.”—Martin Wolf, Financial Times
“The authors weave a complex tapestry of monetary, fiscal and
social policies through history and offer opinions about what went
right and what went wrong. . . . Worth reading for their insights
into the history of trade and finance.”—George Melloan, Wall Street
Journal
Selected by Financial Times as one of “Five Books to Boost Your
Understanding of Tariffs and Trade Wars”
“An eagle-eyed perspective on the global economy, underpinned by
close analysis and a remarkable clarity of exposition. The book is
a terrific survey of the forces behind today’s global trade
tensions and imbalances.”—Ann Pettifor, Times Literary
Supplement
“[O]ffers a deeper argument about the source of the trouble.”—The
Economist
“Matthew Klein and Michael Pettis have successfully woven a grand
narrative linking income inequality, geopolitics, trade, finance
and even environmental issues.”—Maximilian Kärnfelt, Merics China
Briefing Newsletter
“[A]s Matthew Klein and Michael Pettis argue in their brilliant
polemic Trade Wars Are Class Wars, industrial policy instruments
are only part of the story.”—Adam Tooze, London Review of Books
“A well-written, highly recommended, and thought-provoking
book.”—Ian Bright, Reading Room for the Society of Professional
Economists
“This timely analysis should be of interest to policymakers as well
as to scholars in economics, political science and international
relations.”—Luqman Saeed, Journal of Peace Research
“Trade Wars Are Class Wars is a tale of three economies, China,
Germany and the US. . . . It’s a terrific book.”—Enlightened
Economist
Winner of the Lionel Gelber Prize, sponsored by Munk Centre for
International Studies
“An erudite, original, and provocative explanation of the global
economic imbalances that have been at the root of numerous
financial crises.”—Ernesto Zedillo, director, Yale Center for the
Study of Globalization
“This is a book that everyone concerned with the global economy
should read. A fascinating account of the damage that rising
inequality—especially in China and Germany—has done to all our
economies.”—Dani Rodrik, Harvard University
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