Simon Johnson is the Ronald A. Kurtz Professor of Entrepreneurship
at MIT's Sloan School of Management and a senior fellow of the
Peterson Institute for International Economics. James Kwak is an
Associate Professor at the University of Connecticut School of Law.
He previously co-founded Guidewire Software.
Visit them at- http-//baselinescenario.com/
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Praise for Simon Johnson and James Kwak's White House Burning
“A thorough, scholarly account of how the country got into this
predicament and how it can dig its way out. . . . In their
important, enlightening new book, economist Simon Johnson and
lawyer James Kwak point out the absurdities of a budget debate
dominated by partisan exaggerations and warnings of
pending doom.”
—San Francisco Chronicle
“Thought-provoking. . . . Sobering. . . . Lucid. . . .
Alarming.”
—Financial Times
“Johnson and Kwak bring dispassionate insights to bear on the
bedeviling question of how to fix our fiscal mess before it gets
fixed for us.”
—Bloomberg
“A must-read for anyone who wishes to understand the true nature of
our fiscal problems.”
—Liaquat Ahamed, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Lords of
Finance
“[Johnson and Kwak] shatter dozens of additional myths about
deficit spending. . . . [Johnson and Kwak] thankfully dispel the
widespread notion that a nation debt totaling trillions of dollars
means that a government is too big.”
—USA Today
“A detailed, lucid, sure-to-be controversial account of whether the
massive national debt of the U.S. government actually matters. . .
. [Johnson and Kwak’s] especially valuable insight is that the
national debt is a major problem only if it is perceived as a
problem. . . . A book to be enjoyed by ideologues and
non-ideologues of all stripes because it is not a tract for
Republicans, Democrats or any other partisan organization.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“In this powerful book, Johnson and Kwak cut through both the
partisanship and the complexities of the debate over America’s
national debt to give us a clear understanding of why it matters
and what to do about it. America’s future depends vitally upon
bringing our deficits under control while also investing in our
growth, and this book tells us how to do both.”
—Charles Ferguson, director of the Academy Award-winning
documentary Inside Job
“By skillfully placing the debt debate in an insightful historical
context and providing detailed recommendations, Johnson and Kwak
make a major and timely contribution to a national debate that will
only get more heated in the years ahead. It’s a must-read for those
wondering about the relationship between the national debt and
America’s challenges; the choices that we must make to restore
fiscal viability, promote growth, create jobs, and reduce
inequality; and the way that polarized politics torpedoes coherent
discussion of these complex issues.”
—Mohamed A. El-Erian, CEO of PIMCO and prize-winning author of When
Markets Collide
“Full of wisdom and specific recommendations, [White House Burning]
reminds us that only when citizens understand the seriousness of
our predicament will politicians take the necessary steps to
strengthen our country. Let’s hope this book is a best seller.”
—Bill Bradley, former United States senator and cosponsor of the
Tax Reform Act of 1986
“Could there be a more important subject today than the national
debt? And could there be two smarter, clearer, more incisive
writers to tell us about it than Simon Johnson and James Kwak? With
precision and common sense, White House Burning tells the story of
where our debt came from, what it means, and what we can do about
it. This is the kind of important, informed, and accessible book a
democracy can’t do without.”
—Noah Feldman, Bemis Professor of International Law, Harvard Law
School, and author of Scorpions: The Battles and Triumphs of FDR’s
Great Supreme Court Justices
“As they did in 13 Bankers, Johnson and Kwak imbed a crucial
current policy debate in the history of the United States economy.
Their blueprint for resolving the budget problem without trampling
on the basic needs of average Americans is must-reading.”
—C. Fred Bergsten, director, Peterson Institute for International
Economics
“If you are puzzled about how our country’s finances got so messed
up, look no further. Johnson and Kwak explain, with great lucidity
and flair, how the battle lines on debt and taxes have been drawn
going back to the founding fathers, and how things got off the
rails in the last two decades. And they have good news for you:
even if our politicians are incorrigible, our problems are not
insoluble.”
—Daron Acemoglu, Elizabeth and James Killian Professor of
Economics, MIT, and coauthor of Why Nations Fail: The Origins of
Power, Prosperity, and Poverty
“The politicians don’t care about the economics. The economists
don’t understand the politics. Johnson and Kwak get both, that’s
why you should read this book.”
—James Robinson, David Florence Professor of Government, Harvard
University, and coauthor of Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power,
Prosperity, and Poverty
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