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Brandon G. Adams
4.0 out of 5 stars Chapter 10 is Gold
Reviewed in the United States on June 23, 2017
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Everyone should buy this book solely to read Chapter 10, “Debasing the Coinage”, p190-212. This chapter alone is easily worth full retail, and this is not surprising, as this is the area we would expect Stephen King to know best.
King makes a compelling case in this chapter that modern monetary interventions have devolved into a modern form of Beggar-Thy-Neighbor.
He notes that, “although stock markets made impressive gains in the years after the financial crisis, capital spending in the developed world remained largely moribund. Instead, the most important channel became the exchange rate.”
He continues, “In a world in which most economies are weak simultaneously, however, printing money to drive the exchange rate lower risks becoming a zero-sum game: one country’s competitive gain is another’s competitive loss; one country’s inflationary increase is another’s deflationary problem. And so it has proved.” Later: “Put another way, monetary policy has – unwittingly – become a mechanism by which countries wage financial warfare.”
Chapter 10, overall, is masterful, ending with the simple but powerful observation that, “In the event of another recession, central banks will have no option but to do more in the way of quantitative easing: knowing this, financial asset values will remain inflated, regardless of underlying economic performance. Under these conditions, listed companies will continue to gain access to financial capital on favorable terms, whether or not that capital is deployed wisely… Overall, the result is likely to be persistent misallocation of capital and thus a sustained period of productivity underperformance.”
As for the rest of the book, I’d say… it depends. For me, it comes down to a philosophical argument about the modern book. I believe that much of the reason people valued books throughout history is that books summarized and synthesized, in one place, knowledge about a particular topic. It’s no longer clear that this function of books is valuable. People can get, on the Internet, any information they want, precisely tailored to their interests and backgrounds, in an instant and for free. So my criticism of the rest of the book is that while there is some strong original content there, a bit too much of it for my taste consists of a rehash of well-known 20th Century historical events.
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Enrique Maroto
4.0 out of 5 stars A Critique On Globalization
Reviewed in the United States on January 25, 2020
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King masterfully walks you through the economic and social history of the last centuries to land at the current state of malfunctioning globalization.

The Post World War II institutions need to be overhauled in order to deal with new problems and actors. The old globalization architecture is losing credibility and has become ineffective.

At home, most countries have to create institutions that need to balance out the benefits of globalization in a more equitable way in order to make economies more sustainable.
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Stanislav Borzykh
4.0 out of 5 stars I think it's useful book to review our rosy vision of this world
Reviewed in the United States on November 25, 2017
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I think it's useful book to review our rosy vision of this world. Facts are facts and Stephen D. King makes right conclusions. However I would like to advise my work for even more dramatic view:
https://www.amazon.com/Civilization-its-fate-civilization-doomed-ebook/dp/B01NGUHCCD/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1511600683&sr=8-1&keywords=borzykh
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GA Seydack
5.0 out of 5 stars Problem solving: First acknowledge the mess we’re in ....
Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2018
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The author tells it like it is, the global mess we’re in, and digging ourselves in ever deeper. Deep, comprehensive insights presented in a concise manner. The solution? It’ll be for us to engineer, and it ain’t gonna be easy.
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GABRIEL LEAL
4.0 out of 5 stars Hope we wake up from the grave
Reviewed in the United States on June 15, 2017
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Good analysis though I hope many of the perspectives and expectations don't come to reality.
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David S. Wellhauser
2.0 out of 5 stars Too Far to the Left
Reviewed in the United States on July 28, 2017
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The history leading up to globalization was worthwhile but the leftist take on globalization was not helpful and the contempt for the people was difficult to swallow. Then there was the dated argument of China taking over the world.

All in all a poor effort.
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Mark Twain
1.0 out of 5 stars Just no
Reviewed in the United States on July 4, 2022
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How can you write a book about de-globalization and leave out oil, transportation, military, and food? I give this book a D.
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Lorrie
2.0 out of 5 stars What are you talking about
Reviewed in the United States on September 15, 2017
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This is the first book of Stephen King that I could not follow. I felt that I needed to have a back ground in sociology to even follow it. It made no sense to me and therefore I discontinued reading it.
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Nick Bolton
3.0 out of 5 stars Somewhat mediocre
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 10, 2022
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Having read Peter Zeihan's books, I was looking forward to this one by King exploring similar ground. Sadly I found he lacked an ability to separate fact and analysis from what appears to be his own essentially status quo preferences. Anything left or right of business as usual is subtly derided as populist, conspiracy-based or some other epithet. His analysis feels very surface level and the utterly unnecessary caricature of an imagined 2024 Republican convention truly let slip his prejudices. Interesting in parts but it left me feeling delighted to have finished it!
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Shoeburymike
5.0 out of 5 stars Points us into direction we will be going after Brexit - Downwards!!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 30, 2017
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I bought this after seeing Stephen D King being interviewed on the Hard Talk show by Stephen Saccur, took it on holiday with me, and read it cover to cover, including the humorous parody at the end looking forward to 2044, whic I will say no more bout as it may spoil it for some people!
Despite being a 78 year old fairly 'savvy' person both politically and economically, I fund his approach very readable and understandable. He reinforced my personal views - without actually saying it in so many words - that there must be something wrong with the mentality of the English persona in the way they blissfully go through history causing damage and disruption whenever they decide on a course of action, demanding what they 'want' rather than what they need! From an economic point of the view puts the Brexit referendum into a perspective I hadn't thought of before, just repeating the historical mistakes of the past. I didn't agree with him 100% on his take on some of the past parliamentarian heavyweights like Enoch Powell, but I forgive him that as history had been re-written on him by the time that Stephen got out of nappies! Powell was a prophet not a agent provocateur!
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Amazon Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars Be an pub expert on economics and get a degree.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 10, 2018
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If you want to understand "Globalisation" and then be able to argue about it in the pub then read it. Carefully. If you want to learn more about economics and obtain a degree, then read all the referenced papers. No matter what your need is, it is easy to read and stimulating for the brain. An excellent text book.
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Frank
2.0 out of 5 stars Looked good
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 12, 2017
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I was looking forward to adding this nice book to my library, the dust jacket closely resembles the cover of Aldous Huxley's book and the hardcover below looks good too (dark indigo with gold lettering on the spine). I found some parts on African populations and migration interesting but the book was disappointing overall. Most of it is historical analysis, which would have been engaging, had it not been shallow and rambling. The book is divided into four parts and eleven chapters yet the contents do not feel organised and the lack of coherence and synthesis do not make the author sound convincing. The epilogue (A 2044 Republican Fundraiser) is mediocre at best.
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Dr S Cooper
4.0 out of 5 stars Valuable
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 8, 2017
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A valuable review of the looming problems, some of which are very significant and which require urgent consideration by government and international bodies.
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