• The Big Handout

  • How Government Subsidies and Corporate Welfare Corrupt the World We Live In and Wreak Havoc on Our Food Bills
  • De: Thomas M. Kostigen
  • Narrado por: Bronson Pinchot
  • Duración: 7 h y 28 m
  • 4.5 out of 5 stars (2 calificaciones)

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The Big Handout  Por  arte de portada

The Big Handout

De: Thomas M. Kostigen
Narrado por: Bronson Pinchot
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Resumen del Editor

A riveting exposé of how a little-understood government policy perverts our way of living, making us fatter, poorer, and more unhealthy.

Did you know that subsidized goods often cost us more than we'd pay for them in the free market? In fact, we sometimes pay for goods that will never exist at all. It turns out that the free market in America is anything but. How did a system designed to safeguard American farmers turn into the nation's biggest scam?Most of us don't know what subsidies are and don't think they affect us directly, so we tune out. But they have an enormous impact on all of us. Put simply, a subsidy is a grant by the government to a private business. Cotton, wheat, corn, soy, and oil are the most subsidized commodities in the United States. The Big Handout exposes how artificially lowering the prices of these commodities hurts us and people around the world. Behind the troubling news about fiscal, environmental, and foreign policies is a story about just one thing: subsidies.

In this eye-opening book, New York Times best-selling author Thomas M. Kostigen explores government policies that cost taxpayers $200 billion per year - more than $1,500 per household. He persuasively shows that subsidies are at the root of our most pressing problems as a country - our foreign policy, our health, our food supply, even our money troubles and our expanding waistlines. Revealing just how toxic America's subsidy system has become, The Big Handout is a wake-up call that empowers us to demand change.

©2011 Thomas Kositgen (P)2014 Audible Inc.

Lo que los oyentes dicen sobre The Big Handout

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Interesting content, wide reaching

I was interested in farm subsidies after listening to books by Thomas Sowell. This is not an economics book, but it is a policy one. I was a bit thrown-off by blanket references to the ills of corporate America and Wall Street greed. However, I found the statements about how subsidies affect third world countries, the kinds of foods we eat and sweeteners we use, the types of fishing we engage in, and the way we treat the soil/ land to be very interesting. Overall, I learned from this book, but not in the ways I expected to learn. It was a worthwhile listen.

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