11/07/2016
Smick (The World Is Curved), an investment advisor and former Capitol Hill staffer, makes a thoughtful, if buzzword-laden, plea for an economy-wide shift from mammoth companies to plucky startups. Writing that “the economic system is rigged,” he sketches in a system in which big banks and the government favor established behemoths over nimble, innovative newcomers. He goes on to say that the U.S. has had too much Wall Street–style capitalism (financial engineering) and not enough Main Street–style capitalism (innovation). Smick presents a 14-point plan of bipartisan reforms for reorienting the U.S. toward smaller, gutsier businesses, covering topics such as the “illusion of certainty,” the financial crisis and big banks, competition with China, and secular stagnation. Getting surprisingly emotional given the financial theme, he focuses heavily on how Americans have felt after the 2008 crash, arguing that, contrary to popular opinion, “America’s best days are yet to come.” The book’s stumbling block is its obsession with America’s view of itself, which leads the author to rely on a number of clichés, such as the idea of entitled, complacent millennials and Internet-drunk young people who can no longer communicate properly. Nonetheless, this call to arms regarding the need to get audacious and adventurous about U.S. economic growth is a thought-provoking, entertaining read. Agent: Jim Levine, Levine Greenberg Agency. (Jan.)
"Smick's call for a fairer capitalism makes for bracing reading for students of the modern economy and polity."?Kirkus Reviews
"David Smick's analytical insights are always worthwhile reading."?Alan Greenspan, former Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors
"This call to arms regarding the need to get audacious and adventurous about U.S. economic growth is a thought-provoking, entertaining read."?Publishers Weekly
"Never one to aim low, David Smick is calling for America to reinvent herself so all of us can enjoy another era of 'mass flourishing.' And even more impressive, he's written a whole book on how to do it. The Great Equalizer is chock full of canny insights and bold ideas; it definitely deserves a close read."?Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Paul Ryan
"Agree or disagree and I do some of both, David Smick has written an important tract on restoring comity in Washington and a sense of economic hope across the country. Whoever advises the next president on economics will want to read this book."?Former Secretary of the U.S. Treasury Lawrence Summers
"David Smick was a key leader in the revolution which led to two decades of prosperity. Now, in The Great Equalizer, he courageously takes on the policies which are crippling our economy and shifting money from working Americans to Wall Street. This is an important book."?Newt Gingrich, former Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives
"Smick describes a bold vision with specific, actionable recommendations. His ideas--written in an easy-to-understand, engaging style--are light years beyond anything advocated during the long election season. A must read with any highly innovative policy framework."?Jeffrey E. Garten, Yale School of Management
"The next U.S. President should thank David Smick for The Great Equalizer. It offers a prescription for how an American leader can succeed in a time of divided government. Having lived the American Dream, Smick has a clear-sighted view of what is best about America. His optimistic attitude, his big heart and personal experience in finance and politics offers a unique window into what ails America and what can be done about it. Specifically, his legislative experience allows him to see how Congressional deals can actually happen--deals in which each side gets some of what it wants and the American people get what they want: action not stalemate; progress not paralysis."?Bill Bradley, former U.S. Senator
"David Smick's probing insights on the global economy stem from an extraordinary vantage point few observers can match."?George Soros
★ 01/01/2017
Financial market advisor and best-selling author Smick (chairman & CEO, advisory firm Johnson Smick International; The World Is Curved) draws on 40 years of professional experience to explain how current slow U.S. economic growth can be accelerated through entrepreneurial innovation. Smick acknowledges that innovation is disruptive, but that in post-2008 America, government has created a risk-adverse climate that has stifled innovation in favor of too-big-to-fail banks and corporations. The 2016 populist political movement in both parties, he says, reflects the growing dissatisfaction of average Americans with the status quo. Smick identifies threats such as excessive public debt (mostly owing to entitlements), an overleveraged China, and deglobalization. His solution is to promote what he calls Main Street Capitalism where all enterprises compete on a level playing field, with minimal government interference, and the availability of capital to fund new growth opportunities. He offers specific suggestions for tax reform, improving education, and allowing more Americans to benefit from economic growth. VERDICT Written for a general audience and bursting with ideas, including a 14-point plan for the next U.S. president, Smick's persuasive and hopeful prescription to cure economic malaise should be popular with all readers, especially those who feel disenfranchised.—Lawrence Maxted, Gannon Univ. Lib., Erie, PA
2016-11-20
The worst enemy of capitalism is…capitalism.That is one takeaway from financial adviser Smick (The World Is Curved: Hidden Dangers to the Global Economy, 2008), the founder and publisher of International Economy magazine. One of the lessons learned from the recent presidential election is that there is a hunger for populism in the United States, whether of an authoritarian or a libertarian nature. Thus the Bernie Sanders campaign, which held capitalism as an economic system to be the chief author of our woes. However, writes the author, the culprit is not so much the system of private profit for goods and services, but a global machine that has become much larger and more entrenched than anyone might ever have imagined. "In recent decades, a Corporate Capitalism of inside deal-making, elite special privilege, and dominance by large institutions has...exerted a stranglehold over the U.S. economy," writes Smick, going on to say that this kind of capitalism is not the kind that we ought to preserve. In its place the author advocates for "Main Street Capitalism," characterized by openness of access and entry and favoring entrepreneurship and small business, the historic engines of most economic growth. Smick is long on both diagnosis and prescription; he offers detailed notes, for instance, on how tax policy favors the big players, with a private equity firm on Wall Street paying 15 percent capital gains while a family-owned dry cleaner down the road would pay half that. Populist sentiment aside, and though there's really not a whole lot new here, the author is clearly on the side of capitalism against any other kind of -ism, in the interest of which he proposes a "14-point plan" that leverages political compromise, tax and educational reforms, a modest minimum wage hike, and other measures to level a playing field that is indisputably tilted. Is all this pie-in-the-sky thinking? Perhaps so, but Smick's call for a fairer capitalism makes for bracing reading for students of the modern economy and polity.