What Went Wrong with Capitalism
A century of expanding government has distorted financial markets, stoked massive inequality, and soaked America in debt.

Capitalism didn't fail, it was ruined...

What went wrong with capitalism? Ruchir Sharma's account is not like any you will have heard before. He says progressives are right, in part, when they mock modern capitalism as “socialism for the rich.” For a century, governments have expanded in just about every measurable dimension, from spending to regulation and the scale of financial rescues when the economy wobbles. The result is expensive state guarantees for everyone-bailouts for the rich, entitlements for the middle class, welfare for the poor.

Taking you back to the 19th century, Sharma shows how completely the reflexes of government have changed: from hands-off to hands-on, from doing too little to help anyone in hard times to today trying to prevent anyone suffering any economic pain, ever. Trading sins of omission and indifference for excesses of spending and meddling, governments from the United States to Europe and Japan have pumped so much money into their economies that financial markets can no longer invest all that capital efficiently.

Inadvertently, they have fueled the rise of monopolies, “zombie” firms, and billionaires. They have made capitalism less fair and less efficient, which is slowing economic growth and fueling popular anger. The first step to a cure is a correct diagnose of the problem. Capitalism has been badly distorted by constant government intervention and the relentless spread of a bailout culture. Building an even bigger state will only double down on what ruined capitalism in the first place.
"1144165467"
What Went Wrong with Capitalism
A century of expanding government has distorted financial markets, stoked massive inequality, and soaked America in debt.

Capitalism didn't fail, it was ruined...

What went wrong with capitalism? Ruchir Sharma's account is not like any you will have heard before. He says progressives are right, in part, when they mock modern capitalism as “socialism for the rich.” For a century, governments have expanded in just about every measurable dimension, from spending to regulation and the scale of financial rescues when the economy wobbles. The result is expensive state guarantees for everyone-bailouts for the rich, entitlements for the middle class, welfare for the poor.

Taking you back to the 19th century, Sharma shows how completely the reflexes of government have changed: from hands-off to hands-on, from doing too little to help anyone in hard times to today trying to prevent anyone suffering any economic pain, ever. Trading sins of omission and indifference for excesses of spending and meddling, governments from the United States to Europe and Japan have pumped so much money into their economies that financial markets can no longer invest all that capital efficiently.

Inadvertently, they have fueled the rise of monopolies, “zombie” firms, and billionaires. They have made capitalism less fair and less efficient, which is slowing economic growth and fueling popular anger. The first step to a cure is a correct diagnose of the problem. Capitalism has been badly distorted by constant government intervention and the relentless spread of a bailout culture. Building an even bigger state will only double down on what ruined capitalism in the first place.
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What Went Wrong with Capitalism

What Went Wrong with Capitalism

by Ruchir Sharma

Narrated by Fajer Al-Kaisi

Unabridged — 9 hours, 19 minutes

What Went Wrong with Capitalism

What Went Wrong with Capitalism

by Ruchir Sharma

Narrated by Fajer Al-Kaisi

Unabridged — 9 hours, 19 minutes

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Overview

A century of expanding government has distorted financial markets, stoked massive inequality, and soaked America in debt.

Capitalism didn't fail, it was ruined...

What went wrong with capitalism? Ruchir Sharma's account is not like any you will have heard before. He says progressives are right, in part, when they mock modern capitalism as “socialism for the rich.” For a century, governments have expanded in just about every measurable dimension, from spending to regulation and the scale of financial rescues when the economy wobbles. The result is expensive state guarantees for everyone-bailouts for the rich, entitlements for the middle class, welfare for the poor.

Taking you back to the 19th century, Sharma shows how completely the reflexes of government have changed: from hands-off to hands-on, from doing too little to help anyone in hard times to today trying to prevent anyone suffering any economic pain, ever. Trading sins of omission and indifference for excesses of spending and meddling, governments from the United States to Europe and Japan have pumped so much money into their economies that financial markets can no longer invest all that capital efficiently.

Inadvertently, they have fueled the rise of monopolies, “zombie” firms, and billionaires. They have made capitalism less fair and less efficient, which is slowing economic growth and fueling popular anger. The first step to a cure is a correct diagnose of the problem. Capitalism has been badly distorted by constant government intervention and the relentless spread of a bailout culture. Building an even bigger state will only double down on what ruined capitalism in the first place.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

04/01/2024

“By smothering capitalism’s competitive fire, big government is slowing productivity growth,” according to this unpersuasive treatise. Sharma (The 10 Rules of Successful Nations), founder of the investment firm Breakout Capital, argues that the U.S. government’s reliance on “easy money”—a catchall term for state interventions, including lowering interest rates, buying bonds, and bailing out corporations—is driving wealth inequality, the proliferation of monopolies, and the ballooning of the national debt. According to Sharma, central banks that lend money on generous terms to struggling companies stymie competition and compound market inefficiencies, contributing to losses in national economic production. Because wage growth depends on productivity increases, Sharma contends, these irresponsible lending habits, paired with bailouts for the wealthy, are widening the gap between rich and poor. Unfortunately, the proposed solutions are less than inspiring. He argues that doing away with market interventions will allow companies to rise and fall on their own merit, with the most productive outfits coming out on top. However, the implication that increased productivity will lead to higher worker wages doesn’t address the possibility that executives could simply pocket the gains for themselves. To Sharma’s credit, he’s astonishingly forthright about the downsides of less intervention, admitting somewhat glibly that more frequent downturns are the price society pays for “economic freedom” (“Some degree of suffering is a given in life”). This is unlikely to sway readers who don’t already share its conservative fiscal outlook. (June)

From the Publisher

Eye opening...a convincing case,” Columnist Brett Stephens of the New York Times: “Why the broad dissatisfaction with an economic system that is supposed to offer unsurpassed prosperity? Ruchir Sharma has an answer that boils down to two words: easy money. In an eye-opening new book, “What Went Wrong With Capitalism,” he makes a convincing case.”

“Invigorating,” Columnist George F. Will of the Washington Post: “A safety net once meant to catch the poor at the precipice of hunger was extended under the financial markets’ ... So argues Ruchir Sharma in his invigorating ‘What Went Wrong With Capitalism’.”

“Absolutely fascinating," CNN host and commentator Fareed Zakaria: “A terrific book... It’s an absolutely fascinating read. I think you will see the economy differently.”

“A future Nobel laureate after this, I think?” CNBC “Squawk Box” host Joe Kieran to Sharma on June 11, 2024: “You [don’t just] preach to the choir, you want to bring in people who hate capitalism and show them what the real problem is... there’s something for everyone in this. This is not just government’s fault, this is big corporations that want bailouts...”

“Superbly written and cogently argued,” critic Barton Swaim in the Wall Street Journal: “Fear of risk has, over the past half-century, robbed American capitalism of its capacity for robust growth... [argues] Ruchir Sharma’s superbly written and cogently argued ‘What Went Wrong with Capitalism’.”

"Brilliant," columnist Matthew Lynn of the Daily Telegraph, London: "As Ruchir Sharma argues in his brilliant new book, What Went Wrong with Capitalism: "Because the EU lacks the power to tax and spend directly... it has turned itself into a pure regulatory state."

“This book will reshape how you think about the world. It is bound to provoke people on both the left and the right.”
Larry Summers, former Secretary of the Treasury

“Ruchir Sharma stands apart because he is not ideologically driven. This fresh and accessible analysis of the issues confronting capitalism should be read by all sides.”
Robert Rubin, former Secretary of the Treasury and chairman of Citigroup

“At a moment at which democracy and free markets are under intense challenge all over the world, we are lucky that the brilliant and incomparable Ruchir Sharma has brought us a characteristically original and provocative book that tells us how to understand the ways that capitalism is falling badly short. Everyone should read, absorb and debate Sharma’s wise arguments.”
—Michael Beschloss, historian and author of the New York Times’s bestsellers Presidents of War and Presidential Courage

“In his timely and consequential book, Ruchir Sharma chronicles the government bailouts, interventions, and machinations that have brought America to this hinge point in history. His message to policymakers: Try capitalism, the real kind.”
Kevin Warsh, former member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors

Kirkus Reviews

2024-03-22
A book-length assertion that capitalism’s woes can be traced to government interventionism.

Sharma, an investments manager, financial journalist, and author of The 10 Rules of Successful Nations, The Rise and Fall of Nations, and other books, opens with the case of his native India. The author argues that it should be in a better position in the global marketplace, possessing an entrepreneurial culture and endless human capital. The culprit was “India’s lingering attachment to a state that overpromises and under-delivers,” one that privileged social welfare over infrastructure development. Much the same is true in the U.S., where today “President Joe Biden is promising to fix the crises of capitalism by enlarging a government that never shrank.” Refreshingly, Sharma places just as much blame on Ronald Reagan for the swollen state that introduced distortions into the market. Moreover, “flaws that economists blame on ‘market failures,’ including wealth inequality and inordinate corporate power, often flow more from government excesses.” One distortion is the government’s bloated debt, as it continues to fund itself by borrowing in order to pay for “the perennial deficit.” As any household budget manager would tell you, debt is ultimately unsustainable. Wealth concentration is another outcome of government tinkering that has, whether by design or not, concentrated wealth into the hands of a very small number of people, “a critical symptom of capitalism gone wrong, both inefficient and grossly unfair.” Perhaps surprisingly, Sharma notes that in quasi-socialist economies such as the Scandinavian nations, such interventions are fewer and shallower, while autocratic command economies are doomed to fail. “[T]oday every large developed country is a full-fledged democracy,” he writes, and the more freedom the better—but that freedom, he argues, is undermined by the U.S. government, which has accrued “the widest budget deficit in the developed world.”

Sure to generate debate, and of special interest to adherents of free market capitalism.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940160443751
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Publication date: 06/11/2024
Edition description: Unabridged
Sales rank: 938,067
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