Business papers today are in a triumphant mood, buoyed by a
conviction that the economic stagnation of the last quarter century
has vanished in favor of a new age of robust growth. But if we are
doing so well, many ask, why does it feel like we are working
harder for less? Why, despite economic growth, does inequality
between rich and poor keep rising? In this wide-ranging and
provocative book, Thomas Palley pulls together many threads of "new
liberal" economic thought to offer detailed answers to these
pressing questions. And he proposes a new economic
model--structural Keynesianism--that he argues would return America
to sustainable, fairly shared prosperity. The key, he writes, is to
abandon the myth of a natural competitive economy, which has
justified unleashing capital and attacking unions. This has
resulted in an economy dominated by business.
Palley's book, which began as a cover article for "The Atlantic
Monthly" in 1996, challenges the economic orthodoxies of the
political right and center, popularized by such economists as
Milton Friedman and Paul Krugman. He marshals a powerful array of
economic facts and arguments to show that the interests of working
families have gradually been sacrificed to those of corporations.
Expanding on traditional Keynesian economics, he argues that,
although capitalism is the most productive system ever devised, it
also tends to generate deep economic inequalities and encourage the
pursuit of profit at the expense of all else. He challenges
fatalists who say we can do nothing about this--that economic
insecurity and stagnant wages are the inevitable results of
irresistible globalization. Palley argues that capitalism comes in
a range of forms and that government can and should shape it from a
"mean street" system into a "main street" system through monetary,
fiscal, trade, and regulatory policies that promote widespread
prosperity.
"Plenty of Nothing" offers a compelling alternative to
conventional economic wisdom. The book is clearly and powerfully
written and will provoke debate among economists and the general
public about the most stubborn problems in the American
economy.
General
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