very disappointing - false advertising
I bought this book because of all the glowing endorsements by people like Alan Greenspan promising that this book will shed light on what's going on financially. It doesn't. It's mostly fluff, and will not add to your understanding of the mysteries of high finance. Worse, it'll probably discourage you from further investigation. Rather than shed light on things, the author basically keeps repeating that the economy is so complex that even the experts don't understand it 'wait - I thought YOU were an expert, and we're going to explain it to us, no?' and also very fragile, so we peons better not try to mess with it or all hell will break loose we'd best leave it to the big boys to take care of. Well excuse me, but the big boys 'the individuals who run the Fed and Treasury departments, Fannie & Freddie, the regulatory agencies, the credit rating agencies, the investment banks, the mortgage lenders, etc.' are the ones who created this mess, not we little people, and they created it deliberately in order to screw the middle class by transferring even more wealth from our pockets to theirs. The author also repeatedly warns about the dangers of 'class warfare'. But we're already in a class war - the elite started it about 25 years ago, when they began systematically dismantling the middle class. Since that time real wages for the vast majority of Americans have either stagnated or actually fallen. Only the top 5% 'people making over ~$300,000/yr' have seen any real gains, because they're the only ones who can afford significant stock investments. And the real gains have all gone to the top one tenth of 1% - people who make HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS or even BILLIONS in salary every year - these are your investment bankers, hedge fund managers, private equity guys, etc. Meanwhile, the middle class, including most doctors, lawyers and other professionals have been getting squeezed big-time: stagnant or falling real wages, competition from much cheaper foreign labor at all skill levels 'either immigrants or due to off-shoring', a falling dollar, skyrocketing inflation in education and health care expenses, food, oil, etc. Not that long ago, mom could stay home and raise the kids 'and cook delicious, nutritious meals, socialize with other moms, etc'. Now, most families HAVE to have two earners just to get by, everyone's stressed out, everybody's fat because of junk food, divorce rates have skyrocketed, etc. Even Warren Buffet says 'there is a class war, but my class started it, and my class is winning'. The author is right about one thing: middle class people do not hate the rich - we do not begrudge anyone their achievement and resulting wealth. What we do resent is that the system is unfair that we do not in fact have much of a 'meritocracy' at all. So much depends on luck - who your parents were, what schools they sent you to, how much love and support and guidance they gave you, the contacts they set you up with 'or that you made at the elite schools your parents got you into', etc. That means that the average American is pretty much screwed from birth to wage-slavery and never had a chance of participating in this fabulous creation of wealth. Instead, we work longer hours for less money, pay more for everything, and are constantly told that social security, Medicare and even our pensions will most likely not be there for us. This is all bad enough. But then to be told that WE'RE at fault for the mess we're in, and need to cough up trillions of dollars in taxes to bail out the billionaires? That's infuriating.
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Overview
David Smick keeps a low profile, but experts consider him one of the most insightful financial market strategists in the world. For more than two decades, he has conferred with central bankers and advised top Wall Street executives and investors.
The World Is Curved picks up where Thomas Friedman’s The World Is Flat left off, taking listeners on an insider’s tour through the private offices of central bankers, finance ministers, even prime ministers. Smick reveals how today’s risky environment came to be—and why the mortgage mess is a symptom of potentially far more devastating trouble. He wrestles with the two questions on everyone’s mind: How bad could...