About this deal
Today, people are more worried than ever before: inequality is rising, wages are stagnating, tech is dystopian and things are changing way too fast for us to adjust.
Angrynomics” is a very essential and relevant work especially considering the unprecedented times that we find ourselves in. Publication dates are subject to change (although this is an extremely uncommon occurrence overall). Rather the authors fail to account for the long standing decay in economic productivity growth, coupled with erroneous political decisions made by governments that hurt the very population they hope to serve. The authors do not address the issues that may arise as a result of cross subsidization and cream skimming.Eric Lonergan is a policy economist and author, with over twenty years' experience in financial markets. I found dialogue 5 particularly interesting as the authors provide some interesting solutions for tackling the issues raised in the previous sections of the book. I mean it was ok and nothing was bad per see, but it still felt like they were reciting other peoples' ideas. It breaks down the economy into three large periods, the New Deal to the 70s, the 70s until the 2008 Financial Crash, and that recession until now.
In some ways it is a challenge to traditional assumptions and patterns of thought … but … read the book and find out and judge for yourself. Overall, the authors spend the first four chapters teeing up the opportunity to talk about their own work and macro ideas (hellicopter drops etc). When public anger casts aside its moral outrage in a positive form and begins forming exclusive ranks and groups, it takes on a more dangerous and devious shape. Nuestro nuevo versión del capitalismo debe abordar la desigualdad en la riqueza para que nuestras sociedades se adapten mejor a los cambios. The postscript is also woth listening to as it clarifies their ideas in regards to the massive economic impact of the pandemic.Yet over the last decade emotionally dysregulated financial markets have engendered a regression of quality of life standards, along with a crescendo of societal anger that has unfortunately fallen on the government’s deaf ears.