- Published: 10 September 2024
- ISBN: 9780241595763
- Imprint: Allen Lane
- Format: Hardback
- Pages: 384
- RRP: $55.00
What Went Wrong With Capitalism
- Published: 10 September 2024
- ISBN: 9780241595763
- Imprint: Allen Lane
- Format: Hardback
- Pages: 384
- RRP: $55.00
Sharma’s new book offers an important perspective on capitalism from a global strategist. This book will reshape how you think about the world and is bound to provoke people on both the left and the right.
Lawrence H. Summers, former US Secretary of the Treasury
In his timely and consequential book, Ruchir Sharma chronicles the government bailouts, interventions, and machinations that have brought the West to this hinge point in history. His message to policymakers: Try capitalism, the real kind.
Kevin Warsh, former US Federal Reserve Board Governor
What Went Wrong With Capitalism is a plea for government sanity, for true competition, and against crony capitalism, it is exactly the message our world needs to hear. I am not sure there will be a more correct book this year.
Tyler Cowen, the Holbert L. Harris Chair of Economics at George Mason University and co-author of the Marginal Revolution blog
Sharma stands apart because he is not ideologically driven in presenting a valuable analysis of the issues confronting capitalism. The result is a fresh and accessible contribution to the debates about our economic system that should be read and considered by all sides.
Robert Rubin, former US Secretary of the Treasury and chairman of Citigroup
A blunt broadside against the welfare state of finance. It will make the right kind of enemies.
James Grant, founder and editor, Grant’s Interest Rate Observer
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