Beyond the Crash: Overcoming the First Crisis of Globalization Audiobook, by Gordon Brown Play Audiobook Sample

Beyond the Crash: Overcoming the First Crisis of Globalization Audiobook

Beyond the Crash: Overcoming the First Crisis of Globalization Audiobook, by Gordon Brown Play Audiobook Sample
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Read By: Gordon Brown Publisher: Simon & Schuster Audio Listen Time: at 1.0x Speed 4.67 hours at 1.5x Speed 3.50 hours at 2.0x Speed Release Date: December 2010 Format: Unabridged Audiobook ISBN: 9781442341128

Quick Stats About this Audiobook

Total Audiobook Chapters:

17

Longest Chapter Length:

86:27 minutes

Shortest Chapter Length:

28 seconds

Average Chapter Length:

24:37 minutes

Audiobooks by this Author:

3

Other Audiobooks Written by Gordon Brown: > View All...

Publisher Description

The international financial crisis that has held our global economy in its grip for too long still seems to be in full stride. Former British Prime Minister and Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown believes the crisis can be reversed, but that the world’s leaders must work together if we are to avoid a decade of lost jobs and low growth.

Brown speaks both as someone who was in the room driving discussions that led to some crucial decisions and as an expert renowned for his remarkable financial acumen. No one who had Brown’s access has written about the crisis yet, and no one has written so convincingly about what the global community must do next in order to climb out of this abyss. Brown outlines the shocking recklessness and irresponsibility of the banks that he believes contributed to the depth and breadth of the crisis. As he sees it, the crisis was brought on not simply by technical failings, but by ethical failings too. Brown argues that markets need morals and suggests that the only way to truly ensure that the world economy does not flounder so badly again is to institute a banking constitution and a global growth plan for jobs and justice.

Beyond the Crash puts forth not just an explanation for what happened, but a directive for how to prevent future financial disasters. Long admired for his grasp of economic issues, Brown describes the individual events that he believes led to the crisis unfolding as it did. He synthesizes the many historical precedents leading to the current status, from the 1933 London conference of world leaders that failed to resolve the Great Depression to the more recent crash in the Asian housing market. Brown’s analysis is of paramount importance during these uncertain financial times.

As Brown himself said of his ideas for the future, “We now live in a world of global trade, global financial flows, global movements of people, and instant global communications. Our economies are connected as never before, and I believe that global economic problems require global solutions and global institutions. In writing my analysis of the financial crisis, I wanted to help explain how we got here, but more important, to offer some recommendations as to how the next stage of globalization can be managed so that the economy works for people and not the other way around.”##

***

The crisis exposed the contradiction of globalization itself: as economies have become more interconnected, regulators and governments have failed to keep pace and increase coordination. It is a failure intrinsic to unregulated global markets, an instability that resulted from the manner in which increasing flows of capital around the world happened and impacted the economy. And it is a failure of collective action at an international level to respond quickly enough to the structural imbalances and inequities that arose.

At its simplest, then, this is the first true crisis of globalization. For the first time everybody, from the richest person in the richest city to the poorest person in the poorest slum, was affected by the same crisis. Although its roots are global, its impact is local, directly felt on nearly every main street, on nearly every shop floor, around nearly every kitchen table.

Billions of people around the world are in need of and are demanding a better globalization. It is the nature of power that you always leave tasks unfinished when you leave office. It is the nature of politics that the argument must continue. This book is my warning of a decade of lost growth and my answer to that fear with a call for a better globalization. It is an explanation of a pattern in the numbers that points to an enormous opportunity to alleviate poverty, create jobs, and grow. A future of low growth, high unemployment, decline, and decay is not inevitable; it’s about the change we choose.

-- From Beyond the Crash

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“When the economic crisis erupted in 2008–9, Brown, like Churchill in 1940, was the right man in the right place at the right time…He’d read widely and thought deeply about economics, finance, globalization. He was the one national leader who came to the crisis with a plan and the authority to push it through...This is his story of how he did it, told soberly, clearly, compellingly. It is not a defense of his premiership, but his personal account of a heroic moment in it. He does not claim credit for ‘saving the world,’ but lets the story speak for itself, and praises the contribution of his own team and the other world leaders. It is an interrupted story, because he did not survive long enough politically to finish the job. Since he left the scene efforts to co-ordinate recovery policies have fallen to pieces. This is the measure of his achievement—and the hole that his departure left.” 

— Observer (London) 

Quotes

  • “Gripping…[Brown’s] matter-of-fact recounting of the early months of the crisis conveys the dilemmas and angst of polictymakers as they tried to handle the biggest economic drama in decades… The book conveys well Brown's sense of history, the rapid pace of change in the global economy and the failures of unfettered markets to manage things on their won. But it also conveys his moral sensibilities…What is clear from this book is that Brown knew what needed to be done and tried to do it at a time when others were paralysed, captured by the financial community, or deluded by their past mistakes into trying to underestimate the severity of the crisis that their policies has helped create.”

    — Financial Times
  • “Beyond the Crash offers insight into a man who…found himself at the center of a maelstrom for which he was unusually well-prepared.”

    — BusinessWeek

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    " didn't really go in to detail how to overcome future problems in the global economy and doesn't really blame the government of being lax in supervising the banking sector but hindsight is a wonderful thing and talk about regulation after the event "

    — Stephen, 12/21/2010

About Gordon Brown

Gordon Brown served as British prime minister and leader of the Labour Party from 2007 to 2010. During the decade before that, he was Chancellor of the Exchequer, making him the longest-serving chancellor in modern history. Browns time as chancellor was marked by major reform of Britains monetary and fiscal policy and sustained investment in health, education, and overseas aid. As prime minister, his tenure coincided with the recent financial crisis, and he was one of the first to initiate calls for global financial action, with his administration simultaneously introducing a range of rescue measures within the country. Brown has a PhD in history from the University of Edinburgh and spent his early career working as a television journalist. He has been a Member of Parliament since 1983. He is married to Sarah Brown, a charity campaigner, and has two young sons.