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The past twenty years have been an era of economic disappointment in the United States. They have also been a time of intense economic debate, as rival ideologies contend for policy influence. Above all, they have been the age of the policy entrepreneur - the economic snake-oil salesman, right or left, who offers easy answers to hard problems.
It started with the conservative economists - Milton Friedman at their head - who made powerful arguments against activist government that had liberals on the defensive for many years. Yet when Ronald Reagan brought conservatism to power, it was in the name not of serious thinkers but of the supply-siders, whose ideas were cartoon-like in their simplicity. And when the dust settled, it was clear that the supply-side treatment not only had cured nothing, but had left behind a $3 trillion bill.
Meanwhile, the intellectual pendulum had swung. In the 1980s, even while conservatives ruled in Washington, economic ideas that justified government activism were experiencing a strong revival. But the liberals, it turns out, have their own supply-siders: the strategic traders, whose simplistic vision of a U.S. economy locked in win-lose competition with other countries proved far more appealing to politicians than less-dramatic truth.
And it seems all too likely that the new patent medicine will do as much harm as the previous one. In this provocative book, Paul Krugman traces the swing of the ideological pendulum, from left to right and back again, and the strange things that happen to economic ideas on their way to power.
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1
Peddling Prosperity: Economic Sense and Nonsense in an Age of Diminished Expectations
April 1995, W. W. Norton & Company
in English
0393312925 9780393312928
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2
Peddling prosperity: economic sense and nonsense in the age of diminished expectations
1995, W.W. Norton
in English
0393312925 9780393312928
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3
Peddling prosperity: economic sense and nonsense in the age of diminished expectations
1994, W.W. Norton
in English
0393036023
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Peddling prosperity: economic sense and nonsense in the age of diminished expectations
1994, W.W. Norton
in English
0393036022 9780393036022
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Book Details
First Sentence
"In 1981 Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan uttered a startling pronouncement: "The Republicans," he declared, "are now the party of ideas.""
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- Created April 29, 2008
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May 29, 2019 | Edited by MARC Bot | associate 1 edition with work |
June 11, 2012 | Edited by Alan Millar | merge authors |
August 5, 2010 | Edited by IdentifierBot | added LibraryThing ID |
April 24, 2010 | Edited by Open Library Bot | Fixed duplicate goodreads IDs. |
April 29, 2008 | Created by an anonymous user | Imported from amazon.com record |