agenda
for fundamental changes, based on the premise
that the primacy of private profit is no longer
compatible with the priorities of modern democracies.
Instead, we need to emphasize equity, cooperation
and far more effective democratic accountability.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Harry Shutt is an independent economic consultant.
He is the author of The Trouble with Capitalism
(Zed Books, 1999) and A New Democracy: Alternatives
to a Bankrupt World Order (Zed Books, 2001)
CONTENTS
- The Long Road to Disaster Taming the business
cycle Post-war delusions The return of the
business cycle and the rejection of orthodoxy
The cancer of 'moral hazard' Liberalisation
and the 'race to the bottom' 1980-2000: the
failure of neo-liberalism
- The Deluge Postponed Distorting market forces
Financial liberalisation Sustaining the return
on investment The rise of the bubble economy
Technology: the new enemy The search for new
investment outlets
- The Surfeit of Capital and its Consequences
The plundering of the public sector The appetite
for high risk High-tech fantasies
- The Dishonesty of Desperation The limits
of manipulation The culture of fraud Complicity
of the state
- A System Past Reforming An exercise in cosmetics
Inescapable pressures of the market The price
of accountability The stakeholder myth
- No End to Denial Falsifying the numbers
The response to the pensions crisis: a study
in fantasy Compulsive optimism in the markets
An admission of defeat? The triumph of mendacity
over experience
- Beyond the Cataclysm A new dispensation
for enterprise Reordering economic priorities
Averting total collapse Resistance and repression
An age of unreason?
|