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 Location:  Home » Exporting » Economic Conditions » The War for Wealth: The True Story of Globalization, or Why the Flat World is BrokenNovember 20, 2008  


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The War for Wealth: The True Story of Globalization, or Why the Flat World is Broken
The War for Wealth: The True Story of Globalization, or Why the Flat World is Broken
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Author: Gabor Steingart
Publisher: McGraw-Hill
Category: Book

List Price: $29.95
Buy New: $17.74
You Save: $12.21 (41%)
Buy New/Used from $13.51

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars(11 reviews)
Sales Rank: 74812

Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 304
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4
Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.3 x 1.3

ISBN: 0071545964
Dewey Decimal Number: 337
EAN: 9780071545969
ASIN: 0071545964

Publication Date: April 4, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

Globalization. The Flat World. Outsourcing. Free Trade.

Each of these phrases is a flashpoint in one of the most heated debates of our lifetime: Is globalization a force for good, or is it a policy that is sure to destroy the economic foundation of the United States and Europe while exporting our wealth and prosperity overseas?

In The War for Wealth, leading intellectual and agenda-setting journalist Gabor Steingart examines how globalization has affected the state of the world's economy and returns with a bleak outlook for the West: our prosperity and wealth are disappearing faster than ever, and with it our political power and our long-held democratic ideals. But all is not lost; we can still stem the flow of capital and jobs and once again restore the West to its respected position of global leader in economics and politics.

In this eye-opening and dramatic account, Steingart lays out the three potential scenarios the world faces - a ?shock scenario? in which there is a global economic crash, an ?Asia-over-all scenario? where the rising economies of Asia completely overtake the West, or the ?American renaissance scenario? in which U.S. politicians unite with each other and with Europe, forming a pragmatic third way to bring the West back from the brink of destruction.

Compelling, controversial, and thought-provoking, The War for Wealth alerts readers to the crucial state of the Western economy--and shows how leaders can return the West to its position of power in the global arena.




Customer Reviews:   Read 6 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Relief from the Globalization Propaganda   October 24, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Globalization has had a strong, yet subtle, propaganda from both the "liberal" and conservative media in the last years. Just take a look at magazines Newsweek, Time and many others, but above all The Economist. They are always reminding us how important is that companies can freely operate globally. Fareed Zakaria, for example, wrote some weeks ago that while ipods are made abroad, most of the profits go to Apple. Good for Steve and Co. but bad for common people who don't own corporations. Instead, Mr. Zakaria chose to show off the startlingly low American unemployment statistics. As for web sites, go to the ultraconservative [...], which has a single one writer against free trade, Pat Buchanan.

Gabor Steingart is one of the few writers who goes deeper that and exposes what holds the terrific unemployment statistics: part-time jobs (no matter how few hours a week), minimum wages and plain unemployed simply masked. We can even say it is as hard to get in those statistics as getting into an ivy-league college. According to the US Labor statistics, the minimum wage jobs are meant to be the main jobs sources by far and large in the next years. There will be like 600,000 opening for college professors and many others for college graduates, which all in all won't take the whole youth needing jobs. Yet, most of the media (both "liberal" and conservative) remain simplifying the issue and keeping repeating the great unemployment statistics and Wal-Mart prices (which are not so great either), just like a nazi general used to say to keep lying until people believe them.

The news channels don't promote globalization as much, instead they distract us and focus on the oversimplification of the "culture wars" (both excessive liberals or conservatives, who are minorities in USA) , missing people (like 1 in 100,000) and most recently have only paid attention to the political campaigns and the financial crisis. These issues are surely important and still second in importance to the basic need of making a living, which globalization won't let us do. No matter how cheap a product can be as the propaganda always says, if you don't have a job you can't buy much, which is happening to more and more millions of people all over the 1st world, as Gabor well exposes.



5 out of 5 stars a great book probably coming too late   October 18, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I feel almost personally grateful to Steingart because he has written something I have always wanted to say, but couldn't possibly have said so well.

The questions he asks on page 227, for example, have been troubling me for years. I beseech every American to pause and respond to these buring questions.

"Did you really believe that you could live, in the long term, on borrowed money?
"Who actually claimed that such a large nation doesn't need an industrial base?
"Where are the men and women who made us believe that a negative balance of trade is a sigh of strength?
"Why did no one on Wall Street sound the alarm bell when the U.S. dollar became eroded and lost intrinsic value for such a prolonged period of time?
"Is it possible that no one could have noticed a country that was once the world's biggest lender selling off its assets to others?
"How could the entrenchment of economic inequality in a democratic nation have been tolerated for so long?
"What happed to the upward mobility that was once this country's trademark?
"And, last but not least: why did democracy, which is supposed to react more quickly to malfunctions than other forms of government, fail so miserably?"

As someone who genuinely wishes America well, it pains me to see this great country de-industrialized and become the biggest debtor in human history, reduced to begging more loans from foreign powers such as the Chinese Communist regime.

My gut feeling is that it's too late to remedy the dire situation. I pray miracle happens. I wish to be proven wrong.

By the way, Deng Xiaoping was never premier of China, as Steingart told us. His official position, when he did hold one, was vice-premier, though he was the paramount leader of the Chinese Communist Party from the early 80s. Chinese politics was bizare.




5 out of 5 stars Must read   September 19, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Every American should read this book; the author gives a broader view about the world economy, and how we got to this point, where we have been losing jobs to the Asian countries: the causes, the consequences and what we can do to revert it.


5 out of 5 stars Reform tax policy   September 11, 2008
  2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Among the fairly simple, but politically difficult recommendations is to eliminate income based taxes and instead tax consumption. The US policy of taxing income of individuals and, especially corporations, effectively makes US products gives importers a free ride and makes US exports uncompetitive internationally. Taxing sales not only levels the playing field for US producers domestically and internationally, but also greatly reduces tax fraud and black market free riders.

Eliminate the tax on savings and capital gains and odds are people would save and invest more.



5 out of 5 stars Read This Book, Understand Today's Economy   July 22, 2008
  2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I love books, and I seem to find a new one to like every week. And yet, I can honestly say, this is the best book I've read in years. Few books have the power to encapsulate the meteoric economic and political changes that face the United States--and the world--right now. Gabor Steingart, a German journalist working in Washington, DC, for "Der Spiegel," has managed to come at just the right time with just the right book, "The War for Wealth."

What makes this book so pertinent? First, it approaches the question of whether globalization truly benefits all. Unlike those who favor the open market who make the assumption that free trade helpa all, Steingart posits that globalization instead is leading to a redistribution of resources. Not all countries benefit equally. In this new world order, Americans are needed largely as consumers, not workers, who are financing their purchases on a mountain of debt.

The expansion of the labor market as a result of globalization, in fact, has led to a decline in the value of workers. This has hurt Western nations the most. In the US industrial base alone, there has been a 50 percent decline in jobs in a single generation. Americans and Europeans are overpriced for the global market, not because of their wages (although this is a factor) but largely because of the cost of their social safety net.

Who are the winners? Those in India and China, obviously. In China, those growth rates are even being understated by the Communist government so that the West does not even see the full extent of this unfettered development. Moreover, China has chosen a different, more insidious tactic in this economic war. As Steingart notes, "the Asians are attacking with economic weapons and avoiding ideological conflict. They do not conduct debates with the West over equality and justice, nor do they level any accusations or issue threats. The rising global powers are not interested in a battle of cultures. They are ignoring issues of religion and ideology. They are quiet adversaries who are placing their bets on economic efficiency. The West, they reason, can be defeated with its own weapons."

Unlike many who see these problems, however, Steingart is not a protectionist, nor does he see globalization as something to be halted in its steps. He is not a fear monger. As an economist and journalist, Steingart knows that this is a trend that is not likely to be reversed. It can, however, be managed by savvy leadership and a willingness on the part of Western nations to work together. Steingart basically lays out three options: global chaos (the shock scenario), the rise of Asia (the Asia-above-all scenario, in which American dreams bite the dust), or remaking history (the American Renaissance scenario).

How America and the West manage globalization, international trade, and the development of rules and regulations to even the playing field are critical to the continuance of the good life. If I could have one wish, it would be that both presidential candidates and their camps would read Steingart's book. This critical overview of the world and economic development today is something that every American should be thinking about as they approach the future.




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