Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Non-fiction | Main Collection | HC 106.84 .R45 2013 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5164341 |
HC 106.84 .P38 2010 On the brink : inside the race to stop the collapse of the global financial system / | HC 106.84 .R34 2017 Democracy against domination / | HC 106.84 .R45 2010 Aftershock : the next economy and America's future / | HC 106.84 .R45 2013 Aftershock : The next economy and America's future / | HC 106.84 .S36 2010 Destined for failure : American prosperity in the age of bailouts / | HC 106.84 .W68 2012 The price of politics / | HC 107 .C22 S395 2006 Making Silicon Valley : innovation and the growth of high tech, 1930-1970 / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 161-173) and index.
Eccles' Insight --
Parallels --
The basic bargain --
How concentrated income at the top hurts the economy --
Why policymakers obsess about the financial economy instead of the real one --
The great prosperity : 1947-1975 --
How we got ourselves into the same mess again --
How Americans kept buying anyway : the three coping mechanisms --
The future without coping mechanisms --
Why China won't save us --
No return to normal --
The 2020 election --
The politics of economics, 2010-2020 --
Why can't we be content with less? --
The pain of economic loss --
Adding insult to injury --
Outrage at a rigged game --
The politics of anger --
What should be done: a new deal for the middle class --
How it could get done.
Economic policy maker and political theorist Robert B. Reich argues that the nation's 2008 economic collapse is the result of an increasing concentration of income and wealth at the top--and a middle class that had to go deeply into debt to maintain a decent standard of living. To ensure that prosperity is widely shared, he continues, requires the implementation of a much broader safety net for the middle class financed by higher marginal tax rates on the very wealthy.
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