From the author of Day of Reckoning , the acclaimed critique of Ronald Reagan’s economic policy (“Every citizen should read it,” said The New York Times ): a persuasive, wide-ranging argument that economic growth provides far more than material benefits.In clear-cut prose, Benjamin M. Friedman examines the political and social histories of the large Western democracies–particularly of the United States since the Civil War–to demonstrate the fact that incomes on the rise lead to more open and democratic societies. He explains that growth, rather than simply a high standard of living, is key to effecting political and social liberalization in the third world, and shows that even the wealthiest of nations puts its democratic values at risk when income levels stand still. Merely being rich is no protection against a turn toward rigidity and intolerance when a country’s citizens lose the sense that they are getting ahead.With concrete policy suggestions for pursuing growth at home and promoting worldwide economic expansion, this volume is a major contribution to the ongoing debate about the effects of economic growth and globalization.
Benjamin M. Friedman Boeken
Benjamin Morton Friedman is een vooraanstaand Amerikaans politiek econoom, die de ingewikkelde relatie tussen economische omstandigheden en maatschappelijke uitkomsten diepgaand onderzoekt. Zijn werk examineert nauwgezet hoe economische krachten politieke en sociale landschappen vormgeven, en hoe de maatschappij op haar beurt economische trends beïnvloedt. Friedman's benadering wordt gekenmerkt door zijn analytische strengheid en een scherp bewustzijn van de historische context, waardoor hij lezers diepgaande inzichten biedt in complexe economische verschijnselen. Zijn bijdragen bieden waardevolle perspectieven om hedendaagse uitdagingen aan te gaan.



Religion and the Rise of Capitalism
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The author demonstrates that the foundational transition in thinking about what is now called economics, beginning in the 18th century, was decisively shaped by the hotly contended lines of religious thought within the English-speaking Protestant world.