A Failure of Capitalism: The Crisis of ’08 and the Descent into Depression

Awards:   Nominated for James Willard Hurst Prize 2010
Author:   Richard A. Posner
Publisher:   Harvard University Press
ISBN:  

9780674060395


Pages:   368
Publication Date:   31 May 2011
Format:   Paperback
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A Failure of Capitalism: The Crisis of ’08 and the Descent into Depression


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Awards

  • Nominated for James Willard Hurst Prize 2010

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Richard A. Posner
Publisher:   Harvard University Press
Imprint:   Harvard University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 11.10cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 18.10cm
Weight:   0.286kg
ISBN:  

9780674060395


ISBN 10:   0674060393
Pages:   368
Publication Date:   31 May 2011
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Reviews

Lively, readable, and plainspoken...Posner has an extraordinarily sharp mind. -- Robert M. Solow New York Review of Books 20090514 Posner has managed to write a compelling book on the crash...The book has numerous worthwhile insights, including a surprisingly Keynesian analysis of the dynamics of depressions. -- Robert Kuttner American Prospect 20090501 A surprising volume that explains what happened to the banking system and economy in terms the lay reader can easily understand...[Posner's] critique is bracing, all the more so because it comes from a right-leaning thinker normally hostile to the ministrations of government bureaucrats. -- Paul M. Barrett Washington Post Book World 20090503 Before seeking political asylum in free-market Hong Kong, consider reading a new book that critiques what went wrong with capitalism, written in order to save it. Judge Richard Posner's A Failure of Capitalism: The Crisis of '08 and the Descent into Depression is noteworthy. As a longtime University of Chicago professor and father of the free-market-based law-and-economics movement, Judge Posner makes an unlikely critic of capitalism. But as author of some 40 books and as the most frequently cited federal appeals court jurist, he is also one of our most original and clearheaded thinkers. -- L. Gordon Crovitz Wall Street Journal 20090505 It comes as something of a surprise that Posner, a doyen of the market-oriented law-and-economics movement, should deliver a roundhouse punch to the proposition that markets are self-correcting. It might also seem odd that a federal appellate judge (and University of Chicago law lecturer) would be among the first out of the gate with a comprehensive book on the financial crisis--if, that is, the judge were any other judge. But Posner is the late Daniel Patrick Moynihan's successor as the country's most omnivorous and independent-minded public intellectual. By now, his dozens of books just about fill their own wing in the Library of Congress...Compact and bracingly lucid...By the last page, not a single lazy generalization has survived Posner's merciless scrutiny, not one populist cliche remains standing. A Failure of Capitalism clears away whole forests of cant but leaves readers at a loss as to where to go from here. In other words, it is only a starting point--but an indispensable one. -- Jonathan Rauch New York Times Book Review 20090517 [Posner] has the rare kind of mind that is a pure pleasure to watch in action, regardless of the subject and the argument being made. -- John Lanchester New Yorker 20090601 Richard Posner is one of America's most prominent and prolific public intellectuals...With his concise, jargon-free analysis of the current economic crisis, Posner has cast his lot with those who believe that the depression (given the steep reduction in consumption, credit and production, the term, he insists, is appropriate) was the result not of intrusive, heavy-handed regulation of housing and finance, but of deregulation, hostility to taxation and to government in general. -- Glenn C. Altschuler Jerusalem Post 20090619 Richard Posner is a phenomenon...He provides a very competent account of the events which led to the current crisis, with an emphasis on the political and ideological context. -- John Kay Financial Times 20090731 [Posner] is the quintessential U.S. economic-conservative intellectual...So an excoriating attack by Posner on modern financial market practices is news. A Failure of Capitalism is precisely that. There are still U.S. conservatives who think the crisis was overdone, that the policy response has been too great, that this was merely a crisis of confidence and liquidity, and that the banking system was not insolvent, merely illiquid. That is not Posner's view. His judgment is that the banking system is insolvent and the crisis that took place in 2008 transformed a recession in the US into a depression...In his preface, Posner emphasizes that he has written the book in medias res, a lawyer's way of saying in the thick of it, with the implication that he has yet fully to make up his mind. He has, however, offered a thought-provoking interim analysis of what went wrong. -- Warwick Lightfoot Financial World 20090701 The best book describing this malaise is Richard Posner's A Failure of Capitalism. The distinctiveness of his case is that he is a prominent conservative thinker with the intellectual acuity to argue that the crisis is not to do with the traditional enemy of conservatism, big government, but is a consequence of decisions taken by private firms. The ill-effects of those decisions were worsened by deregulation of banking. -- Oliver Kamm The Times 20091205


Lively, readable, and plainspoken...Posner has an extraordinarily sharp mind. -- Robert M. Solow New York Review of Books 20090514 Posner has managed to write a compelling book on the crash...The book has numerous worthwhile insights, including a surprisingly Keynesian analysis of the dynamics of depressions. -- Robert Kuttner American Prospect 20090501 A surprising volume that explains what happened to the banking system and economy in terms the lay reader can easily understand...[Posner's] critique is bracing, all the more so because it comes from a right-leaning thinker normally hostile to the ministrations of government bureaucrats. -- Paul M. Barrett Washington Post Book World 20090503 Before seeking political asylum in free-market Hong Kong, consider reading a new book that critiques what went wrong with capitalism, written in order to save it. Judge Richard Posner's A Failure of Capitalism: The Crisis of '08 and the Descent into Depression is noteworthy. As a longtime University of Chicago professor and father of the free-market-based law-and-economics movement, Judge Posner makes an unlikely critic of capitalism. But as author of some 40 books and as the most frequently cited federal appeals court jurist, he is also one of our most original and clearheaded thinkers. -- L. Gordon Crovitz Wall Street Journal 20090505 It comes as something of a surprise that Posner, a doyen of the market-oriented law-and-economics movement, should deliver a roundhouse punch to the proposition that markets are self-correcting. It might also seem odd that a federal appellate judge (and University of Chicago law lecturer) would be among the first out of the gate with a comprehensive book on the financial crisis--if, that is, the judge were any other judge. But Posner is the late Daniel Patrick Moynihan's successor as the country's most omnivorous and independent-minded public intellectual. By now, his dozens of books just about fill their own wing in the Library of Congress...Compact and bracingly lucid...By the last page, not a single lazy generalization has survived Posner's merciless scrutiny, not one populist cliche remains standing. A Failure of Capitalism clears away whole forests of cant but leaves readers at a loss as to where to go from here. In other words, it is only a starting point--but an indispensable one. -- Jonathan Rauch New York Times Book Review 20090517 [Posner] has the rare kind of mind that is a pure pleasure to watch in action, regardless of the subject and the argument being made. -- John Lanchester New Yorker 20090601 Richard Posner is one of America's most prominent and prolific public intellectuals...With his concise, jargon-free analysis of the current economic crisis, Posner has cast his lot with those who believe that the depression (given the steep reduction in consumption, credit and production, the term, he insists, is appropriate) was the result not of intrusive, heavy-handed regulation of housing and finance, but of deregulation, hostility to taxation and to government in general. -- Glenn C. Altschuler Jerusalem Post 20090619 Richard Posner is a phenomenon...He provides a very competent account of the events which led to the current crisis, with an emphasis on the political and ideological context. -- John Kay Financial Times 20090731 [Posner] is the quintessential U.S. economic-conservative intellectual...So an excoriating attack by Posner on modern financial market practices is news. A Failure of Capitalism is precisely that. There are still U.S. conservatives who think the crisis was overdone, that the policy response has been too great, that this was merely a crisis of confidence and liquidity, and that the banking system was not insolvent, merely illiquid. That is not Posner's view. His judgment is that the banking system is insolvent and the crisis that took place in 2008 transformed a recession in the US into a depression...In his preface, Posner emphasizes that he has written the book in medias res, a lawyer's way of saying in the thick of it, with the implication that he has yet fully to make up his mind. He has, however, offered a thought-provoking interim analysis of what went wrong. -- Warwick Lightfoot Financial World 20090701 The best book describing this malaise is Richard Posner's A Failure of Capitalism. The distinctiveness of his case is that he is a prominent conservative thinker with the intellectual acuity to argue that the crisis is not to do with the traditional enemy of conservatism, big government, but is a consequence of decisions taken by private firms. The ill-effects of those decisions were worsened by deregulation of banking. -- Oliver Kamm The Times 20091205 [A] compelling read...Notable for [its] high seriousness and sophistication. -- Robert Teitelman Huffington Post 20101223


Lively, readable, and plainspoken...Posner has an extraordinarily sharp mind. -- Robert M. Solow New York Review of Books 20090514 Posner has managed to write a compelling book on the crash...The book has numerous worthwhile insights, including a surprisingly Keynesian analysis of the dynamics of depressions. -- Robert Kuttner American Prospect 20090501 A surprising volume that explains what happened to the banking system and economy in terms the lay reader can easily understand...[Posner's] critique is bracing, all the more so because it comes from a right-leaning thinker normally hostile to the ministrations of government bureaucrats. -- Paul M. Barrett Washington Post Book World 20090503 Before seeking political asylum in free-market Hong Kong, consider reading a new book that critiques what went wrong with capitalism, written in order to save it. Judge Richard Posner's A Failure of Capitalism: The Crisis of '08 and the Descent into Depression is noteworthy. As a longtime University of Chicago professor and father of the free-market-based law-and-economics movement, Judge Posner makes an unlikely critic of capitalism. But as author of some 40 books and as the most frequently cited federal appeals court jurist, he is also one of our most original and clearheaded thinkers. -- L. Gordon Crovitz Wall Street Journal 20090505 It comes as something of a surprise that Posner, a doyen of the market-oriented law-and-economics movement, should deliver a roundhouse punch to the proposition that markets are self-correcting. It might also seem odd that a federal appellate judge (and University of Chicago law lecturer) would be among the first out of the gate with a comprehensive book on the financial crisis--if, that is, the judge were any other judge. But Posner is the late Daniel Patrick Moynihan's successor as the country's most omnivorous and independent-minded public intellectual. By now, his dozens of books just about fill their own wing in the Library of Congress...Compact and bracingly lucid...By the last page, not a single lazy generalization has survived Posner's merciless scrutiny, not one populist cliche remains standing. A Failure of Capitalism clears away whole forests of cant but leaves readers at a loss as to where to go from here. In other words, it is only a starting point--but an indispensable one. -- Jonathan Rauch New York Times Book Review 20090517 [Posner] has the rare kind of mind that is a pure pleasure to watch in action, regardless of the subject and the argument being made. -- John Lanchester New Yorker 20090601 Richard Posner is one of America's most prominent and prolific public intellectuals...With his concise, jargon-free analysis of the current economic crisis, Posner has cast his lot with those who believe that the depression (given the steep reduction in consumption, credit and production, the term, he insists, is appropriate) was the result not of intrusive, heavy-handed regulation of housing and finance, but of deregulation, hostility to taxation and to government in general. -- Glenn C. Altschuler Jerusalem Post 20090619 Richard Posner is a phenomenon...He provides a very competent account of the events which led to the current crisis, with an emphasis on the political and ideological context. -- John Kay Financial Times 20090731 [Posner] is the quintessential U.S. economic-conservative intellectual...So an excoriating attack by Posner on modern financial market practices is news. A Failure of Capitalism is precisely that. There are still U.S. conservatives who think the crisis was overdone, that the policy response has been too great, that this was merely a crisis of confidence and liquidity, and that the banking system was not insolvent, merely illiquid. That is not Posner's view. His judgment is that the banking system is insolvent and the crisis that took place in 2008 transformed a recession in the US into a depression...In his preface, Posner emphasizes that he has written the book in medias res, a lawyer's way of saying in the thick of it, with the implication that he has yet fully to make up his mind. He has, however, offered a thought-provoking interim analysis of what went wrong. -- Warwick Lightfoot Financial World 20090701 The best book describing this malaise is Richard Posner's A Failure of Capitalism. The distinctiveness of his case is that he is a prominent conservative thinker with the intellectual acuity to argue that the crisis is not to do with the traditional enemy of conservatism, big government, but is a consequence of decisions taken by private firms. The ill-effects of those decisions were worsened by deregulation of banking. -- Oliver Kamm The Times 20091205 [A] compelling read...Notable for [its] high seriousness and sophistication. -- Robert Teitelman Huffington Post 20101223 [Posner's] bracing and intellectually admirable A Failure of Capitalism demands attention. -- Jonathan Kirshner Boston Review 20110101


[Posner's] bracing and intellectually admirable A Failure of Capitalism demands attention. -- Jonathan Kirshner * Boston Review * [A] compelling read...Notable for [its] high seriousness and sophistication. -- Robert Teitelman * Huffington Post * The best book describing this malaise is Richard Posner's A Failure of Capitalism. The distinctiveness of his case is that he is a prominent conservative thinker with the intellectual acuity to argue that the crisis is not to do with the traditional enemy of conservatism, big government, but is a consequence of decisions taken by private firms. The ill-effects of those decisions were worsened by deregulation of banking. -- Oliver Kamm * The Times * [Posner] is the quintessential U.S. economic-conservative intellectual...So an excoriating attack by Posner on modern financial market practices is news. A Failure of Capitalism is precisely that. There are still U.S. conservatives who think the crisis was overdone, that the policy response has been too great, that this was merely a crisis of confidence and liquidity, and that the banking system was not insolvent, merely illiquid. That is not Posner's view. His judgment is that the banking system is insolvent and the crisis that took place in 2008 transformed a recession in the US into a depression...In his preface, Posner emphasizes that he has written the book in medias res, a lawyer's way of saying in the thick of it, with the implication that he has yet fully to make up his mind. He has, however, offered a thought-provoking interim analysis of what went wrong. -- Warwick Lightfoot * Financial World * Richard Posner is a phenomenon...He provides a very competent account of the events which led to the current crisis, with an emphasis on the political and ideological context. -- John Kay * Financial Times * Richard Posner is one of America's most prominent and prolific public intellectuals...With his concise, jargon-free analysis of the current economic crisis, Posner has cast his lot with those who believe that the depression (given the steep reduction in consumption, credit and production, the term, he insists, is appropriate) was the result not of intrusive, heavy-handed regulation of housing and finance, but of deregulation, hostility to taxation and to government in general. -- Glenn C. Altschuler * Jerusalem Post * [Posner] has the rare kind of mind that is a pure pleasure to watch in action, regardless of the subject and the argument being made. -- John Lanchester * New Yorker * It comes as something of a surprise that Posner, a doyen of the market-oriented law-and-economics movement, should deliver a roundhouse punch to the proposition that markets are self-correcting. It might also seem odd that a federal appellate judge (and University of Chicago law lecturer) would be among the first out of the gate with a comprehensive book on the financial crisis--if, that is, the judge were any other judge. But Posner is the late Daniel Patrick Moynihan's successor as the country's most omnivorous and independent-minded public intellectual. By now, his dozens of books just about fill their own wing in the Library of Congress...Compact and bracingly lucid...By the last page, not a single lazy generalization has survived Posner's merciless scrutiny, not one populist cliche remains standing. A Failure of Capitalism clears away whole forests of cant but leaves readers at a loss as to where to go from here. In other words, it is only a starting point--but an indispensable one. -- Jonathan Rauch * New York Times Book Review * Before seeking political asylum in free-market Hong Kong, consider reading a new book that critiques what went wrong with capitalism, written in order to save it. Judge Richard Posner's A Failure of Capitalism: The Crisis of '08 and the Descent into Depression is noteworthy. As a longtime University of Chicago professor and father of the free-market-based law-and-economics movement, Judge Posner makes an unlikely critic of capitalism. But as author of some 40 books and as the most frequently cited federal appeals court jurist, he is also one of our most original and clearheaded thinkers. -- L. Gordon Crovitz * Wall Street Journal * A surprising volume that explains what happened to the banking system and economy in terms the lay reader can easily understand...[Posner's] critique is bracing, all the more so because it comes from a right-leaning thinker normally hostile to the ministrations of government bureaucrats. -- Paul M. Barrett * Washington Post Book World * Posner has managed to write a compelling book on the crash...The book has numerous worthwhile insights, including a surprisingly Keynesian analysis of the dynamics of depressions. -- Robert Kuttner * American Prospect * Lively, readable, and plainspoken...Posner has an extraordinarily sharp mind. -- Robert M. Solow * New York Review of Books *


Author Information

Richard A. Posner retired as a judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in 2017. He was previously a senior lecturer at the University of Chicago Law School.

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