Davos Man: How the Billionaires Devoured the World

Available
Product Details
Price
$19.99  $18.59
Publisher
Mariner Books
Publish Date
Pages
480
Dimensions
5.4 X 7.6 X 1.2 inches | 0.7 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780063078314

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About the Author

Peter S. Goodman is the global economics correspondent for the New York Times. He was previously the New York Times' European economics correspondent based in London, and the national economics correspondent based in New York, where he played a leading role in the paper's award-winning coverage of the Great Recession, including a series that was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. Previously, he covered the Internet bubble and bust as the Washington Post's telecommunications reporter and served as its China-based Asian economics correspondent.

Reviews

"A meticulously researched, clearly reported and truly infuriating history of the way the top 1% of the world has systematically arranged the way societies operate in order to become even richer, all to the detriment of the rest of us. ... The book serves as a call to arms and an invitation to fight back against the continued unabashed pillaging of all economies by those who least need it." -- San Francisco Chronicle

"Powerful. ... Goodman's reporting is biting and bitterly funny. ... Davos Man shows us that today's extreme wealth is inextricably linked to a great crime, perhaps the greatest one of this century: the hijacking of our democracy." -- Washington Post

"Excellent. ... An angry, powerful look at the economic inequality that's been brought into sharp relief by the COVID-19 pandemic. ... A powerful, fiery book, and it could well be an essential one." -- NPR.org

"The Times's global economics correspondent profiles five billionaires (along with workers and migrants across the world) to show how their exploitation of the pandemic has exacerbated inequality across the globe." -- New York Times Book Review

"Well-written and well-reported. ... A passionate denunciation of the mega-rich." -- The Economist

"A biting, uproarious yet vital and deadly serious account of the profound damage the billionaire class is inflicting on the world. Peter S. Goodman guides the reader through the hidden stories and twisted beliefs of some of the titans of finance and industry, who continually rationalize their bad behavior to themselves." -- JOSEPH E. STIGLITZ, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Economics

"Unflinching and authoritative, Peter Goodman's Davos Man will be read a hundred years from now as a warning, bellowed from the blessed side of the velvet rope, about a slow-motion scandal that spans the globe. Deliciously rich with searing detail, the clarity is reminiscent of Tom Wolfe, let loose in the Alps, in search of hypocrisies and vanities." -- EVAN OSNOS, National Book Award-winning author of Age of Ambition and Wildland

"One of the great financial investigative journalists, Peter S. Goodman delivers a meticulously detailed account of how the billionaire class has hijacked the world's economy, feasting on calamity, shirking taxes, all the while spouting bromides about compassionate capitalism. I so wish this tale of limitless greed and hypocrisy was a novel or a mini-series and not the truth about the world in which we live. Reader, prepare to be enraged." -- BARBARA DEMICK, author of Nothing to Envy and Eat the Buddha

"New York Times global economics correspondent Goodman mounts a scathing critique of the greed, narcissism, and hypocrisy that characterize those in 'the stratosphere of the globe-trotting class'... An urgent, timely, and compelling message with nearly limitless implications." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"Impressively detailed. ... Very readable, extensively reported. ... A well-researched and lively explanation of how the global economy works, and the turning points that have enabled profiteering by the ultra-rich while undermining societal and democratic institutions." -- Charter

"Goodman is a skilled reporter whose stories of private affluence and public squalor are filled with detail and human interest." -- Wall Street Journal