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enlarge | Manufacturer: Penguin Category: EBooks
List Price: $17.00 Buy New: $9.99 You Save: $7.01 (41%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 235 reviews Sales Rank: 516
Format: Kindle Book Media: Kindle Edition Edition: Reprint Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 576
Dewey Decimal Number: 920 ASIN: B000UZJRIG
Publication Date: September 9, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Customer Reviews:
A Treasure September 14, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is very well written book by a brilliant economist. A history of a person in a very influential and challenging position offering powerful descriptions of these experiences.
Outstanding book September 11, 2008 1 out of 4 found this review helpful
Greenspan's overview of his life, the economy, and the various presidents he served under was genuinely fascinating. A self proclaimed libertarian, Greenspan has an thorough and very fair review of the economic capabilities of each president he served under. I found it very surprising and his honesty on the economy very refreshing.
A Truly Fascinating Look into Greenspan, Economics, and US Policy September 9, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
Greenspan's "The Age of Turbulence" is a tour de force, an incredibly engaging, insightful, and detailed look, not only at the life and history of the most famous economist of the U.S., but of the key economic events that have shaken, molded, and served as the crucible for the global economy of the 21st century. Make no mistake about it: this is a book that will easily become a de facto standard of the genre, and will remain so for years to come.
From the opening pages of Greenspan's introduction we immediately become aware that this book is surprisingly well written, and that Greenspan has somehow managed to coalesce the mountains of knowledge and experiences he has accumulated over some six decades of public life into an imminently accessible and, yes, understandable, text. The book commences with Greenspan's flight back from Switzerland on 9/11, and the interruption of that flight with the news of what had happened in New York City that day. Greenspan peels back the history and lets us in on his many thoughts as his flight made an emergency return to Zurich, and then, subsequently, during his interactions with persons at all levels of the government and the banking system in the weeks that followed. This opening story helps orient us to some of the duties of a Fed Chairman during times of crisis, and it is from this scene that the rest of the book's narrative is then laid out.
The book is essentially broken into two parts: the first, in which Greenspan draws us through his own learning path through the years so that we can understand how he came to master individual economic events and systems; and the second, the application of these lessons learned toward attempting to understand what he calls today's new global economy. The book proper continues with this approach of mixing personal history with mini-lessons of economics, first starting with his childhood in New York, then moving to his teen and adolescent years, his PhD work, and his eventual move into government service. We read about his childhood fascination with numbers, his studies at Julliard in music, his love of baseball, his skill in conquering huge masses of data wherever he found them, and see in his upbringing the traits that would serve him (and us) so well in his eventual role as Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Bank. As Greenspan weaves his story, we are introduced to numerous asides which explain to us many aspects of the economic system with which we may not yet fully understand or comprehend, and Greenspan deftly intertwines such didactic content in with these life events in a manner that makes us learn as we go, all the while not even realizing we are being educated as we proceed.
The sweep of the story is grand, and leaves little left unturned. We are allowed to peer into Greenspan's insights and thinking concerning Black Monday, the fall of the Berlin Wall, the Rise of China, the role of Russia in world economics, the dot com bubble and burst, and, of course, the effect of globalization as it was ensconced immediately after World War II and how it appears today. In it, Greenspan not only makes his formidable knowledge of all these subjects known, but he also tells us his beliefs about many of them, and even tries to tell us how he thinks things may look a quarter of a century from now.
Perhaps most interesting in this volume beyond its educational aspects is reading about Greenspan's inner feelings about the various personages and events with which he interacted over the years. His comments about meeting Ayn Raynd, and the impact her thinking played upon his own, are both humorous and honest. His thoughts about Nixon, which he explicates - both good and bad - yield more insight that can be used whenever we study that portion of history. His comments on Ford, Reagan, and Clinton are also quite interesting, and it is a study in personality to see how he contrasts and compares these people as he winds out his story. Its a real "extra" for readers of the Greenspan's story.
A book that is as engaging as it is insightful, "The Age of Turbulence" is truly a "must-read" for nearly anyone interested in financial markets, capitalism, global economics, and the role of U.S. foreign (and domestic) policy. Buy it to learn and to become better educated, but read it to enjoy and savor. I'll bet you'll be as surprised as I at just how truly fascinating the work turns out to be.
An OK book August 6, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Greenspan is smart and gives a good picture of how the U.S. economy works(and sometimes doesn't). Near the end of the book he talks about the regulation of markets, in particular the investment industry. He doesn't think much of regulation and says things like hedge funds perform a fundamental good in the economy. Would the country be worse off if a hundred highly leveraged hedge funds closed down tomorrow? I personally don't think so....the country may be better. Charlie Munger thinks that a lot of liquidity brings out a bad side in humans. I think this has been shown with the credit/real estate situation now. Charlie Munger says that Greenspan overdosed on Ayn Rand. I think so too. Other than that chapter near the end of the book, its a fairly worthwhile read.
brilliant book from a brilliant man July 30, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
before reading this book i never understood why so many people i consider smart think that Greendpan is extremely intelligent. Now i do
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