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Supercapitalism: The Transformation of Business , Democracy, and Everyday Life (Borzoi Books) Rough Cut
 
 
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Supercapitalism: The Transformation of Business , Democracy, and Everyday Life (Borzoi Books) Rough Cut [Englisch] [Gebundene Ausgabe]

Robert B. Reich
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Produktinformation

  • Gebundene Ausgabe: 288 Seiten
  • Verlag: Knopf (4. September 2007)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0307265617
  • ISBN-13: 978-0307265616
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 23,6 x 16,6 x 3 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 3.0 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (1 Kundenrezension)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 222.752 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)

Mehr über den Autor

Robert B. Reich
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Produktbeschreibungen

From Booklist

Reich, professor of public policy and former secretary of labor, argues that as the U.S. has grown stronger as a capitalist economy, it has grown weaker as a democratic nation. Reich begins by looking at the political and economic history that has contributed to the particular brand of capitalism and democracy practiced in the U.S. and how democracy is threatened as more and more Americans are engrossed in their roles as consumers and investors and less so as citizens. He recalls the "almost Golden Age" of the 1950s, a period of stability as large corporations, big labor, and government managed the interests of consumers, workers, management, and investors for the "common good." The spread of capitalism to a global level hasn't corresponded with a spread of democracy throughout the world and has led to some negative social consequences at home, including widening inequalities and a shrinking social safety net. Reich asserts that although Americans dislike what lower wages are doing to us as a nation, when weighed against lower prices or higher return on investments, we vacillate or look the other way. Reich uses tables and charts and plain speech to describe how the economy has grown so efficient and effective that the human equation is lost and how the democracy has become less and less responsive to common values. As citizens, we need to "make our purchases and investments a social choice as well as a personal one," Reich maintains. Bush, Vanessa

Pressestimmen

“Smart and provocative . . . Reich’s proposed responses to supercapitalism are at once bold and surprising . . . [he] challenges us to think deeply about political economy.”
-News & Observer

“The book succeeds brilliantly. Clear-eyed, well-reasoned, and deeply insightful, Supercapitalism is must reading for anyone interested in the fate of our country and its institutions . . . timely and important reading for a country in deep distress.”
-Kansas.com

“Critically important . . . the value of this book isn’t in proposing a specific policy prescription. It’s about waking up and educating several generations of Americans who can’t seem to understand that you can’t have it all for free . . . It’s the most important message anyone can impart today.”
-San Francisco Bay Guardian

“A grand debunking of the conventional wisdom . . . the main thrust of Reich’s argument is right on target . . Reich documents in lurid detail the explosive growth of corporate lobbying expenditures and campaign contributions since the 1970s.”
-The New York Times Book Review

“Reich is that most exotic of species: an economist who can write.”
-San Francisco magazine

Supercapitalism is not a polemic or a call to arms. Reich is merely trying to dent capitalism’s rock-star status while suggesting to a dazed citizenry that, as Shakespeare said of Caesar’s Rome, the fault is not in our stars but in ourselves.”
-San Francisco Chronicle

“Surprising . . . Reich paints a disturbing portrait of a world in which corporations have become our quasi-government.”
-Sunday Star-Ledger

“An engaging and insightful account.”
-Harvard Business Review

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Von Donald Mitchell TOP 500 REZENSENT
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Robert Reich provides little new information in this superficial look at how global competition emerged in the last 60 years and makes questionable recommendations for how to improve matters. Unless you feel compelled to read every book that Professor Reich writes, you can skip this one.

Unlike many commentators who praise or criticize business while ignoring society, Professor Reich attempts to reconcile the two. He is tougher on consumers than on business: Business is supposed to focus on making profits, and consumers who complain about business should realize that serving more interests could raise prices and cut customer benefits.

Where Professor Reich gets worried is when competition for government favor becomes part of beating your business rival, when success in business causes a widening of income and net worth within the society, and citizen's interests are ignored by the political process. He feels that all of those factors are a problem now and are likely to get worse in the future.

Professor Reich proposes very few solutions . . . and ones that aren't likely to be implemented. For income distribution, he wants to make the top rates in income higher (like in the 1950s), directly tax corporate shareholders on their share of corporate profits (to further boost the bite on the rich), and provide more of a social safety net for those who lose their jobs or have temporary problems. The political likelihood of those things happening is certainly quite low.

In the field of corporate governance, he wants corporations to lose the right to sue and lobby government. Instead of suing companies, you'll sue individuals . . . something he feels would improve behavior quite a lot. Now, can you imagine business wanting to do those things?

Wealth creation has probably never been more democratic in the United States. By studying the Forbes 400, we see that the great wealth is mostly new wealth, generated by entrepreneurs who mostly played by the rules. Education and access to capital to start up one's own business have never been more available.

It's inevitable that income and wealth distribution will widen in a global economy. Why? The best will get paid on a global rather than a national scale while the least effective will have to compete with more people who are already paid a lot less. When the Berlin Wall fell, this effect was inevitable.

I believe that having a non-responsive federal government is a problem, but that problem will probably have to be solved by the creation of a new political party (or conversion of an existing one) with a focus on representing the broad interests of citizens that corporations don't care about.

I also think Professor Reich doesn't appreciate the extent to which the federal government's power will continue to wane versus the power of the largest and most effective companies. Government is going the way of agriculture in terms of becoming less important, except where corruption makes it hard to do business.
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161 von 167 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
The Balance of Capitalism and Democracy 17. September 2007
Von Izaak VanGaalen - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
According to Robert Reich, former Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration, there was a time when capitalism and democracy where almost perfectly balanced. This was the period of 1945 to 1975, which he calls the "Not Quite Golden Age." During this period there was a three-way social contract among big business, big labor, and big government. Each made sure that they as well as the other two received a fair share of the pie. Unions recieved their wages and benefits, business their profits, and regulatory agencies had their power. It was also a time when the gap between the rich and the poor was the narrowest in our history. It was not quite the golden age because women and minorities were still second class citizens, but at least there was hope.

Fast forward to 2007, capitalism is thriving and democracy is sputtering. Why has capitlism become supercapitalism and democracy become enfeebled? Reich explains that it was a combination of things: deregulation, globe spanning computer networks, better transportation, etc. The changes were mainly a result of technological breakthroughs; unlike many leftists, he is not conspiratorial thinker. The winner of this great transformation was the consumer/investor and the loser was the citizen/wage earner. The consumer has more choices than ever before and at reasonable prices. The investor has unprecedented opportunities to make profits. The citzen, however, is not doing well. The average citizen does not have much voice - other than voting - in the body politic. And on the wage earner has been stagnating for many years. The most salient illustration of this trend is Walmart. Walmart delivers the goods at low prices, but the trade-off is low wages for their employees. We justify this dilemma, as Reich nicely puts it, because "The awkward truth is that most of us are of two minds."

As a left-leaning author, Reich makes some startling pronouncements. One, stop treating corporations as human beings. They are neither moral or immoral, they are merely "bundles of contracts." I couldn't agree more. Stop expecting corporations to be socially responsible, see them for what they are: profit-seeking organizations. Any socially responsible action is a ruse to bolster the bottom line anyway. Don't even encourage them to be socially responsible because it will wrongly lead us to believe that they are solving problems when they are not. Corporations play by the rules that they are given and it is up to citizens and their elected representatives to change the rules.

This is no easy task in the age of supercapitalism. There are currently 38,000 registered lobbyists in Washington DC in a virtual arms race of spending with each other to buy favors from our so-called representatives. The only way citizens can compete with this is not by hiring more lobbyists but advocating through new media outlets such as the internet and cable tv. This, according to Reich, is currently to most effective way to make government more responsive.

The question that remains, after reading this book, is will consumers be willing to sacrifice their low prices to achieve their goals as citizens. If the answer is yes, we can possibly rebalance the equation between democracy and capitalism; if not, we are left to the not so tender mercies of supercapitalism.
63 von 67 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
A thoughtful, realistic view of our present situation 11. Oktober 2007
Von Marshall Goldsmith - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
My friend Joanie's father was uneducated and had a very poor work ethic. Yet he worked for a union for 30 years, retired in his 50's and collected health care and pension benefits for 30 more years. His wife did not work, they lived in a nice home in the suburbs and he put three kids through college.
He was fortunate enough to have been born in the right place at the right time (as well as being of the preferred race and sex).
His grandson, Jared, Joanie's son, is 25, has three years of college education, works very hard (about 60 hours per week), lives with his mother and will probably never be able to afford the home and lifestyle experienced by his grandfather.
While the US GDP has grown rapidly, the benefits of the process are not readily visible to Jared - or millions of other young people like him.
Supercapitalism does an excellent job of explaining what has happened to the US economy - and why Jared is having a harder time than his grandfather.
While the term 'fair and balanced' is overused by parts of the media, this book is actually 'fair and balanced'!
Rather than bashing corporations - and corporate executives - Reich points out that they should be expected to do what they do - provide the best products at the lowest prices for consumers and provide a competitive return for stockholders.
He also says that we, as citizens, should become more actively involved in making decisions that are in the best interest of our country.
Reich discusses a major roadblock for citizens to overcome when he notes, "But the largest impediment to reform is one brazen fact: Many politicians and lobbyists want to continue to extort money from the private sector. That's how politicians keep their hold on power and lobbyists keep their hold on money."
Supercapitalism presents a clear analysis of why we are where we are - and a call to action for citizens to become more involved in promoting the common good.
77 von 85 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Whether or not you agree with Reich SUPERCAPITALISM opens up a dialogue on economics and social responsibility 10. September 2007
Von WTDK - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Robert Reich makes a compelling argument that supercapitalism has robbed democracy of much of its power. Supercapitalism by the definition presented in the book is simple--the consumer is king and prices ALWAYS go down. What Reich looks at is the cost of low prices to companies, society, the individual and its impact on the workings of democracy. So how is democracy compromised? Reich also points out that the rise of different lobbying groups, the cost of politics and globalization as contributing to this process. This isn't a surprise. It has just become more pronounced with time.

It's not due to some large conspiracy or any hidden political agenda as much as it is driven by consumption. Ultimately Reich argues that it robs the common citizen of any control over democracy. It's not surprising that this is a highly charged issue because the economics of what benefits society (or "the common good" as Reich calls it)often gets tangled up in the web of politics. Reich also points out that the cost of supercompetitiveness, constantly falling prices is a loss to the economic and social health of America. Reich points out that everyone wants to get the lowest price possible but he also suggests that we must balance that with our desire to have decent wages and benefits. He also points out that the move towards regulation was initiated by government and that corporations went along because it kept out competition and guaranteed a top and bottom for prices allowing companies to get a profit without fear of cutting prices so low that it would put them out of business.

I should point out that this is an oversimplification of Reich's points but it does capture some of the concepts. He also makes some suggestions that would help keep the free market afloat without undermining democracy and allowing consumers to still benefit from competitive pricing. Since this is economics we are discussing politics is mixed in and might color whether or not you agree with his points.

Reich's style is breezy for a book that looks at economics, democracy and the erosion of wages, benefits. Reich comes across as fair balanced and thoughtful even as he sells his take on what is undermining American society. Ultimately it's a worthwhile book to read simply because it opens up dialogue on the social cost of constantly lowering prices and how it impacts those who live next door to us.
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