The Finance Curse, Nicholas Shaxson
The Finance Curse, Nicholas Shaxson
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The Finance Curse
How Global Finance Is Making Us All Poorer

Author: Nicholas Shaxson

Narrator: Simon Mattacks

Unabridged: 12 hr 1 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 11/05/2019


Synopsis

Financial journalist Nicholas Shaxson first made his reputation studying the “resource curse,” seeing first-hand the disastrous economic and societal effects of the discovery of oil in Angola. He then gained prominence as an expert on tax havens, revealing the dark corners of that world long before the scandals of the Panama and Paradise Papers. Now, in The Finance Curse, he brings his knowledge to bear in an eye-opening investigation of how banks have overbalanced the economies of Western democracies, exerting an outsize effect on policy-making and effecting a brain drain of the brightest and best to the financial industry and its offshoots, much to the detriment of both business and broader society.How did we get to this situation? Shaxson describes the transformation of banks over the twentieth century as they changed from relatively small institutions that did well for themselves by serving the needs of business, to unfettered global behemoths. As the world reeled from World War II, the banks grew bigger in the post-war restructuring, experimenting with esoteric financial instruments like the Eurobonds in the 1960s, and then in the 1970s and ’80s taking increasingly high risks in order to compete with each other to return more profit to their demanding shareholders. Now these megabanks spread the fiscal gospel that business must be taxed as little as possible, that corporations need rights previously granted to humans, and encourage a fight to the bottom between states to provide the most subsidized environment for big business, in the name of “competitivity.”We need strong financial institutions―but when finance grows too big it becomes a curse. The Finance Curse is the explosive story of how finance got a stranglehold on society and how we might release ourselves from its grasp.

About Nicholas Shaxson

Nicholas Shaxson is the author of Treasure Islands: Tax Havens and the Men who Stole the World and Poisoned Wells: The Dirty Politics of African Oil. He is a journalist, campaigner, and world expert on both tax havens and financial centers, as well as the Resource Curse. His writing has appeared in Vanity Fair, Financial Times, the Economist, the Economist Intelligence Unit, and many others. He lives in Germany.


Reviews

Goodreads review by David on September 27, 2019

A bright light goes on while reading The Finance Curse. Nicholas Shaxson connects a number of phenomena around the world that collectively oppress billions of people. He likens it all to the petroleum curse, where developing nations’ citizens end up worse off for the discovery of oil. In this case,......more

Goodreads review by Ksensei on August 11, 2019

I really wish I could give this book a better rating. I dove in prepared to agree with the author and discover the nuance of what an overly robust financial sector does to economies, why, how and what to do about it. Some of that Shaxson did deliver and there were a few chapters I found quite engagi......more

Goodreads review by Tejas on April 15, 2024

Each chapter starts with a promising chapter name but you find a pattern of repeatedly boring the reader with trivial information instead of technicalities behind the cheating involved in financial world. Though there are few insights provided but they are shredded all over the book in a disconnecte......more

Goodreads review by Tonstant on December 30, 2019

The Finance Curse is the reason I will not achieve my 2019 GoodReads Reading Challenge of 200 books, but it was worth it. This is a very detailed review of the myriad ways the finance industry is undermining democracy, good government, and the economy. It is a well-known truism that resource-depende......more

Goodreads review by D.A. on November 25, 2020

Warning: do not read this book just before bedtime. It’s not good for blood pressure, nor for sleep. The author is angry about the financial world – how it’s run – in whose interests it’s run – and his anger is, alas, infectious. I started this book pretty sceptical about the City and finance in gener......more