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Rating: Summary: Thoughtful and Passionate Review: As we head into the last stages of a presidential campaign where the economy is a top issue, this engaging book is a must-read. Mandel provides a robust critique of economic policy and lays out a road map for regaining exuberant growth. The key he argues lies in making "support for technology...central to economic policy," Yet, such a task is anything but easy. Mandel bemoans the fact that "unfortunately, technology rarely makes an appearance...in Washington economic policy discussions." As a result, while policy makers may talk about technology-driven growth, in Washington it's "the poor step-child, receiving a microscopic amount of time, energy and money from politicians." He's right.Mandel goes on to "out" the enemies of exuberant growth, including naming names of economists who for all their claim to fame, actually neither understand nor support technologically-driven economic growth. Here's a Ph.D. economist saying that the emperor (the economics profession) has no clothes (they don't understand how the 21st century innovation economy works. He goes on to lay out how its not just mainstream economists who don't get it, but that on "both on the left and the right, there is a profound discomfort with technological change." In spite of this, Mandel is optimistic about the future, given America's advantages in financial markets, entrepreneurship, and technology. Mandel got it right (albeit he was a bit premature) when he predicted "The Coming Internet Depression" (who besides Mandel had the foresight to buck conventional wisdom in early 2000 that the Internet economy was going to go through a big correction). I hope he has it right now when he predicts good economic times for the next decade at least. He lays out some interesting and useful policy proposals (although my only complaint with the book was that I wish he had gone into more detail on these) that could help spur growth in the future. All in all a great book and on top of that an enjoyable, "journalistic" read. I only hope economists take the time to read it.
Rating: Summary: Correction to the First Reviewer Review: In September of 2000, Mandel released his first book "The Coming Internet Depression." Then, he stated that the Dot.com stocks were going to take a beating. In fact, the NASDAQ had already imploded in the first quarter of 2000. Mandel thought this event would have dire economic consequences for decades. However, we never experienced a "Depression." Instead we experienced the mildest recession on record. In other words, Mandel's judgment at the time was way too "Depressed." This time around, Mandel's judgment is way too "Exuberant." Much of what Mandel says is correct. The U.S. economy remains the World's powerhouse of innovation. Our society is better at developing and implementing innovations. This is due to our being accepting of risk, our flexible labor markets, our entrepreneurship climate, and our capital markets for financing innovation being unparalleled. So far, Mandel is right. He continues his case along the "New Economy" theory, whereby our unprecedented level of innovation will have long lived benefit including superior labor productivity and economic growth for decades to come. This is correct, and is a truism by now. This theory is seventy years old, as first stated by Joseph Schumpeter, an Austrian economist who passed away in 1950. His brilliant concept was "creative destruction." This is where new technologies displace jobs, but replaces these by higher value added ones. Mandel also believes that our economic sustainable economic growth rate is much higher than we have historically thought. Well, Alan Greenspan has said the same thing for years, and has actually implemented his vision with his lacks monetary policy. Thus, in terms of technology and economic growth much of what Mandel says is true. But, there is no new material here. So, where does Mandel go astray? Mandel's analysis has overlooked the combination of demographic forces (the aging of the Baby boomers) and their staggering related fiscal costs (Social Security and Medicare). If you think of the Federal Government as an insurance company with predictable claims liabilities; this insurer is insolvent. The retirement benefit claims (Social Security and Medicare benefits) the elderly have against this insurer way exceed its premium earned (social security taxes) and its reserves (Social Security trust fund). This gap on a net present value basis, as disclosed in the Social Security and Medicare trustees' reports, amounts to $72 trillion! What are the implications of this $72 trillion? It means that a huge portion of capital will be necessary to support Social Security and Medicare benefits of U.S. citizen. This will cause: a) A dwindling of capital available for more productive use such as financing R&D; b)A huge rise in demand for money, which will increase its cost (rates). Thus, rates will go up. This will slow the rate of investment, capital formation, labor productivity, and economic growth. c)An increase in the Government debt level to potentially unsustainable level. This is a huge issue Mandel has underestimated. The concept that technological innovation can bail us out of this fiscal crisis is utopic. Every serious economist of either side of the aisle knows that. Mandel, instead chooses to criticize them all for being pessimistic. By doing so, he looses all credibility. For excellent fiscal analysis, I recommend Laurence Kotlikoff's "The Coming Generational Storm" and Robert Stowe England "Global Aging and Financial Markets" and "The Fiscal Challenge of an Aging Industrial World." Also, Robert Rubin "In an Uncertain World" and Paul Krugman's "The Great Unraveling" are also very interesting on economic and fiscal issues. Joseph Stiglitz "The Roaring Nineties" is a good piece of economics revisionism. Finally, Roger Alcaly's "The New Economy" is a better analysis on the history and prospect of technological innovation.
Rating: Summary: Big Risks Big Rewards Review: Mandel's thesis is that economic progress and technological innovation are inextricably linked and the U.S. is uniquely positioned to take advantage of it. Like many good ideas the link seems intuitive, but as Mandel shows, many respected economists are skeptical of the contribution of technology to growth. This book clearly defines its case and argues forcefully for a change in the prevailing wisdom. Mandel distinguishes "exuberant growth" exemplified by the internet boom of the last decade from the "cautious" growth of the U.S. in the 1970's or Europe and Japan today. Cautious growth, "suggestion box" growth, is marked by an emphasis on personal savings, fiscal conservatism, and gradualism. This is "capital fundamentalism". But there is little evidence to show that a high savings and investment rate without the jumpstart of technological discovery yields much growth. High savings rates in Japan and Europe have not placed these economies in the vanguard of economic progress. Nor has our historically low savings rate stalled our leadership. Exuberant growth in the U.S. economy is supported by our "high performance" financial markets. The efficient way in which huge sums of capital are directed to new ideas by venture capital firms and the high-yield (junk) bond market make it possible for breakaway developments to bubble up through the economy. Stock options, maligned for their high profile abuse, serve an important funadmental role by securing the allegiance of valuable wage earners and making them partners in a risky enterprise. A "hot" economy is a creative one fostering new technologies and economic progress. It is also a risky economy "pulsating" with the flow of capital to the Next Big Thing which may in the end be nothing more than a bubble. The internet has proven to be a disruptive innovation (Clayton Christensen's evocative phrase) creating jobs and wealth. Our efforts in Space and nuclear power have have been less successful. Areas that Mandel lists for possible breakthroughs include biotechnology, energy (e.g. fuel cells), wireless communications, and nanotechnology. High octane economies make for risky markets. Mandel urges greater corporate transparency and multi-year income tax averaging to soften the tax burden of boom years and to cushion the lean ones. Implicit in all this is the need for a strong commitment to research and development in promising technologies. Without technological innovation job markets stagnate, skill sets become commonplace and vulnerable to the cheapest provider (e.g. "offshoring"). Exuberant growth is not assured. Mandel is not shy about naming the economists he sees impeding the necessary support for technological initiatives that foster growth. For Mandel their blind spot is "the single biggest failure" of modern economics. This is a book intended to stimulate vigorous debate.
Rating: Summary: No wonder this book is a dud Review: Michael Mandel's book has laid an egg, but you can only understand why if you make the mistake of picking up this book and reading it. This same gent, who "predicted" the Internet depression (after it already happened) now seeks to burden us with the believe that all these hobgoblins out there are the "enemies of growth." But his arguments are unconvincing and poorly presented, in prose that is hackneyed and academic-dull.
Rating: Summary: No wonder this book is a dud Review: Michael Mandel's book has laid an egg, but you can only understand why if you make the mistake of picking up this book and reading it. This same gent, who "predicted" the Internet depression (after it already happened) now seeks to burden us with the believe that all these hobgoblins out there are the "enemies of growth." But his arguments are unconvincing and poorly presented, in prose that is hackneyed and academic-dull.
Rating: Summary: Strawmen galore Review: The problem with this book is that it posits one strawman after another--particularly liberal economists like Krugman. But the basic flaw in his argument is that there really aren't a lot of people out there who are "against progress and innovation," no matter how many rationalizations he may use to present that thesis.
So what we have here is an author trying to drum up a "controversy" that doesn't exist, which doesn't work on an intellectual level and apparently isn't selling many books either, judging from the Amazon sales rank.
Rating: Summary: Arguing for Faster Economic Growth through Innovation Review: This book makes a simple argument. First, economies need new technologies that are successful in order to grow more rapidly. Second, such more rapid growth benefits everyone if appropriate attention is paid to social and environmental risks of the new technology. Third, many people automatically oppose faster growth out of fear for the potential harm such growth can bring. Fourth, without a social consensus on seeking new technologies that can bring helpful innovations, there will be slower economic progress. Fifth, there seems to be enough potential for improvement in energy, nanotechnology, biotechnology, advanced forms of telecommunication (especially portable devices) and space, that one or more are likely to bear fruit if well pursued. Sixth, government needs to keep incentives in place to encourage investment in these ways and to create as large a Ph.D. workforce in advanced technologies as possible. Seventh, without such a focus, many college educated people will see their incomes either grow more slowly or decline in real terms.
There are some helpful sections in the book such as the evidence for the role that technological innovation seems to have played in the past. But most of the book seems to simply repeat the same argument in slightly different forms and from slightly different angles. As a result, I had a feeling like "Where's the beef?"
Economics is a poor platform to make this argument. Dr. Mandel tries to overcome that by pointing out the quality of life and "fun" aspects of faster technological growth. But in areas like medical research using biotechnology, he feels constrained to mostly look at the economic implications rather than the noneconomic benefits.
I also wondered how devoted people are in opposing technology. In the cases where opposition is strong (such as nuclear energy), the caution seems more than warranted. I felt like that part of the case was overstated.
He is also concerned that many more foreign students are getting technology Ph.D.'s in the United States. It's almost a protectionist sort of argument. U.S. based companies are full of Ph.D.'s who were born elsewhere, became educated here, and now live and work here.
I think he would have made better use of his time to write a magazine article with the evidence that he presents here. There isn't enough to justify a book based on his arguments.
But I like the book's title: Rational exuberance can be good for one and all.
Rating: Summary: I found the arguments unconvincing Review: This is a book where I agree with the main premise, but dislike many of the conclusions as well as the delivery. The main premise is that the periods of great technological change are times of great economic growth, which is something that is very hard to disagree with. From this, the author argues that all policies should favor the development of new technologies and takes a few shots at the people he thinks are opposed to such policies. Unfortunately, his arguments are shallow and unclear. First and foremost, he neglects history. The onset of the industrial revolution was an era of great technological advancement and led to a dramatic increase in wealth. However, we cannot forget many of the consequences of this advancement. In England, it led to rapid loss of their forests and in the industrial regions, the air was so dirty from the smokestacks that people could barely see. I remember reading of an instance where a lengthy weather pattern that kept the pollution in an English city led to thousands of deaths. There is also a classic case in the United States where a river was so polluted that it actually caught fire. Therefore, some of those he classifies as enemies of growth are asking the very important questions that need to be asked concerning the consequences of technological improvements. Mandel also derides those who preach against MASSIVE federal budget deficits. He quotes former secretary of commerce Peter Peterson, who said in 2003 "When such deficits are incurred in order to fund a rising transfer from young to old, they also constitute an injustice against further generations." Mandel's next sentence is "This is the language of morality, rather than economics. From this perspective, taking on debt is wrong because it reflects profligacy and wastefulness, and shows that the government is out of control." It is immoral to saddle the next generation with an enormous debt, so Mandel's statement is inappropriate in that area. I have listened to Pete Peterson argue against massive budget deficits for two decades and his point has always been in opposition to massive deficits that require large expenditures for interest payments and take capital away from the free markets, where it would be the most efficiently utilized. Mandel then does a little bashing of former Senator William Proxmire, who regularly gave out Golden Fleece Awards for what he considered outrageous government spending. The classic example of the $600 toilet seat is mentioned. Mandel then states, "Unfortunately, this antiwaste, antidebt mind-set is inimical to innovation, which inevitably requires going down a lot of different dead-end roads before finding success. . . From the perspective of a deficit hawk, exuberant growth is intensely disturbing." This is simply not true, rapid economic growth does not disturb the deficit hawks, in fact they welcome it. What disturbs them is the unarguable fact that government spending is inherently wasteful. Mandel seems to believe that the only way new technologies develop is by throwing enormous amounts of money at them. The dot-com bubble and burst shows that this is nonsense. The Internet companies that survived the implosion were almost exclusively those that spent well within their means and were fairly conservative in their business plans. Also, many of the new technologies that are so highly praised in the book were developed on minimal budgets. This book is little more than a collection of arguments in favor of massive federal budget deficits, cloaked in a nebulous mantra of "exuberant growth." I found very few of the arguments convincing, in many cases they deal with peoples beliefs taken out of context and inaccurately. To sum them up, his point is that if we are courageous enough to accept the right amount of debt, then enough new technologies will be developed to grow the economy into surplus. Mandel presents no conclusive evidence in support of this thesis, and extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. I was also unimpressed with the subtitle of the book, as quite frankly he silences no one and while many people will raise legitimate concerns, few are really enemies of economic growth.
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