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David McWilliams' The Generation Game: David McWilliams Ireland 3

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As the BOTOX ECONOMY was laid bare and the financial filler of other people’s money became evident, the JAGGERS, JUGGLERS and BONO BOOMERS struggled to maintain their slice of a diminished pie.


However the author saw a possible solution to Ireland’s quandaries. Taking a trip around the globe from Shanghai to New York, from Latin America to Central Europe, he says we can learn from history and appreciate that Ireland has a unique economic resource: OUR GLOBAL TRIBE. If we exploit the demographic potential of the Diaspora, we can re-invigorate the nation. The prosperity of future Irish generations is based on harnessing the collective power of past generations. This is the global GENERATION GAME.

315 pages, Kindle Edition

First published November 11, 2005

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David McWilliams

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5 stars
16 (19%)
4 stars
38 (45%)
3 stars
24 (28%)
2 stars
6 (7%)
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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Conni Dawson.
43 reviews2 followers
October 2, 2014
The book itself was quite interesting, especially reading it now in retrospect. The writing style, however, leaves an awful lot to be desired. The author is especially fond of writing out whole paragraphs of examples.

"No music shop can do without them. They are the ones who buy all the cds, those Cream back-catalogues, top-of-the-range ipods, corporate boxes as well as Mini Coopers. They are the people who made Reeling in the Years one of the bestselling cds ever. They know words to 'An Dearg Doon', make the annual pilgrimage to the Vibe for Philo and consider nuclear power to be the spawn on the devil, while holding up France (Europe's biggest user of nuclear power) as the cradle of the Republican civilisation.

They were Ireland's first hippies and Ireland's revolutionary generation. They made Carnsore our Woodstock, drove Citroen 2CVs with 'Atomic Power,Nein Danke' stickers, picketed the British embassy, marched at Wood Quay, took condom trains and manned the 1970s' barricades."

It's interesting the first few times, but by page 100 it wears a bit thin.
Otherwise a good read though.
Profile Image for Frank Peters.
1,016 reviews59 followers
July 2, 2011
The book is really very outstanding. It was eerie reading it in 2009, since we are now seeking much of what the author predicted in 2007. He is very astute yet blunt, sometimes ride and often very funny. I had planned to rate the book much more highly, however the author completely ran out of steam in the last few chapters. He started to pontificate and be much, much, much too repetitive. For the fist 80%, I didn’t want to put the book down, yet the last 20% was boring and dreary.
Profile Image for Johanna.
26 reviews
August 14, 2008
More of a social commentary than an economics book - but for us ex-pats in Ireland it gives a good compare/contrast with the present day Ireland (if a very jaded view) to what things were like in the 80's and 90's.
111 reviews
September 24, 2011
Considering when this was published (the inside of my edition says 2007 rather than 2008 on the page here), this bopk is not as bad as he rating suggests. I think this has the potential to be an important book for either economics or history sudents in a few years.
Profile Image for B.
5 reviews
August 27, 2012
It's so scary to realize the game is applicable to any nation, what's even worse, the game is already on. Fantastic piece of study with an in-your-face attitude of the author. It's a keeper.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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