Kann eine mächtige Nation wie die USA pleitegehen? Bedrohen hohe Schulden weltweit unser kollektives Wohlergehen? Ray Dalio, »New York Times«-Bestsellerautor und einer der größten Investoren unserer Zeit, erläutert die Gründe für seine Befürchtungen und liefert eine Blaupause, um die aktuelle Situation besser verstehen und entsprechend handeln zu können. Dalio wurde zum führenden Global-Macro-Investor, indem er die Muster der Geschichte studierte und unkonventionelle Perspektiven auf das entwickelte, was heute auf den Märkten passiert. Aus 35 Fallbeispielen der letzten 100 Jahre destilliert Dalio in seinem neuen Buch den zentralen Mechanismus hinter den großen Schuldenzyklus. Diese bahnbrechende Analyse bietet Anlegern das nötige Rüstzeug, um die Bedrohung frühzeitig zu erkennen, richtig einzuschätzen und das Schlimmste zu verhindern.
Raymond Dalio (born August 8, 1949) is an American investor, hedge fund manager, and philanthropist. Dalio is the founder of investment firm Bridgewater Associates, one of the world's largest hedge funds.
It's kinda incredible (if you ask me), but Ray Dalio has managed to wite yet another book on the very same topic (big & small cycles in local/global economies) and it's ... a-must-read again. Bah.
No, but seriously, get it - it's a no-brainer buy. Many good points, many good observations - quite hard to follow as an audiobook (without graphs and illustrations), and even in the Kindle form I occasionally had to stop and process some shortcuts he made. TBH not all chapters are for every audience, but the ones that are supposed to be generally understandable for everyone already bring a powerful message - hope is not a strategy, we should learn from the past, the post-WW2 period is over, multilateral liberalism is over and we're (unfortunately) back to the rules of direct, brutal strength. For the latest 2 generations (at least) - it's a shock. The faster the wake-up comes, the better.
OK, but back to the book: - it covers the general theory of cycles (already introduced earlier by Dalio) - its detailed justification/clarification - examples from the past (for various countries) - a summary and even a brief hints on solutions
I've started listening to audiobook (in my Everand subscription), but the book is so good that Ive bought e-book as well & I already know I'll be coming back to it regularly. Good stuff.
Demagogues and sophistry are going to ruin the world You added a status update
Usually demagogues from the left share support on the people who are in poverty, and on the lower spectrum, where they demagogues on the right will share support on people who are middle class to hold their power All through out history You added a status update
Who controls the autocracy and if they do radical enough policies to control the oligarchs in there country and how far and how serious will such governments take and how much dictatorial they will be, power controls but absolute control Autocracy from democracy is How nationalist they'll be.
Dark sky’s in southern Alberta and over Canada prairies😞
Top it off we have climate deniers who completely ignore the last decade Canada 🇨🇦 has been in a state of emergency 🚨 fire 🔥 status…. And that this year we got 25% of our ground water 💦 this year…. I don’t know how it could get any worst, expanding to the global over population areas that only have 25% of there ground water 💦 with looking at the crisis that is going and transpiring on hard money and on Fiat money.
Might just be the dark haze of smoke developing over the prairies but I think we’re in hell…. Crops are going to be stunted either from lack of ground water 💧 or the smoke haze and the cattle can’t be on the farm cause they rely on the small water sheds on the farm that are well fed that are near empty….
Call me a nihilistic person 🧍♂️ but this year is looking forward to winter…. And it’s not even summer yet…
How Countries Go Broke: Introduction & Chapter One https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/how-co... 5 big forces affecting cycles of peace & prosperity vs conflict & depression: (1) Big debt cycle; (2) internal politics & social harmony; (3) geopolitics; (4) big acts of nature eg droughts, floods, earthquakes, pandemics etc; (5) technology
Popping of the bubble occurs due to a combination of (1) a tightening of money and (2) the prior rate of debt growth being unsustainable.
Chapt 2: The Mechanics in Words and Concepts https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/how-co... When bond yields are low relative to inflation, bonds will be sold and inflation assets will be bought, and vice versa. "From what I can see, we are likely entering the very turbulent stage in the overall Big Cycle driven by the interactions of these five big forces, and the resulting changes in the world order will be big...By “long-term (big) debt cycle,” I mean the cycle of building up debt assets and debt liabilities over long periods of time (i.e., successive short-term debt cycles) to amounts that eventually become unmanageable. This leads to a combination of big debt restructurings and big debt monetizations that produce a period of big market and economic turbulence." -Ray Dalio Big debt crises come about when the amounts of debt assets and debt liabilities become too large relative to the amount of money in existence and/or the amounts of goods and services in existence. The greater the size of the debt assets and debt liabilities relative to the real incomes being produced, the more difficult the balancing act is, so the greater the likelihood of a debt-caused downturn in the markets and economy. A sure sign of moving toward a debt crisis is when there is a large and rising amount of borrowing that is being used to pay for the debt service.
Chpt 3: The Mechanics in Numbers and Equations 1/ Debts relative to income (Debt/GDP) https://tradingeconomics.com/united-s... [(Future exp ex-int - future income) + current debt*(1+i/r)] / [current income*(1+g)] 2/ Debt service relative to income (interest expense/government revenue >useful vs Debt/GDP) https://www.cbo.gov/publication/61172 3/ Nominal interest rates relative to a) inflation rates and b) nominal income growth rates (i.e., inflation plus real growth) 4/ Debts and debt service relative to savings (e.g., reserves) =>countries with very high debt levels, very large deficits, low savings, and very high and very fast rising interest rates have a very high risk of a debt default or debt devaluation crisis.
Chapter Four & Chapter Five - Part 2: The Archetypical Sequence Leading to Central Governments and Central Banks Going Broke https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/how-co...
'My Trip to Washington to Get in Sync with Republican and Democratic Leaders on the Budget and Debt Situation' -Ray Dalio 27 Jun 2025 https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/my-tri...
Ray Dalio: When countries have too much debt, lowering interest rates and devaluing the currency that the debt is denominated in is the preferred path government policy makers are most likely to take, so it pays to bet on it happening. https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/most-i...
There is little here that is original from the perspective of an investor, macroeconomist, or politician. Dalio writes about pretty basic things with the kind of verbal flourishes that imply he is the only person who understands these dynamics. This is by no means a bad introduction to fiscal and monetary dynamics, and investing through these macro cycles, but it is a far cry from the intellectual tome it strives to be.
I’ve been a fan of Ray’s since I’ve started investing and familiarizing myself with market trends, but I’ve never taken the time to read his work as an author - so as a first “Dalio book” for me my review is a bit biased as I’m reading a lot of these ‘principles’ alongside their definitions for the first time. (I can see how some may have found parts of it repetitive if they’ve read his previous books, but I enjoyed the context as someone who hasn’t)
Dalio releasing this book in March of 2025 would come to a shock to someone who read it that didn’t know the date it was published. The analysis on the federal reserve’s independence (alongside its importance), state of the government debt, and overall world order is shockingly appropriate.
I found the historical debt cycle review of China (yet also a bit anecdotal) and Japan more than worthy of inclusion. China’s resilience economically matches up with what I learned from my reading of “Chip Wars” earlier last year. While Japan’s debt problem is as topical as ever as I’m writing this review in January of 2026.
Provided with Ray’s reasoning for his “3% 3-part solution” I have to agree with him. I think cutting spending, tax increases, and a small yet meaningful interest rate cut makes sense especially given the current /good/ economic conditions to do it in. That being said, his remarks about the current political affairs ongoing in the US paint a larger picture of why he points out in the book with detailed data (rightfully so) with how unprecedentedly divided the US is on both spectrums that a bipartisan agreement would be an almost unthinkable task (but one can hope).
That being said, I appreciated his take on the issue and the historical patterns he pointed out to solidify the understanding of why he was led to his solution, and predictions of the future - which I thought wrapped the book up quite well.
I also appreciated his thoughtful instructions on how to read the book (different per chapter!). As someone who’s been reading “market jargon” for a few years I can only imagine how intimidating some of this information would be if I wasn’t as familiar with the topics at hand.
Dahlio makes big claims about the “big debt cycle” but has no evidence to back it up throughout the book.
His fundamentals on economics are mostly good, but also through an investors lens.
Towards the end of the book, his core premise reveals part of the issue, which is he has a presupposition that with the ability to capture all knowledge the future can be predicted. It’s a pretty obviously faulty premise.
The graphs in the book are mainly ascientific and serve mainly to try to illustrate his points.
The history overview are a bit odd and tangential though not necessarily wrong.
His political section is already dated (idk why you would write current events) and overly naive.
Anyone interested in this book would be better off reading other economists, historians, and political writers.
Nearly a century ago by now, my father taught graduate students business cycle theory, while he was finishing his degree in agricultural economics. As he became invested in agricultural statistics over his long career, he learned that all generalities are false, no matter how well they appear backed up by statistics.
Dalio’s monetarist theory of economic cycles consequently reminds me of medieval geocentrics who could calculate the motions of stars and planets with considerable accuracy, even though their planet was certainly not the center of the universe.
Dalio is a Platonist, not an Aristotelian. A Hedgehog who sees one big thing, and not a Fox who sees many things. His writing is pretentious, arrogant, supercilious, because he has made a lot of money as a hedge fund monetarist, and in his success he wrongly sees monetarism as the Key to Understanding Economics.
Dalio‘s Top Down, almost autocratic approach to economics naturally takes the perspective of the Lords and Masters of the Universe —the Robber Barons who have taken most of the global wealth, often by trickery and legal chicanery, the movers of global markets. Theirs is indeed a Platonic Universe where only the aristoi ( the best people) really matter.
Aristotelian Economics, by contrast, works from the bottom up, focusing not on gaining the most money, but on distributing the greatest economic good for the most people, starting with the poorest of the poor. And so these economists focus on microcosms, on the moral imperative of fairness, rather than the greedy lust of covetedness. A human potentialities model of economics, as Sen & Nussbaum describe it.
Yes, we the people today are at the mercy of politically influential monetarists. But what if economists took as their Original Position the standards of living of those most in need?
Dalio ends his book with a love letter to Trump and his ilk, those artful dodgers who brought about the Crash of 2008, escaping unscathed while poorer folks lost homes and livelihoods.
Picked up this one as I belong to the group of Ray which believes current economic world order centered around US is unsustainable. However, editors of the book sadly have done an awful job. Content of the book is worth 100 pages which has been dragged to 400. He often mentions he won’t go into certain topics because it will be a digression - such digressions would have been a lot better than repeating exactly the same statements over and over.
Having said that, his concept of economic cycles resonates very well and perspective of looking at multiple events with a common lens and theme of cycles is refreshing. The book keeps you waiting till the end to see if economic indicators which he says he uses to predict the stage of cycle are explained - it never comes, just the final conclusions with graphs plotted with probability are shown without any method. Disappointing to see that from Ray Dalio who sets out on this book declaring that he wants to teach the world all the knowledge he gained over decades. None of the concepts in the book are complicated, unnecessarily readers told to skip to next if they are non professionals all throughout the book. Better thing would have been to explain the basics if author thinks whatever he is saying is complex, instead of repetitive statements all over.
Easy to notice is the presumption book carries - the Fed or in general, Central Banks are all powerful entity. In reality, Central Banks have very narrow tools which they can exercise even when they are operating independently. They can get the things wrong, but to get it very right and overturning the bad economy it takes wonders if they do. Ray Dalio has projected the Fed as God-like. Interest rates in the book have been shown as some kind of knob which central banks can easily rotate and “set”, that’s not how the reasonably free markets operate!
4* for the giving the perspective on macro cycles and big picture, 2* for the book structure and presumptions.
always interesting to read dalio’s perspective on things. his previous book, changing world order, has greatly shaped how i view the world and so far its been a solid compass to make sense of and navigate what’s going on in the world. to me, this book felt like a mix between an update on the core points of changing world order a few years down the line, as well as a deep dive on the mechanics and current state of sovereign debt, particularly that of the US.
i feel like this book is structured less cohesively and the ideas are expressed less lucidly than in changing world order. it doesn’t explain every term or concept and often leaves reasoning steps in arguments implicit, which, combined with the fact that this book often quite technical, makes this book less accessible to lay people (read: macroeconomics enthusiasts who are by no means professionals) like myself.
still, for anyone interested in macroeconomics and broadly subscribes to dalio’s views on the cyclicality of economies, countries, and geopolitics, i do recommend this as a follow up to changing world order.
Look, I know everyone is not as well versed in Dalio’s literature as me. For many, this is the first book they’ve read. Because of that, I can excuse the first 100 pages of this book being largely repetitive and arguably verbatim of what was included in his last book, The Changing World Order. However, after page 100, this man starts to cook. It gets a bit technical, even for a finance major, but he does a great job of describing the problem we and the rest of the world face in terms of debt and I love his visually appealing the graphs were. His solution of working down the debt-to-GDP ratio to 3% by cutting spending 4%, hiking taxes 4%, and slashing interest rates by 1% is a bit idealistic and probably over-simplified, but it would work great as a fallback plan if Congress cannot find a more palatable solution. Solid read
Enjoyed Dalio’s thesis more than I thought I would. It really got me thinking (and more worried than before) about the level of indebtedness in the west, and Dalio connected the debt theme with internal politics (populism, economic nationalism) and external politics (war, tariffs, might makes right) in a way that felt coherent and even prescient even though he only wrote it a year ago.
Loses some points because the writing style is tragic. I hated the constant signposting and hated the bold text for those who only wanted to skim. I felt these choices rewarded the disinterested person and punished those who read every page. Will probably seek out some of Dalios thoughts online in shorter form but won’t reach for another book.
Ray Dalio, the founder of Bridgewater Associates, has extensively studied and written about the cyclical nature of economies, particularly focusing on how debt cycles drive the rise and fall of nations. His recent book, "How Countries Go Broke: The Big Cycle," distills decades of research into a comprehensive framework for understanding national bankruptcy. This technical review will delve into Dalio's core concepts, emphasizing the mechanisms by which countries accumulate unsustainable debt and the inevitable consequences.
Dalio's Core Framework: The Big Debt Cycle and the Overall Big Cycle
Dalio posits that the economic machine operates through identifiable cause-effect relationships that repeat in cycles. The most critical of these is the Big Debt Cycle, which typically spans 75-100 years. This cycle is not isolated; it interacts with other major cycles, including the political cycle within countries and the geopolitical cycle between countries, all contributing to what Dalio calls the Overall Big Cycle that dictates the rise and decline of empires. Stages of the Big Debt Cycle and How Countries Go Broke: Dalio outlines a predictable progression for the Big Debt Cycle, which, if mishandled, leads to a country's financial demise:
1) Early Stage: Low Debt, High Productivity, and Sound Money: *Characteristics: After a major restructuring (often following a war or depression), debt levels are low, and there's a strong focus on productivity, sound money, and wealth accumulation. The leading power's currency often gains reserve status due to its stability and economic strength. * Mechanism: People are cautious and prioritize saving and productive investment. Borrowing is for productive purposes, leading to real economic growth.
2)Growth Stage: Credit Expansion and Leveraging: * Characteristics: As confidence grows, people increasingly borrow, believing in continued prosperity. Credit expands faster than incomes, leading to asset price appreciation and a sense of wealth. New financial instruments and intermediaries emerge. * Mechanism: Central banks typically keep interest rates low to stimulate growth, encouraging more borrowing. This "leveraging up" fuels economic activity but also creates a growing debt burden.
3)Bubble Phase: Unsustainable Debt Growth and Speculation: * Characteristics: Debt growth becomes excessive and unsustainable, used increasingly for speculative investments rather than productive ones. Asset prices become detached from their underlying earnings. This is often accompanied by a widening wealth gap. * Mechanism: The illusion of prosperity encourages more borrowing and risk-taking. People extrapolate past returns into the future, ignoring the accumulating debt. The central bank faces a dilemma: raise rates to curb inflation and the bubble (risking a downturn), or keep rates low and let the bubble inflate further.
4) Peak and Tightening: Central Bank Action or Inability to Service Debt: * Characteristics: The bubble bursts. This can be triggered by the central bank raising interest rates to curb inflation, or by the market's realization that existing debt cannot be serviced. * Mechanism: Higher interest rates make debt repayment more difficult, leading to defaults. For countries, this can manifest as difficulty in selling government bonds or a flight of capital.
5) Deleveraging: The Painful Adjustment: * Characteristics: This is the phase where debt levels decline relative to incomes. Dalio identifies four key levers for deleveraging, which are often used in combination: * Austerity (Cutting Spending): Governments, businesses, and individuals reduce spending. While necessary, this can be deflationary and lead to further income contraction, paradoxically increasing the debt burden initially. * Debt Reduction/Restructuring: Debts are written down, defaulted on, or restructured (e.g., lower interest rates, longer repayment periods). This can be painful for creditors (e.g., banks, bondholders). * Wealth Redistribution (from "Haves" to "Have-Nots"): Governments may increase taxes on the wealthy or implement policies that redistribute wealth to stimulate demand. This can lead to social and political unrest. * Monetization of Debt (Printing Money/Quantitative Easing): Central banks print money to buy government debt and other financial assets. This is often the most palatable option for policymakers but carries the risk of inflation and currency devaluation, especially if confidence in the currency is lost. * Mechanism: The goal of deleveraging is to bring debt and income back into a sustainable relationship. The "beautiful deleveraging" is achieved through a balanced mix of these four levers, allowing debt to decline relative to income without causing excessive deflation or inflation. A "ugly deleveraging" occurs when the wrong mix of policies is applied, leading to depression, hyperinflation, or social disorder.
6)Debt Crisis and Potential Bankruptcy: * Characteristics: If the deleveraging process is poorly managed, or if debt levels are simply too immense, a country can face a full-blown debt crisis, potentially leading to national bankruptcy. This is particularly true for countries that borrow in a foreign currency or those whose currency loses its reserve status. * Mechanism: The inability to roll over debt, a collapse in bond prices, soaring interest rates, and hyperinflation (if money printing becomes excessive) can all signal national bankruptcy. The ultimate consequence for a country with a reserve currency that prints its own money is often a devaluation of its currency and a loss of its reserve status.
How the Overall Big Cycle Interacts:
Dalio emphasizes that economic cycles are intertwined with political and geopolitical forces: * Internal Political Cycle: Economic hardship during deleveraging often leads to populism, political polarization, and social unrest, as the "haves" and "have-nots" clash over wealth distribution. * External Geopolitical Cycle: The rise and fall of empires are closely linked to their economic strength. A nation's ability to service its debt, its economic competitiveness, its share of world trade, and the strength of its currency as a reserve currency are all crucial indicators of its power. Declining economic power due to excessive debt can weaken a nation's military and its influence on the global stage, potentially leading to conflicts and a shift in the world order.
Technical Nuances and Dalio's Key Insights:
* Money vs. Credit: Dalio meticulously distinguishes between money (what you settle transactions with) and credit (a promise to deliver money). The vast majority of "money" in an economy is credit, and it's the expansion and contraction of this credit that drives economic cycles. * The Role of Central Banks: Central banks play a pivotal role in managing debt cycles through interest rate policy and quantitative easing. Their ability to print money is a powerful tool, but it has limits, especially for non-reserve currency countries or when confidence in the currency erodes. * Reserve Currency Status: Dalio highlights the immense advantage of having a reserve currency (like the USD). It allows a country to print money to pay its debts without immediate, severe inflationary consequences, as much of that newly printed money is absorbed by global demand for the reserve currency. However, even this has limits, and excessive printing can eventually undermine confidence and lead to a loss of reserve status. * Productivity as the Long-Term Driver: While debt cycles cause short-term fluctuations, Dalio stresses that long-term prosperity is ultimately driven by productivity growth. Countries that fail to improve productivity will eventually become uncompetitive, regardless of their debt management strategies.
Conclusion:
Ray Dalio's "How Countries Go Broke" provides a powerful and historically informed technical framework for understanding the mechanics of national debt crises. By emphasizing the cyclical nature of credit, the interplay of economic, political, and geopolitical forces, and the limited tools available to policymakers, Dalio offers a stark warning about the consequences of unchecked debt accumulation. His work is a crucial guide for policymakers and investors seeking to navigate the complex and often perilous landscape of global finance, providing a lens through which to anticipate and potentially mitigate the inevitable challenges of the "Big Debt Cycle."
Really like this read and seems really relevant to current geopolitical conditions. Can't say I understand every mechanic he discusses in full, but the historical context regarding predictive behavior of the large debt cycle & characteristics of nations and global conflicts that start to occur during stage 5 of the large debt cycle provided meaningful context to certain things we are seeing today I found enlightening.
Some people paint Ray Dalio as a "Doomsayer" but I didn't feel that way at all. I felt his argument wasn't that America was going to collapse and here comes WW3, but more that monetary order we have been accustomed too with the U.S. Dollar serving as the world reserve currency is potentially coming to an end or a reset. What that looks like isn't totally predictable and could range greatly from small cold war like conflicts (being the most likely in this situation) that don't necessarily impact your everyday citizen, all the way to full on war between major countries where internal strife seems to grow larger within classes alongside the adoption of more nationalistic policies, attitudes, and behaviors. This book was finished at the end of the last presidential election and is interesting to compare his broad view predictions to what has actually occurred.
The author masterfully frames the developments in economics and politics (including geopolitics) in terms of debt/money cycles. The style of writing is accessible to both casual and “involved” readers. I particularly enjoyed the mathematical analyses behind the cycles described. However, I was surprised to see some takes on issues from US internal politics to China-related international affairs. This is likely to be due to the author’s different optic to my own, largely affected by age, wealth, nationality, and experience. Overall, i gave the book 5 stars because it gives a holistic, and fair overview, of its propositions in historical context. Furthermore, I quite liked the unique approach to seeing how markets operate.
An important yet dense look at a very pertinent subject. This was my first foray into Dalio, and while some insights were interesting, I wasn’t expecting to be picking up a textbook. I grasped the concept of big and small credit cycles pretty quickly, but the book kept drilling deeper and deeper. I eventually switched to the audiobook just to get through it, because well… it’s a lot. I switched back to reading and the final few chapters saved it for me. Seeing how Dalio would tackle an impending credit crisis and reading his predictions for the future made it worth finishing. 3.5 stars, rounded up to 4.
There is a lot of financial details and specifics which is great if you are in the finance field and want a really in-depth view of countries and their debt cycles. With that being said it is still so repetitive.
In each chapter or section there are points/perspectives being made that get over-repeated too much. Great, interesting but delivered in an extremely dull way. Way too much filler in the book.
Seems like this book was partly a cash grab to jump on the recent economic instability in the US financial market.
The book should have been 1/3 the length that it is.
So this had big concepts explained pretty well and I grasp now how countries go broke. I know a few indicators, what the cycles look like, and the history examples were helpful. I appreciated how the author would say that this section may get too detailed for some so if you skipped to go to a certain chapter.
This is a good book for gaining a better understanding of why we are are in a critical place with respect to our National Debt. The Author does a nice job of detailing the Economics of the Big Cycles and provides the reader with numerous opportunities for deep dives throughout the book.
There is a problem about analytic razors. Too thick, and one slices too erratically of meat from bone. Too thin, and one may spend time slicing slivers when we are trying to prepare a steak.
Ray Dalio, in his analysis of macroeconomics, has made a razor that is too thick. In creating grand principles and narratives of complex macroeconomic events, it removes necessary nuance that would further categorize certain cases. Political events are treated as patterns of human nature and not the choices of men constrained. To abuse Marx, men make their own history, but they do not make it as they please.
And that, I think, is the problem of cutting with a razor too thick. In seeking grand patterns of events and human behavior, we ignore the conditions under which events occurred. Dalio, for example, suggested Musk's Department of Government Efficiency would cut costs and increase efficiency (it did not).
Dalio provides an interesting review of mechanisms under which countries have monetary and debt issues. He presents his cases well in an entertaining and readable way. He also leaves too much meat on the bone, leaving out the "circumstances existing already, given and transmitted from the past." These grand principles may be on balance effective as a betting criterion, but so too was astrology for introducing randomness into decision making criteria (see Alexander Boxer's A Scheme of Heaven) and that does not make astrology right just for being effective.
I simultaneously think capitalism is stupid, and that USA should undertake what he suggests at the end of the book. If we do an even amount of cutting and taxing (and hopefully the Fed does their part too) and then adjust the particulars from there, then at least we'll hopefully still have a country in 10 years (assuming no other country nukes us while DJT is acting up). I am decidedly of the 60% of the country who is on the dole (specifically, I'm on disability), and the cuts to things like Medicaid will really, really hurt, but I would be comforted by knowing that the rich are doing their part to rein in the deficit, too. And if we don't do something soon, we will run out of money to fund entitlements altogether, which would be far more painful overall.
Most of this content is covered in Mr Dalio's other books, but this one has the added benefit of being post pandemic and 2024 election. I don't agree with all of his predictions with how things will play out in terms of the 5 large forces he talks about (e.g., debt/money cycles, domestic stage politics in the US, international stage politics, famine/climate change/pandemics, and technology), but I do appreciate his frameworks and bold guesses.
I'd recommend this book to those interested in understanding more about markets. I don't know how well this will age, Mr Dalio will likely have to write another book in 2030
Definitely one of the more honest books by a capitalist about how power works and what money really is. This one is pretty technical and I've found his interviews to be a bit more accessible but he doesn't try to put any sort of ideological veneer over his treatment of debt traps and inflationary cycles which is extremely refreshing.
This book is about an interesting topic, and I think the ideas within are structurally sound. However, the writing is repetitive and unengaging, which is a serious problem given that the topic is complicated. As I said to my girlfriend, "It's like having a bad professor."
Ray argues that small, careful changes over long periods builds up momentum without too much stress in a single category. I would gladly reach across the aisle to consider some of his data-driven solutions.
Unfortunately, I'm not in the room at all. Good luck everyone!
Muy buen libro, he podido entender las dinámicas de los ciclos de deuda y cómo afectan a los países. Ray Dalio además expone casos particulares de países, y también conecta con la dimensión geopolítica.