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401 pages, Paperback
First published May 21, 2013
There’s a third reason for all the snaking chains of corporate complexity, which brings that other large stakeholder into view: the shambling, unloved, grouchy giant that invests in the roads, the courts, the education of workers, the sewage pipes under homes and office buildings, and the other essential things that underpin all of the titans’ profits. Government. After it has picked up the human flotsam from the lacerated pension pots and the layoffs, be they burned-out journalists or the victims of rogue doctors, the government is at least supposed to get a payback in the form of tax levied on corporate profits.
Something similar is happening in Britain ... These top-down wealth flows from the financial sector haven't exactly turned Britain into an authoritarian state but what has happened is that finance is often in conflict with other parts of the economy, and in these battles finance always seems to win out ... It is no coincidence that the decline of British manufacturing since the 1970s has been so much faster than in other industrial economies, at the same time as Britain's financial sector assets have grown so much larger as a share of the economy than in comparable Western nations.