For the last century, financial crash after financial crash has sent shockwaves through our world. It's time we learned from them.'Remarkably accessible' The Times_________________There is very little that is certain in economics, except there will be another financial crisis. But while we may not be able to stop the next one, we can predict and contain it.The Great Crashes tells the stories of ten historic financial events - from the Wall Street Crash and the dot com boom and bust to the COVID pandemic - and what we can learn from them.Combining her clear-eyed analysis with compelling storytelling, renowned economist Professor Linda Yueh uses these meltdowns to extract a critical three-step framework to help us to recognise the early signs of a crash, mitigate the effects and even prevent them in the future. It is a book that offers urgent lessons for the modern world._________________'An important contribution that can help society anticipate and tackle potential crashes in the future' Christine Lagarde, President of the European Central Bank
Linda Yueh is a Fellow in Economics at St Edmund Hall, Oxford University, Adjunct Professor of Economics at London Business School, Visiting Senior Fellow at the London School of Economics, and was Visiting Professor of Economics at Peking University. The former Economics Editor at Bloomberg TV, she also hosted Talking Business with Linda Yueh as Chief Business Correspondent for BBC News. She writes for The Times, The New York Times and The Financial Times and has advised, among others, The World Bank and World Economic Forum in Davos.
The content of this book sounds very official, like something you might find from the major news company or financial programme. Huge contrast especially after reading Jim Rickard's "Road to Ruin".
Analyzing ten historic financial crises, from the 1929 Wall Street Crash to the COVID-19 pandemic, this book provides a three-step framework to identify, mitigate, and potentially prevent future economic collapses.
This is an interesting, informative, and eye-opening look at the financial crises over the past century. It filled in a lot of gaps for me and showed how we’re constantly learning and getting better at handling these crises as they occur. But it also stresses that boom is always followed by bust, and the euphoric optimism that drives economic bubbles seems to be part of the human condition.
Thanks, NetGalley, for the ARC I received. This is my honest and voluntary review.
An accessible economic history of the great crashes and some of the macro trends running across all of them. The final two chapters, for better or worse show the futility of economic prediction — which Linda herself admitted to me when I met her two years ago. Overall, definitely worth a read in the context of current economic turbulence.
IL nuovo libro di Linda Yueh é quasi allarmantemente tempestivo, come se lei stesse facendo un tanking dell’economia globale come la madre di tutte le trovate di guerrilla marketing.
A fantastic introduction to financial and economic crises. Linda Yueh establishes a memorable and easy to use organising framework (euphoria, credibility and aftermath) for understanding the causes and consequences of crises and the advantages and disadvantages of different policy responses. A great source of anecdotes for teachers, and maybe a good starting point for journalists, policymakers and researchers.