| This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly |  | Authors: Carmen M. Reinhart, Kenneth Rogoff Publisher: Princeton University Press
List Price: $35.00 Buy New: $22.37 as of 3/21/2010 06:18 CDT details You Save: $12.63 (36%)
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Media: Hardcover Edition: 1St Edition Pages: 496 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.2 x 1.7
ISBN: 0691142165 Dewey Decimal Number: 338.542 EAN: 9780691142166
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| - | ISBN13: 9780691142166 | | - | Condition: NEW | | - | Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark. |
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Product Description
Throughout history, rich and poor countries alike have been lending, borrowing, crashing--and recovering--their way through an extraordinary range of financial crises. Each time, the experts have chimed, "this time is different"--claiming that the old rules of valuation no longer apply and that the new situation bears little similarity to past disasters. This book proves that premise wrong. Covering sixty-six countries across five continents, This Time Is Different presents a comprehensive look at the varieties of financial crises, and guides us through eight astonishing centuries of government defaults, banking panics, and inflationary spikes--from medieval currency debasements to today's subprime catastrophe. Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, leading economists whose work has been influential in the policy debate concerning the current financial crisis, provocatively argue that financial combustions are universal rites of passage for emerging and established market nations. The authors draw important lessons from history to show us how much--or how little--we have learned. Using clear, sharp analysis and comprehensive data, Reinhart and Rogoff document that financial fallouts occur in clusters and strike with surprisingly consistent frequency, duration, and ferocity. They examine the patterns of currency crashes, high and hyperinflation, and government defaults on international and domestic debts--as well as the cycles in housing and equity prices, capital flows, unemployment, and government revenues around these crises. While countries do weather their financial storms, Reinhart and Rogoff prove that short memories make it all too easy for crises to recur. An important book that will affect policy discussions for a long time to come, This Time Is Different exposes centuries of financial missteps.
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| Customer Reviews:
EXCELLENT March 19, 2010 ROMANELLI JUAN CARLOS (LA LUCILA, PROVINCIA BUENOS AIRES, AR) It's a wonderful work , mixture of statistics, commom sense and analysis, in which the authors explain basic principles that , when not taken into account, wherever the reasons, have helped created repeatedly , time after time, the most terribly nightmares in financial markets.. JUAN CARLOS
Why Rogoff might be right, but H. Minsky said it best! March 17, 2010 ACEMAN (Paris, FR) Rogoff might be right that there is a constant in our repeating of financial follies, but it doesn't really deal with the the real constant and that is: why do we have boom and bust cycles? In other words, why do we lurch from short term stabilty to unstability and back again. The best research and essay on this is H. Minsky's Stabilizing an Unstable Economy. Here, Minsky details exactly what the problems are and the solutions.There is no need to review 800 years of history because it doesn't matter. What matters is that Minsky gives us an agenda for reform and an approach that should help us deal with the inchorence of present economic theory. 800 years of smoothing out history just won't do as an analysis or explain the misbehavior of markets and economies.
ACEMAN
Thorough, mostly unexciting March 12, 2010 Peter McCluskey (San Bruno, CA USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book documents better than any prior book the history of banking and government debt crises. Most of it is unsurprising to those familiar with the subject. It has more comprehensive data than I've seen before.
It is easier reading than the length would suggest (it has many tables of data, and few readers will be tempted to read all the data). It is relatively objective. That makes it less exciting than the more ideological writings on the subject.
The comparisons between well governed and poorly governed countries show that governments can become mature enough that defaults on government debt and hyperinflation are rare or eliminated, but there is little different in banking crises between different types of government / economies.
They claim that international capital mobility has produced banking crises, but don't convince me that they understand the causality behind the correlation. I'd guess that one causal factor is that the optimism that produces bubbles causes more investors to move money into countries they understand less well than their home country, which means their money is more likely to end up in reckless institutions.
The book ends with tentative guesses about which countries are about to become mature enough to avoid sovereign debt crises. Among the seven candidates is Greece, which is now looking like a poor guess less than a half year after it was published.
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