Publications

The Other Half of Macroeconomics and the Fate of Globalization

Type
Link
Cost
Paid
Published
2018

The Other Half of Macroeconomics and the Fate of Globalization elucidates what was missing in economics all along and what changes are needed to make the profession relevant to the economic challenges of today. This book shows how it’s possible to devise appropriate policy responses to slow wage and productivity growth in these economies. It demonstrates that the effectiveness of monetary and fiscal policy changes as an economy undergoes different stages of development. It explains the 200-year process of economic development and where that process is taking all of us. The Other Half of Macroeconomics offers a completely new way of looking at the economic predicament of advanced countries today.

Praise for The Other Half of Macroeconomics


"Richard Koo has had some of the most important economic ideas of the last two decades. This book extends his important perspective to a wider range of long-run issues. Koo's arguments deserve the attention of everyone who cares about achieving strong sustained economic growth in the industrial world."

Lawrence H. Summers, Charles W. Eliot University Professor, Harvard University


"Richard Koo is the most important economist of our time because he alone has devised a revolutionary framework that accurately explains the global economic crisis. His work is revolutionary not because it overthrows all the economic theory that preceded it, but rather because it completes it. Koo's policy prescriptions offer the world the best chance of restoring prosperity before this economic crisis becomes a political crisis and then a geopolitical crisis. The sooner our policymakers understand the implications of this extraordinary book―and act upon them―the safer we all will be."

Richard Duncan, Author, The Dollar Crisis; Publisher, Macro Watch


"Richard Koo is one of the most astute analysts of macroeconomic policies, showing that only fiscal policy is effective in balance sheet recessions. He now expands his view to the world economy and the history of advanced countries' economic development, arguing that fiscal expansion is the only effective macroeconomic policy for the foreseeable future. But instead of John Maynard Keynes' suggestion that burying money and digging it up helps, he argues forcibly that socially productive investments are needed for advanced economies to keep up with emerging ones."

Peter Temin, M.I.T.; Author, The Vanishing Middle Class: Prejudice and Power in a Dual Economy (2017)


"In the wake of the Great Recession, Richard Koo challenges us in his latest book to look at 'the other half of macroeconomics,' one in which the primary concern of the private sector is to 'minimize debt' rather than 'maximize profit.' Koo brings a wealth of knowledge and real-world experience working in both the U.S. and East Asia to his discussion of the stages of economic development. I find his examples from Japan and China especially compelling. I warmly recommend this book."

Axel Leijonhufvud, Professor Emeritus, UCLA and University of Trento, Italy


"Richard Koo's The Other Half of Macroeconomics and the Fate of Globalization will soon rival Piketty's Capital as the economics book to-date of our century. Koo's book, as its title suggests, divides in half. The first, like John Maynard Keynes' The General Theory, deeply subverts traditional economic theory. The second, like Karl Polanyi's The Great Transformation, sets out a new analysis of recent economic history and maps a new fork in the road to humankind's future. Except for dogmatists and anti-humanitarians, it is required reading."

Edward Fullbrook, Founder, World Economics Association; Editor, Real-World Economics Review


"Anyone who has a deep interest in globalization should read this book. It is at one time thoughtful, analytical, original, policy-relevant and highly engaging."

Jeffrey E. Garten, Dean and Professor Emeritus, Yale University School of Management


"The Great Depression produced Keynes, and the Great Recession produced Koo. With this book, he not only ushers economic analysis into the 21st century but also goes back centuries to show what has been missing in economics all along. This highly accessible book contains new insights worthy of a Nobel Prize."

Shousaku Murayama, CEO, iPS Academia Japan, Kyoto University; former Research Director, Bank of Japan