And the weak suffer what they must?

Europe's crisis and America's economic future

337 pages

English language

Published Jan. 4, 2016

ISBN:
978-1-56858-504-8
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
903285033

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (4 reviews)

""The strong do as they can and the weak suffer what they must." --Thucydides The fate of the global economy hangs in the balance, and Europe is doing its utmost to undermine it, to destabilize America, and to spawn new forms of authoritarianism. Europe has dragged the world into hideous morasses twice in the last one hundred years... it can do it again. Yanis Varoufakis, the former Finance Minister of Greece, shows here that the Eurozone is a house of cards destined to fall without a radical change in direction. And, if the European Union falls apart, he argues, the global economy will not be far behind. Once America abandoned Europe in 1971 from the dollar zone, Europe's leaders decided to create a monetary union of 18 nations without control of their own money, without democratic accountability, and without a government to support the Central Bank. This bizarre economic super-power …

5 editions

Review of 'And the Weak Suffer What They Must?' on Goodreads

4 stars

A curious history of the EU and Eurozone culminating in the ongoing (10 years!) global banking crisis. Told almost exclusively through the lens of international finance and central banks, repeatedly emphasizing the structural imbalances always destined to make the Euro fail as long as there is a technocratic cartel lacking democratic political control over the value of money between surplus and deficit states. Plenty of digs at particular individuals and institutions from the 70s through those Varoufakis met with in his short term as finance minster of Greece attempting to negotiate a writedown of Greek debt rather than holding future Greek society liable for German and French bankers flagrant dismissal of risk or stability in pursuit of leverage.

Subjects

  • Politics and government
  • Financial crises
  • Economic conditions
  • Economic integration

Places

  • Europe