The Commanding Heights: The Battle for the World Economy by Daniel Yergin


The Commanding Heights: The Battle for the World Economy
Title : The Commanding Heights: The Battle for the World Economy
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 068483569X
ISBN-10 : 9780684835693
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 512
Publication : First published January 1, 1998

The Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Prize joins a leading expert on the global economy to present an incisive narrative of the risks and opportunities that are emerging as the balance of power shifts around the world between governments and markets -- and the battle over globalization comes front and center.

A brilliant narrative history, The Commanding Heights is about the most powerful economic forces at work in the world today, and about the people and the ideas that are shaping the future. Across the globe, it has become increasingly accepted dogma that economic activities should be dominated by market forces, not political concerns. With chapters on Europe, the US, Britain, the Third World, the Arab States, Asia, China, India, Latin America, and the former communist countries, Yergin and Stanislaw provide an incisive overview of the state of the economy, and of the battles between governments and markets in each region. Now updated throughout and with two new chapters, The Commanding Heights explains a revolution which is unfolding before our very eyes.


The Commanding Heights: The Battle for the World Economy Reviews


  • Szplug

    The Anti-Shock Doctrine—Yergin runs through many of the same market-transition scenarios that Klein examined in her more recent book, concluding that this trend has been, overall, a very positive and necessary thing. A brief assessment of the Liberal Consensus developed subsequent to the Second World War and carried forward into the late seventies—when a mixture of centralized government economic management, high commodity (read oil) prices, rampant inflation, persistent unemployment, and runaway union confrontations and shutdowns had rendered the world one vast puddle of stagnant economic water—sets the stage for the main event: enter the miracle of Hayekian/Friedmanite Market freedoms—tested in Chile, tinkered with in Indonesia, and then applied, more or less, in the First World through the iconic leadership of Thatcher (whose mentor Sir Keith Joseph gets a fair bit of screen time) and Reagan—and the great benefits of entrepreneurial dynamism, deregulation and privatization, union taming, free trade, and low taxes began to work their global magic. Yergin—a clear but sere writer—brings out the analytic lens to such additional locales as Bolivia, India, Poland, and, in the most fascinating case, that of China's unique evolution towards a Communist-Capitalist hybrid, a development directed by the patient hand of a perseverant Deng Xiaoping. Yergin is intellectually honest enough not to elide the inevitable problems and hiccups that accompanied this radical transformation—though he treats of them comparatively briefly—and his enthusiasm eventually proves contagious (for this reader, at any rate). It is likely that if you read both Yergin's and Klein's (better written and equally convincing) opposing viewpoints, your understanding of the turn towards Free Market Globalism over the past three decades will be that much sounder.

  • Lobstergirl


    In 1922, a year after putting the New Economic Policy in place, Lenin defended letting some small market activity proliferate, declaring that the state would still control the "commanding heights" of the economy. The authors of this book show how the opposite is true today (writing between 1998 and 2008). In the battle between governments and markets, markets have won, all over the world. Globalization has won. All of this is to society's benefit, they say. "Mistrust" of the market now "sounds archaic." The Chicago School of economics (Hayek, Friedman, Stigler, Becker) helped it all happen.

    The chapters on economic developments in Asia, Latin America, and India were very informative, and well done. The discussion of Thatcher's Britain fell somewhat flat. Only two of the fourteen chapters concern the U.S. specifically and they suffer from too tight a focus on a number of narrow topics (e.g., the deregulation of AT&T), rather than a broader overview. A subsection criticizing the explosion of "rights" - affirmative action, civil litigation brought by employees in the workplace, etc. - seems both off-topic and mean-spirited.

    The book is not just extremely one-sided, but also very top-down. It is odd in a book about markets and globalization that labor is so rarely mentioned. One of the largest consequences of both globalization and the ascendancy of markets is the cheapness of labor. This fact is not mentioned at all by the authors. Nor is wealth and income equality, except for a scarce few words near the end. When the authors ever so briefly suggest that social safety nets are needed to help people adjust to globalization, it comes across as an afterthought, crumbs tossed. When they mention that surging numbers of unemployed and underemployed young men in developing countries create "a combustible mix of idleness, poverty, disillusionment, and a bitterness that can be a tremendous source of political and economic instability that spills over borders," you want to inform them that this is not just happening in other places - check out America. Luttwak (see below) did check out America, and he did find bitter young black men there and wrote incisively about them.

    For a much more balanced look at markets and governments, read
    Politics and Markets : The World's Political-Economic Systems by
    Charles E. Lindblom. For the other side of what Yergin and Stanislaw present here, check out
    Turbo-Capitalism: Winners and Losers in the Global Economy by
    Edward N. Luttwak, a book which lucidly discusses the catastrophic consequences of labor being so incredibly cheap. The central question in Luttwak's book is: should markets exist for the benefit of societies, or should societies exist for the benefit of markets? Yergin and Stanislaw would sidestep the question. The market has a Smithian "essential morality" for them. As you and I, and Enron and Google, Volkswagen and Cargill, ExxonMobil and Monsanto, Uber and the Trump Organization, all pursue our self-interest, all of society is made better as a result.

  • DoctorM

    This should be read in tandem with Klein's "The Shock Doctrine", though I'm not quite sure which is the antidote to the other. "Commanding Heights" first appeared in 1998, and it was written in the mid-90s "End of History" era where market capitalism was triumphant, where "neoliberal" was still a good term, and globalisation was the wave of the future.

    The enthusiasm for the brave new free-market world seems so utterly dated now after the global meltdown of 2008 and the retreat of much of the world from free-market fantasies. But it's well worth reading Yergin's early chapters to get a sense of the economic stagnation of the late '70s and the failures of socialist systems that made Chicago economics and Thatcherism seem fresh and hopeful and vital.

    "Commanding Heights" isn't a bad intro to economic policies over the last 30 years, and if it leads you to looking at Jos. Stiglitz and Dani Rodrick's later works (or even doing a compare-and-contrast with Naomi Klein), well...that's not bad at all.

  • Clif

    If you want to know how the economic world got to where it is today from the position it was in after World War II, then this is the book to read. You need not be an economist to understand the process as the author is careful to define terms, to go back to the origin of concepts and to present economic schools of thought in uncluttered prose.

    Yergin follows the progression of economic thinking as it developed from the "corporatist" idea of the 1940's to the free market thinking that dominates the world today. Why were people so eager to try out socialist ideas? What experiences formed minds wary of unfettered capitalism, even in the United States?

    Then, later on, why were political leaders driven to discard the government-led model of the economy that had seemed so full of promise? Why would governments willingly get out of the business of business?

    Following the process of freeing the markets that began in the 1970's with Margaret Thatcher in Great Britain and was taken up by the Reagan "revolution" in the United States, Yergin takes us around the world to find out how the process worked and who the people behind it were from Bolivia to Malaysia and many countries in between.

    Many times while reading this book, I found myself exclaiming, "so, THAT'S what happened!" even as the events being described were ones that I have lived through. We all live busy lives where we can't attend to even major events, let along follow trends that progress through the years. It's great to gain the depth of understanding that such books as this can provide. If you are at all interesting in the economy (and we all should be) then get The Commanding Heights. I checked it out from the library and followed my read by purchasing a copy for my bookshelf.

    UPDATE: As a result of much further reading since this I wrote this review in 2009, I realize the ignorance of history with which I wrote it. Understand that this book presents nothing about the way the United States did all it could through espionage, outright military intervention, the use of armed proxies, the CIA and the power of crippling other economies through market power to undermine any government that tried to make an economy work outside of the capitalist system controlled by the US since the end of WW2. The premier example, but only one of many, is Cuba. This book is a rah-rah account that takes no notice of the dark underside of making sure capitalism as practiced by the US and under its control would prevail worldwide. "The Commanding Heights" were not taken without subterfuge and blood being spilled.

  • Frank Stein


    There were a bunch of points where I felt like quitting the book. Unlike Yergin's other book, "The Prize," on the history of the oil industry, this one can be maddeningly imprecise and repetitive. Here, he'll spend pages discussing "deregulation" or "tariff reduction," without going into a single specific. Key figures are sometimes just identified as "important reformers" instead of minister of such and such, or chairman of such a commission. It's hard to know where all these reforms Yergin talks about are coming from. In the end, though, it is a nice synopsis of the the monumental changes that have taken place in the world economy since the early 1980s, and there are many fantastic stories here. For instance, I had no idea that, Vaclav Klaus, the first prime minister of the post-Communist Czech republic, was originally employed by the communist Czechoslovakian regime to read and "refute" Western economists like Friedman and Hayek, until of course he realized that these guys made a lot of sense, and then used what he learned to overturn the old system (he even wrote an essay titled "The University of Chicago and I"). Or that Yeogar Gaidar, one of Yelstin's aides, explicitly came up with the infamous "loans-for-shares" program in 1996, which gave away many of the Soviet Union's state resources for a song, in order to create a "critical mass" of wealthy Yelstin supporters who would give him cash and help him beat the communists in that years election (the money the state got from the sales also went directly into Yelstin's election campaign). Yergin interviews Gaidar who says that he would do it again in a heartbeat to fight the communists (Yergin did admittedly get some great interviews for the book).

    The book really has a wonderful global reach, from the reforms of the Salinas regime of Mexico to post-Communist Russia to Steven Breyer's work on deregulation in the United States. As "The Economist" blurb on the back says, this is "a book that certainly needed to be written," and despite its faults I'm glad I read it.

  • Aaron

    What's the single most important thing to learn from an economics course today? What I tried to leave my students with is the view that the invisible hand is more powerful than the hidden hand. Things will happen in well-0rganized efforts without direction, controls, plans...That's the Hayek legacy."

    Larry Summers
    As quoted in The Commanding Heights


    Overlooking my desk, there hangs one of my favorite images - a promotional photograph for Louis Vuitton, of all things. Taken by Annie Liebowitz, it shows Mikhail Gorbachev as he rides past the remains of the Berlin Wall, one of Vuitton's bags at his side (above). I was born in the late 1970s, which makes me fairly young in glacial terms but nonetheless old enough to remember the Soviet Union and the fall of The Wall in 1989. Seeing Mikhail Gorbachev pitching luxury goods is therefore something I never would have predicted twenty years ago, but if any image portrays the changes that have colored our world in the past fifty years, this is it.

    It is this transformation that Daniel Yergin and Joseph Stanislaw chronicle in The Commanding Heights: The Battle for the Global Economy, their history of the world economy as it progressed through decades of central planning, through the free market reforms of Thatcher and Reagan in the 1980s, and into the turbulence of the 1990s. In the book, Yergin and Stanislaw serve up an historical overview of the battle of ideas, particularly those of John Maynard Keynes and Friedrich Hayek, that have shaped our modern economy and their impact on countries ranging from France to India to the Tiger economies of East Asia in the 1990s.

    If this all sounds sprawling and overly-ambitious, well, that's because it is. Though the writing is simple and clear, it often borders on simplistic and superficial. As a result, Commanding Heights is often a mile wide and an inch deep, leading Brink Lindsey of the Cato Institute to note that the book tends to read like a 400-page newspaper article.

    Despite framing the book as a battle of the ideas put forth by Keynes and Hayek - truly one of the great intellectual rivalries of the modern world - the authors devote surprisingly little time to these two men and their core philosophies. Sure, their names pop up here and there throughout the book, and their influence looms large - though often unmentioned - throughout, but given the way Keynes and Hayek shaped our world I expected to see a few more pages spent on them.

    Which is not to go too far in disparaging the book. Yergin and Stanislaw have clearly done a tremendous amount of research, and the list of those interviewed for Commanding Heights is a heady one indeed: Gorbachev, Milton Friedman, Vicente Fox, Gary Becker, Narayana Murthy, Robert Rubin, Helmut Schmidt, Lee Kuan Yew, and Margaret Thatcher, to name only a few. Of course, the book is so poorly-endnoted that the reader is often left guessing just where a given piece of information may have come from, though one could do a lot worse for a reading list than the fifteen-page bibliography offered in the back of the book.

    In 2002, Commanding Heights was adapted into a six-hour documentary, which you can view online at the PBS website. Both the book and the documentary have nettled a variety of political groups opposed to open markets and aspects of globalization, especially Marxists and Socialists. The first edition of the book, published in 1998, also received criticism for not anticipating the various financial crises of that time, the scandals involving the likes of Enron and Worldcom, and the attacks of September 11.

    To be fair, Yergin and Stanislaw have attempted to tackle these matters in the updated edition of Commanding Heights, published in 2002. Problem is, the newly-added chapters are little more than forty pages of platitudes that could just as easily have come from any number of the "leadership" books on the market today: "The high rise pyramids of hierarchical corporate structures are being transformed into the low-rise of the flatter organization - less bureaucracy, more teamwork, and greater dispersion of responsibility, information, and decision-making." (407) Sounds like someone's been playing tennis with Thomas Friedman.

    As the global economy slides deeper into infirmity, we seem poised to debate anew the merits of government regulation and just how free we want our free markets to be. At some point in that discussion, however, we would do well to stand back and realize that despite our current travails we live in a time of incredible affluence, with more people in the developing world joining the prosperous ranks by the day. Whatever their book's faults, Yergin and Stanislaw at least got it right on this account.

  • Robert Jerome

    This book is an attempt to make a political appeal sound like a neutral world history. It portrays the last fifty years on earth as a great lesson in which human kind learned that free market capitalism is the only way to effectively manage and economy. The necessary omissions are plentiful. There is no Finland, Denmark, or Sweden. The violently repressive dictators installed through Latin America, especially Nicaragua, are portrayed as heroes of the Chicago School. Stalin's only fault was that he didn't allow free market competition. When a mixed market is successful, it is because "the free market overcame the government red tape." When a mixed market is unsuccessful, it is because "continued government planning and interference stifled the fledgling market." There is an entire chapter dedicated to praising Margaret Thatcher and another for Regan. Milton Freedman and Hayek appear over and over while no other winner of the Nobel in economics is mentioned.

    Overall it is a very worthwhile read. Though the facts are mostly general knowledge, it provides an insight into how the right wingers during the Reagan/Thatcher era understood things.

  • teacheur_le

    A economy-history book needed to be read by every one.
    Take a tea and read this book
    Thanks to the author, we travel around the world and look what happened. Series of events impacting the world economy are presented in the book. We learn how free market with goverment regulations is important for a country.
    The author talks also about globalization, its opportunites and challenges.
    I'm really happy to know this book.

  • Olya

    Interesting ideas that bogged down in the same phrases and meandering detours.

  • Shawn

    I still remember the glitzy PBS miniseries singing the praises of the value of the derivatives trade. I'm reminded of the time Deng Xiao Peng asked an American professor how the stock market worked. The professor said you put a mirror in front of a book. Then you put another mirror adjacent to the first mirror. Then add another mirror. And another. You can do this a hundred times but as long the book is there, all the mirrors have a book.

    Yes, this was the end of the Cold War, the End of History, where the Skorpions walked down to Moskva, down to Gorky Park... The Commanding Heights reads like a prospectus to a high-grade, AAA rated Lehman fund.

    I presume this book was one of the glossy ads that lead to the repeal of Glass Steagall, a.k.a the Graham-Leach-Bliley. Now taxpayers are on the hook for probably another $50 trillion in proprietary, secret, Credit Default Swaps floating around the world. Japanese jobs are shipped to America. American jobs are shipped to Mexico (NAFTA) and Mexico jobs are shipped to China (WTO). Ahhhh, Ricardian free trade. Its proponents worship that your alter, but your leisurely 18th century mind could not have anticipated the level of devaluation a modern central bank can engage in. Competitive devaluation is the buzzword now. If anyone happens upon this book in the bargain, do rescue it and pass it down to a future generation of leaders, along with Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain's "Peace in our Time" speech.

  • cbclaw

    This was quite a difficult title to get through. The book is full of names of people and institutions, and all the important processes, although described in a very logical and orderly way, are presented with overwhelming amount of detail.

    It's worth every single of the five stars, for it's vast amount of information, and, which I found the most praiseworthy - completely unbiased attitude. The book is purely informative and doesn't try to convey any ideology or a specific school of thought (to an extent), and it can challenge and flip your worldview into different directions several times during the lecture. The bottom line is, there are economic solutions that are better than others, but they are not always implemented well, and the situations that different countries are in are so unique, that it's inappropriate to speak of one, universally efficient way of managing economy.

    The book presents different countries and describes their systematic transition, in context of their historical and cultural background. It goes all the way from US, to Latin America, Europe, India, China, Japan, South-East Asia, Russia, Africa.

    I wish there would be more information about the middle eastern countries. I also wish that there was an updated version of this book (the information presented is from 1999), and that the audiobook narrator spoke in less monotonous way.

  • William Schram

    The Commanding Heights is a book about the control of the economic policies of nations. It goes into discussions about Communism and Socialism and other forms of Market Planning and goes over what happened to them. It is actually quite fascinating and interesting since it reminded me of a lot of World Events that I lived through but was too young to care about.

    There isn’t much else to say, except that the book is a bit dated since it was printed in 1998.

  • Doug

    Not as supremely as awesome as his other book The Prize, but a still a very good read. Gives a lot of background and subtext to current business and economics headlines.

  • Tam Nguyen

    lịch sử kinh tế thế kỷ 20 đọc rất dễ hiểu với một đứa gà mờ như mình

  • Tùng Hoàng

    NHỮNG ĐỈNH CAO CHỈ HUY - CUỘC CHIẾN VÌ NỀN KINH TẾ THẾ GIỚI

    Tác giả: Daniel Yergin & Joseph Stanislaw
    Dịch giả: Phạm Quang Diệu

    “Ý tưởng còn có sức mạnh hơn cả những gì người ta thường nghĩ. Thực sự thế giới này được điều khiển không bởi cái gì khác ngoài ý tưởng” - John Maynard Keynes

    Hiếm có cuốn sách nào làm tôi đọc lâu đến vậy, khi gấp lại trang cuối cùng ở trang 767, tôi giật mình, mình đã đọc cuốn sách này trong hơn một tháng. Hơn 30 ngày với việc đọc lần lượt từng chương, tra lại các từ ngữ kinh tế, tìm hiểu lại một số cuốn sách hiếm có liên quan, điều cuối cùng tôi cảm thấy thực sự vui mừng là cuốn sách này may mắn vẫn được tái bản và còn có thể tiếp tục đến được tay các độc giả. Đó thực sự là món quà cho những ai sẽ đọc nó và đọc đến trang cuối cùng, tôi mong là vậy!

    Có lẽ việc sinh ra và sống từ những năm đầu của thời kỳ xóa bao cấp đã làm tôi hiểu được sự chuyển đổi thần kỳ đến với đất nước chúng ta, đến sự ảnh hưởng sâu đậm đối với cuộc sống của chính mình và những người xung quanh như thế nào. Những năm đầu thập kỷ 90 đó, khi Liên Xô tan rã, khi bức tường Berlin sụp đổ, tôi thấy một sự đổ vỡ lớn, một sự mất mát không gì bù đắp được trong niềm tin và lý tưởng của bố mẹ tôi. Một điều mà thế hệ chúng tôi hoàn toàn chưa hiểu lắm thời điểm đó, chúng tôi lúc này chỉ là đang thực sự háo hức chứng kiến cuộc sống quanh mình thay đổi ngày một rõ rệt. Những ký ức về thời kỳ chiến tranh, về thời bao cấp tem phiếu tuy nghèo nhưng giàu tình nghĩa, giờ chỉ còn có thể tìm lại qua những mảnh ghép ký ức rời rạc, qua những cuốn sách chuyền tay phản ánh một phần của lịch sử.

    Vậy rốt cục, điều gì đã xảy ra với đất nước mình và bối cảnh thế giới như thế nào đã dẫn thế hệ của ông bà, của bố mẹ tôi, và cả tôi nữa cùng đi qua một thế kỷ đầy biến động như vậy. Tôi đặt mục tiêu cho mình cần phải tự tìm hiểu để bù đắp những lỗ hổng lớn mà sách vở trên ghế nhà trường thực sự đã không giúp ích được nhiều cho bản thân. Tò mò như một đứa trẻ khi có được cuốn sách này, tôi đi từ những năm tháng huy hoàng của chủ nghĩa xã hội đến sự cạnh tranh khốc liệt giữa hai thế giới tư tưởng, tìm hiểu sự sụp đổ tất yếu của một hệ tư tưởng quan liêu, trì trệ, thấu hiểu những khó khăn của quá trình phục hồi, phát triển trong kỷ nguyên toàn cầu hóa. Khối lượng dữ liệu và những phân tích thấu đáo của các tác giả cuốn sách đã làm tôi choáng ngợp, khâm phục và “ngộ” ra nhiều điều.

    Tháng 11/1922, khi V.I.Lenin khởi xướng chính sách Kinh tế mới trong lần xuất hiện cuối cùng trước công chúng ở St. Petersburg, ông đã cho phép sự quay trở lại của tiểu thương và nông nghiệp tư nhân, nhưng đồng thời chỉ rõ Nhà nước sẽ vẫn nắm giữ “những đỉnh cao chỉ huy”, những yếu tố quan trọng nhất của nền kinh tế. Những năm tháng sau Thế chiến thứ hai là thời kỳ hoàng kim của quản lý nhà nước, của nền kinh tế hỗn hợp vận hành dưới sự điều hành của chính phủ và sự kiểm soát được mở rộng đến từng ngõ ngách đời sống người dân. Sau ba mươi năm huy hoàng của chủ nghĩa Keynes với những thành tựu thần kỳ của các nền kinh tế theo quan điểm hỗn hợp, nơi nhà nước chiếm lĩnh các đỉnh cao chỉ huy, điều gì phải đến rồi cũng đã đến.

    Sự suy yếu nền chính trị, khủng hoảng kinh tế, khủng hoảng mất niềm tin tràn ngập khắp nơi trên thế giới khi những điểm yếu đã dần dần lộ rõ. Các chuỗi sự kiện đã dẫn đến một sự chuyển biến lớn từ kiểm soát của nhà nước sang điều tiết bởi thị trường. Sự thay đổi toàn diện về tư tưởng hay quá trình đảo ngược trên toàn thế giới này bắt đầu từ sự kiên định của Margaret Thatcher, người đàn bà thép nước Anh, rồi lan tới châu Âu, châu Á. Khi Chiến tranh Lạnh chấm dứt, bức tường Berlin sụp đổ, Liên Xô tan rã, Trung Quốc, các nước Mỹ Latinh... cũng nhanh chóng chuyển mình, thì cũng là lúc "Thị trường" lấy lại vị thế vốn có của nó và khẳng định tầm quan trọng trong phát triển kinh tế, xã hội. Sự sụp đổ cùng sự đảo cực trong tư tưởng kinh tế - chính trị toàn cầu đã tự nó đưa ra câu trả lời, dù nghiệt ngã và đau đớn với nhiều quốc gia, nhiều chế độ nhà nước. Giống như một cuộc thanh tẩy tâm hồn hay liều thuốc đắng cho cơ thể mang nhiều bệnh tật, điều cần thiết là lòng dũng cảm chấp nhận thay đổi và niềm tin vào đích đến cuối cùng, dù nó tiềm ẩn nhiều rủi ro, thách thức.

    “Rủi ro là một phần tất yếu trong thế giới mới này... điều quyết định thực sự vẫn là dựa vào sự cân nhắc lại niềm tin và quan điểm... Niềm tin sẽ tồn tại nếu nó có điểm tựa và được kiểm nghiệm.”

    ---------

    Điểm đánh giá: 9/10

    Nhận xét: Có thể cuốn sách này sẽ làm người đọc ban đầu mệt mỏi, sẽ có lúc chán nản, muốn buông xuống, nhưng như thưởng thức chuyện đời, chuyện người bên ấm trà mạn với những người bạn tâm giao, vị đắng ban đầu sẽ thấm dần qua đầu lưỡi, lưu lại những cảm xúc nhẹ nhàng, rồi chuyển sang vị ngọt thanh sảng khoái khi đến những trang sách cuối cùng. Qua từng chương, cuộc sống của bao kiếp người được lật giở nhanh qua từng trang sách, qua từng con số thống kê khô khan nhưng biết nói, những điều mà chỉ những người đã trải nghiệm trực tiếp mới thấu hiểu khoảng thời gian đó khắc nghiệt nhưng đáng nhớ đến chừng nào.

  • Nemo

    A pretty good overview of how world economies turned towards Keynesian way(gov playing a big role) after 1930 crisis and esp after WWII. And then the Hayek theory (market economy) and Chicago School and the Thatcherism started to become a dominant trend in 1970s. I read carefully what the book said about China, HK and Singapore, and found that it basically captured the key things right, such as Deng and how he overcome dissident like Chen Yun. So I just assumed that the author have described other countries correctly.

    What I like most is that the author brings in a lot of unfamiliar figures (economists, finance ministers, social activity organizers, and so on across various continents) and from time to time tell you something fun about their childhood, personal and political life. I can tell that the author must have done a lot of research and interviews to support the writing.

    What I don't like is two fold.
    A, it has a pre established view (market good vs gov bad), so you felt that the book doesn't provide a real interesting thinking but read more like a propaganda.
    B, the whole book is purely focused on just one theme (how gov owned economy failed and then the reform toward market fixed the country) And after a couple of country examples the rest of book looks kind of banal and repetitive.

    I don't need to read what happened in Brazil, Peru, Africa, India, Poland, Malaysia to predict what the author is about to say. So, the merit of this book is more in details and less in its key themes.

  • Gavin

    A nice overview of the world economy looking at the early twentieth-century through 1998. As an aside you can choose to read the book and watch a six hour PBS documentary on the book, which is what I did.

    The key thing to remember for me is that when Deng Xiaoping changed China's economy to capitalism within one year he unleashed 500,000,000 workers on the world. There is a reason that China claims double-digit growth, and at the same time created a rift in the world work force.

    The last idea is that although capitalism is not perfect, it does have a reputation for being the system that works better than any other.

  • Strong Extraordinary Dreams

    A book of two parts (literally).

    The first part is purely informative, about how the titans of the world economies (power, heavy Industry, the huge specialist Industrial sectors in those countries that have / had them) developed in the world's various economies. The general idea is that as industries grew their needs changed.

    The second part is more of a cheerleading for giving away these national assets to the nearest rich person and opposing the "explosion of (human) rights" so annoying to the small-minded 1%. Lots of obvious mistakes and tenuous connections here - hence this book''s bad reputation.

    Wanted to give 5 stars, but couldn't.

  • Degenerate Chemist

    I definitely enjoyed this book for what it was- a history of the economic and political landscape of the world post WW2. I am a novice on both these topics and this book felt written right for my level. As other reviewers have noted this book is a little to optimistic about free market economies and neoliberalism as it was published pre 2008. While the reading material was dense and took me awhile to get through this was definitely informative and worth the time. It was a fascinating roadmap of how we got to the world we live in today.

  • Berry Muhl

    Absolutely essential reading for anyone interested either in economics or in the recent history of the world. An indispensable companion volume to The Prize, which I also heartily recommend.

    This work was treated in miniseries form by PBS, and I also strongly suggest you check that out, as there is some new material there to discover.

  • Neshamah

    Đỉnh cao chỉ huy là các chính phủ, cuốn sách là tổng quan sự phát triển của các đất nước nổi bật sau thế chiến. Với điểm chung là sự tập trung khôi phục và tìm hướng phát triển kinh tế dựa trên một cơ sở lý thuyết vững chắc, các cơ sở lý thuyết này phần lớn ảnh hưởng bởi kt tư bản. Đi liền vs nền tảng đó là một nhà lãnh đạo giữ đúng hướng cho nền kt.

  • Tom feux

    Economic history for dummies

    A most accessible survey of modern history viewed through the lens of economic evolution. The central theme is planned economies vs market based. A most satisfying answer is that both are plateaus (footholds) on the way to socio-economic perfection.

  • Hans

    Me gusto mucho. Un libro completo que da un panorama general del mundo en el siglo 20 desde el punto de vista económico. Con una tendencia desde el marcado y libre mercado como respuesta a todo, sin embargo si analisa los problemas y consecuencias que ha traido este. Recomendable.

  • Harsh Thaker

    Politics, Economics & Policy of countries from South Korea to Chile moving from commanding heights to free market system

  • Kỳ Lân

    Một cuốn sách không như mong đợi của mình. Cơ bản về nội dung có thể chấp nhận được, nhưng quá dài làm cho người đọc ngán ngẫm bởi sự trùng lặp.

  • Beltran Alvarez de Estrada

    An amazing journey of the world economy since WWI till 2002, analyzing the dynamics that led countries to decide between a state-controlled or free-market model.

  • David Savage

    A "chewy" intellectual read which illuminates the early recognition of the flaws of communism by its own founder Lenin

  • Tuấn Anh

    Nhà nước can thiệp ở mức độ nào và như thế nào vào từng thời kỳ tại các nước.