John Cassidy is a staff writer at The New Yorker and the author of Dot.con- The Greatest Story Ever Sold and How Markets Fail, which was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Nonfiction.
Fascinating and informative ... This is intellectual history at its best. Essential reading for anyone who wonders how the modern world wandered off course -- Simon Johnson, winner of the 2024 Nobel Prize for Economics and co-author of <i>Power and Progress</i> A marvellously lucid overview of capitalism’s critics, written in good old-fashioned expository prose -- Pratinav Anil * Guardian * An impressive history of arguments about capitalism, from the industrial age to our time. Clear and accessible, it is an invaluable touchstone for current debates about economic renewal in our post-globalization moment -- Michael J. Sandel, author of <i>The Tyranny of Merit</i> Capitalism and its Critics [is an] unexpectedly lively romp through the two-and-a-half-century history of capitalism ... a zombie tale in which the mystery is why capitalism, having so many ill-wishers and so many chronic health problems, keeps rising anew from each crisis – be it the 1930s Great Depression or 2008 financial crisis – even stronger and more resilient. Cassidy ... offers gripping analyses of socialist communes, slavery, imperialism and monetarism; he takes us to the heart of such topical questions as whether tariffs are folly, as laissez-faire orthodoxy suggests, or essential to making America great again, as Donald Trump insists -- Stuart Jeffries * Telegraph * Cassidy makes the history of capitalism digestible by weaving together, in each chapter, the biography of each of his subjects with their key critique of capitalism, thus humanising otherwise dry debates about economic theory * The Times *