Nicolas Jabko is a professor of political science at Johns Hopkins University. A transatlantic scholar at heart, he has spent most of his life and career between the United States and Europe.
'Monetary orthodoxies are not set in stone. In times of crisis, technocrats need to adjust their beliefs – sometimes much faster than they ever imagined. This will happen again. A great book, a must-read.' Thomas Piketty, Paris School of Economics 'A brilliant guide to the strange politics born from the Great Financial Crisis. Drawing on untapped central bank archives, Jabko reveals how every appearance of consensus masks fierce internal battles – and how history moves in staggers, not smooth waves.' Quinn Slobodian, Boston University 'This book examines why central bankers, once the darlings of New Right politicians, have come under attack from conservatives. Jabko's insightful analysis of monetary technocrats is a must-read for scholars of political economy, history and economics interested in understanding the changing shape of economic power today.' Jacqueline Best, University of Ottawa 'Jabko locates the politics of money at the intersection of central banking, economics, and everyday political debate. That approach transforms the Fed and the ECB from impenetrable facades for power into three-dimensional spaces of decision. A path-breaking study that redefines neoliberalism and its change over time.' Christine Desan, Harvard Law School 'Nicolas Jabko's compelling new book tells the story of how independent central bankers at the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank changed tactics dramatically after adopting neoliberal austerity to tame inflation in the 1980s. After 2008, populist backlash led them to Keynesian moderation. Jabko tells the story through central bankers' internal deliberations, with both a riveting narrative and rigorous machine learning. A tour de force!' Frank Dobbin, Harvard University