
Slouching Towards Utopia
An Economic History of the Twentieth Century
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Narrated by:
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Allan Aquino
About this listen
From one of the world's leading economists, a sweeping new history of the twentieth century—a century that left us vastly richer, yet still profoundly dissatisfied.
Before 1870, most people lived in dire poverty, the benefits of the slow crawl of invention continually offset by a growing population. Then came a great shift: invention sprinted forward, doubling our technological capabilities each generation, and creatively destroying the economy again and again.
Slouching Towards Utopia tells the story of the major economic and technological shifts of the 20th century in a bold and ambitious, grand narrative. In vivid and compelling detail, DeLong charts the unprecedented explosion of material wealth after 1870 which transformed living standards around the world, freeing humanity from centuries of poverty, but paradoxically has left us now with unprecedented inequality, global warming and widespread dissatisfaction with the status quo.
How did the long twentieth century fail to deliver the utopia our ancestors believed would be the inevitable result of such material wellbeing?
How did humanity end up less on a march to progress than a slouch in the right direction?
And what can we learn from the past in pursuit of a better world?
©2022 Brad DeLong (P)2022 Hachette AudioMore enjoyable than your average economic history - yet
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The book is weakest when it strawmans the conservative position, embraces the silliest forms of wokeism (hard to believe the author believes everything they seemed to have to write there, it's downright anti-intellectual in its worst places) and pretends China's politicians are doing a good job by directing their economy towards building labor camps. Also the uncritical praise of FDR rubbed me the wrong way - has DeLong not read Steinbeck?
Still, the good parts overcome these weaknesses. The book tells a story that overall makes sense or is at least fun to entertain. It has a lot of good metaphors and historical anecdotes. Recommended.
A lefty view of the "long 20th century"
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Interesting but far too long
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A liberal view point
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Heavy going
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Dreadful
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