An insider's guide to our broken economy and how it fails
to serve us.
‘A fascinating examination of the failures of modern
economics, and how these failures are harming us all' Grace Blakeley,
author of Vulture Capitalism
‘Easily one of the most compelling economics
communicators of our generation.' Yuan Yang, FT columnist
and MP for Earley and Woodley
Did you know that while we think of money as notes issued by
the government, the truth is that the overwhelming majority of money today is
credit created by private banks?
Did you know that the reason housing keeps getting less
accessible is because we haven’t found a way to separate houses from land in
our policies?
And did you know that far from globalisation being a
mystical force, certain countries and currencies have dominated the way it has
played out – to their own advantage?
Whilst economics is at the heart of the society we live in,
governing so many functions from our taxes to where we live to the price of our
shopping, few of us have a strong grasp on the subject. This book is here to
help.
Why We're Getting Poorer delves into the key
topics in economics – money, globalisation, inequality, climate change and
growth – showing that what we think we know about these things is wrong, and
teaching us what we really need to know. Deciphering the jargon and complexity
of economic thinking, with examples ranging from the Simpsons to the German
football league to The Inbetweeners, Cahal Moran shows us why our economy set
us up to fail, and offers suggestions for how we can make positive changes.
Written by an award-winning economist and the YouTuber
responsible for ‘Unlearning Economics’, Why We're Getting Poorer is
a thrilling, iconoclastic guide to how the world really works.
About the Author
Dr Cahal Moran is a Fellow at the London School of
Economics and Political Science. He received his PhD in economics from the
University Manchester on the subject of prospect theory. He is the co-author of
the bestselling book The Econocracy: on the Perils of Leaving Economics
to the Experts (Penguin Press).
He is a lifelong member of the charity Rethinking Economics,
which campaigns for a better economics education and has featured on BBC radio
4 alongside other members. He also runs a YouTube channel, Unlearning
Economics, which has over 119,000 youtube subscribers, 53,000 twitter followers
and has just launched a podcast. He lives in London.