Update: Interesting (if short) review from Tom Watson MP
Tribune has just published my review of Paul Mason's book Meltdown, on the global economic crisis. You can't see the review online so a copy is below.
"A succinct and well-structured post mortem on the last days of casino capitalism" is my bid for the sentence which ends up on the back of the next edition.
It's one of a number of books on the credit crunch (such an innocuous term) and while I'm not that bothered with Vince Cable's The Storm I would like to try The Gods That Failed by Larry Elliot and Dan Atkinson which predicted many of the current problems.
But, as it is, I have Jason Cowley's The Last Game on the Liverpool v Arsenal title deciding match in 1989 to review next (reviewed by the excellent Jim White here). It's bringing back a lot of good memories.
If there’s one boom caused by the global financial bust then it’s in books telling us how it all happened.
Paul Mason, Newsnight’s relatively new economics editor, got to cover the biggest economics story of the last 70 years and could hardly believe what he was reporting. The one constant through the breathless prose is the sound of his jaw dropping as another low is breached.
The book is roughly in three sections. The initial part is the traditional bit where a journalist talks in the present tense as events unfold around them. Mason is always being woken at some ungodly hour to be told another venerable institution has gone belly up and then has to rush off to stand outside a big glass building or watch Alistair Darling give a press conference.
There are nice details such as the body language of Treasury officials betraying their terror.
Having set the scene, Mason then tries to put the crisis in
context. Some of this will please supporters of the position that it’s all America’s fault.
For Mason it stems from deregulation during the Clinton
As the mind boggling sums of money accumulated nobody
thought to peek behind the curtain. It’s here that Mason sticks it to Brown.
Second only to
Mason does not spare us the complex details of the financial deals. Reassuringly he tells us that MPs have been left holding their heads in their hands having tried to similarly fathom where the money went. A glossary of terms at the back helps you get through this.
He also makes the vital point that the collapse has already
had a direct and savage impact on the poorest. Swathes of urban
In a short final section of a short book, Mason suggests how this changed financial and political landscape might develop.
He sees an opportunity to institute systems “shaped by the willingness of ordinary people to impose limits, standards and sustainability on capital”.
Being such a short, and somewhat rushed, conclusion it doesn’t quite have the force that it might have. However this is a succinct and well-structured post mortem on the last days of casino capitalism.
ENDS
excellent review, phil.
Posted by: books | Monday, February 08, 2010 at 14:39