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The Alternative

How to Build a Just Economy

The Alternative Open the full-size image

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Contributors

By Nick Romeo

Read by Jamie Renell

Formats and Prices

On Sale
Jan 16, 2024
Publisher
Hachette Audio
ISBN-13
9781668632932

Price

$27.99

Format

  1. ebook
  2. Hardcover

Format:

  1. Audiobook Download (Unabridged) $27.99
  2. ebook $19.99 $25.99 CAD
  3. Hardcover $32.00 $41.00 CAD

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Winners Take All meets Nickel and Dimed in this provocative debunking of accepted wisdom, providing the pathway to a sustainable, survivable economy. 

Confronted by the terrifying trends of the early twenty-first century – widening inequality, environmental destruction, and the immiseration of millions of workers around the world – many economists and business leaders still preach dogmas that lack evidence and create political catastrophe: Private markets are always more efficient than public ones; investment capital flows efficiently to necessary projects; massive inequality is the unavoidable side effect of economic growth; people are selfish and will only behave well with the right incentives.
 
But a growing number of people – academic economists, business owners, policy entrepreneurs, and ordinary people – are rejecting these myths and reshaping economies around the world to reflect ethical and social values. Though they differ in approach, all share a vision of the economy as a place of moral action and accountability. Journalist Nick Romeo has spent years covering the world’s most innovative economic and policy ideas for The New Yorker. Romeo takes us on an extraordinary journey through the unforgettable stories and successes of people working to build economies that are more equal, just, and livable. Combining original, in-depth reporting with expert analysis, Romeo explores:
 
  • The successful business owners organizing their companies as purpose trusts (as Patagonia recently did) to fulfill a higher mission, such as sharing profits with workers or protecting the environment
  • The growing deployment of new models by venture capital funds to promote wealth creation for the poorest Americans and address climate change.
  • How Oslo’s climate budgeting program is achieving the emission reduction targets the rest of the world continues to miss, creating a model that will soon be emulated by governments around the world
  • How Portugal strengths democratic culture by letting citizens make crucial budget decisions
  • The way worker ownership and cooperatives foster innovation, share wealth, and improve the quality of jobs, offering an increasingly popular model superior to the traditional corporation
  • The public-sector marketplace that offers decent work and real protections to gig workers in California
  • The job guarantee program in southern Austria that offers high-quality meaningful jobs to every citizen
Many books have exposed what’s not working in our current system. Romeo reveals something even more essential: the structure of a system that could actually work for everyone. Margaret Thatcher was wrong: there is an alternative. This is what it looks like.
 

Genre:

  • Nonfiction
  • Business & Economics
  • Economics
  • General

Nick Romeo  covers policy and ideas for The New Yorker and teaches in the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of California, Berkeley. He has also written for The New York Times, The Washington Post, National Geographic, Rolling Stone, The Atlantic, The MIT Technology Review, and many other venues.

 

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Nick Romeo

About the Author

Nick Romeo  covers policy and ideas for The New Yorker and teaches in the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of California, Berkeley. He has also written for The New York Times, The Washington Post, National Geographic, Rolling Stone, The Atlantic, The MIT Technology Review, and many other venues.

 

Learn more about this author

Featured Post

May 14 2024

Why You’re Paying for Amazon’s Free Lunch: A conversation with Christopher Marquis and Nick Romeo

In 2019, Amazon announced the Climate Pledge, a commitment to reach net-zero carbon by 2040, ten years ahead of the UN Paris Agreement goal. Since then, the retailing juggernaut, which now has about 1.5 million employees, has claimed to have made huge strides toward this goal. But there’s a big catch: the company only accounts…
Read full article
Why You’re Paying for Amazon’s Free Lunch: A conversation with Christopher Marquis and Nick Romeo

Featured Post

January 17 2024

Can We Build an Alternative Economy? A Conversation with Nick Romeo and Simon Johnson

Our economy isn’t headed in the right direction. Despite the visibility of labor organizing at companies like Starbucks and Apple, participation in unions is at roughly 10%, half of what it was in the early 1980s. Meanwhile, about one in eight Americans lives in poverty, while the richest Americans see their fortunes grow. In fact, in 2018, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Microsoft founder Bill Gates, and investor Warren Buffett had more wealth than the poorest half of Americans — and since then, wealth inequality has only intensified. Could we do better?
Read full article
Can We Build an Alternative Economy? A Conversation with Nick Romeo and Simon Johnson
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