Richard Grossman

discusses

Wrong:
Nine Economic Policy Disasters and What We Can Learn from Them

This event includes a book signing

Date

Jan
31
Friday
January 31, 2014
4:00 PM ET

Location

Harvard Book Store
1256 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA 02138

Tickets

This event is free; no tickets are required.

Harvard Book Store is pleased to welcome Professor of Economics at Wesleyan University RICHARD GROSSMAN for a discussion of his latest book, Wrong: Nine Economic Policy Disasters and What We Can Learn from Them.

In recent years, the world has been rocked by major economic crises, most notably the devastating collapse of Lehman Brothers, the largest bankruptcy in American history, which triggered the breathtakingly destructive sub-prime disaster. What sparks these vast economic calamities? Why do our economic policy makers fail to protect us from such upheavals? 

In Wrong, economist Richard Grossman addresses such questions, shining a light on the poor thinking behind nine of the worst economic policy mistakes of the past 200 years, missteps whose outcomes ranged from appalling to tragic. Grossman tells the story behind each misconceived economic move, explaining why the policy was adopted, how it was implemented, and its short- and long-term consequences. In each case, he shows that the main culprits were policy makers who were guided by ideology rather than economics. For instance, Wrong looks at how America's unfounded fear of a centralized monetary authority caused them to reject two central banks, condemning the nation to wave after wave of financial panics. He describes how Britain's blind commitment to free markets, rather than to assisting the starving in Ireland, led to one of the nineteenth century's worst humanitarian tragedies- the Irish famine. And he shows how Britain's reestablishment of the gold standard after World War I, fuelled largely by a desire to recapture its pre-war dominance, helped to turn what would otherwise have been a normal recession into the Great Depression. Grossman also explores the Smoot-Hawley Tariff of 1930, Japan's lost decade of the 1990s, the American subprime crisis, and the present European sovereign debt crisis.

Economic policy should be based on cold, hard economic analysis, Grossman concludes, not on an unquestioning commitment to a particular ideology. Wrong shows what happens when this sensible advice is ignored. 

Richard Grossman
Richard Grossman

Richard Grossman

Richard S. Grossman is Professor of Economics at Wesleyan University in Middletown, CT, a Visiting Scholar at the Institute for Quantitative Social Science at Harvard University, and a 2013-14 Fellow of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Prior to joining the faculty at Wesleyan, he worked as an international economist at the United States Department of State. He has worked and consulted on Wall Street and has testified as an expert witness in federal court. He has published widely in scholarly journals and newspapers.

Harvard Book Store
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