Reviews
The scholarly literature on neoliberalism tends to focus either on the intellectual genealogy of neoliberal thought or on the political history of neoliberal policies. Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway’s
The Big Myth adds a third dimension to the story … it’s an immense scholarly feat.
Oreskes and Conway tell the important and frequently infuriating history of how it is that Americans came to equate the broad concept of freedom with an almost religious belief in the free market … The authors acknowledge that markets do have a role in generating information and allocating resources, one that central planning has never been able to replicate. Their argument is not that capitalism is bad but rather that we should acknowledge its limits.
Offers a valuable perspective on our current disputes about both the democratic and the capitalist sides of democratic capitalism … If today’s executives want to address the tensions about their companies’ role in our societies,
The Big Myth suggests one starting point: for business to stop pushing the idea that the only role of government is to get out of its way.
[A] scorching indictment of free market fundamentalism … and how we can change, before it’s too late.
Richly researched … [Oreskes and Conway] succeed in chronicling a concerted effort by American business to shift public opinion in favor of free markets.
Impressive.
Outstanding … A pair of historians explain how market fundamentalism leads to science denial … For scientists who are dumbfounded by anti-science attitudes, understanding this history is vital. Only by understanding the forces that cause science denial can anything be done about it. Like
Merchants of Doubt before it,
The Big Myth offers crucial insight into this phenomenon.
A sweeping tale of what must be one of the most successful propaganda campaigns ever, one that transformed the intuitive common sense of both American elites and regular people . . . The book is an incredible work of scholarship, and every page has at least one sparkling, fascinating fact.
Conservative economic thought has had a major influence on American life and culture. Readers clamoring for an understanding of its intellectual origins would benefit from picking up
The Big Myth.
Hard-hitting, persuasive.
A vital resource for those trying to navigate a world where the government is demonized by many and corporations receive the rights of citizens from our courts.
Readers will be intellectually enlivened ... The way the book challenges each component of market mythology is hugely impressive … In a world facing existential threats like climate change, markets alone do not suffice, [Oreskes and Conway] argue. Governments must act.
A persuasive examination of how corporate advocates, libertarian academics, and right-wing culture warriors have collaborated to try to convince the American people that economic and political freedom are indivisible, and that regulation leads inexorably to tyranny ... Polemical yet scrupulously researched, this wake-up call rings loud and clear.
A thoughtful denunciation of the economic dogma that the market knows best … A timely, well-argued contribution to the literature of economic inequality and regulation.
At last, an antidote to the toxic fiction that now imperils our planet and our democracy. For decades, self-interested businessmen have promoted the canard that any government effort to make markets work more safely and fairly will cost us our freedom. Not true, show Oreskes and Conway as they boldly exhume the buried truth: that what’s really at stake is the
form of capitalism we choose. If you read only one book this year, make it
The Big Myth.
Both a carefully researched work of intellectual history, and an urgently needed political analysis explaining how Americans have become so deeply alienated from their own government. In a compelling narrative, the authors show how a small but zealous cadre of conservative businessmen, many of them selling harmful products, waged and largely won an undeclared ideological war for Americans' hearts and minds. The magical thinking they promoted has profited them handsomely, but cost the rest of the country tragically.
Admirers of the authors’
Merchants of Doubt will find the same trenchant investigative brilliance here, deployed on an even wider canvas. They show how wealthy industrialists praising free enterprise shamelessly put vast sums of money into manipulating the free market of ideas. The target: well over a century’s worth of progressive movements from child labor regulation to the New Deal to the fight for renewable energy.
A detailed, carefully researched study of how the ideology of market fundamentalism was sold to the American public. An invaluable exposé of how a certain kind of magical thinking was turned into accepted wisdom.
In this major work, Oreskes and Conway expose how American democracy was deformed by decades of ‘free market’ ideology. They reveal how big business interests attacked the very guardrails that make markets safe and fair and flogged the self-serving notion that popular democracy is dangerous to ‘freedom.’ Worst of all, American business successfully persuaded many of us that we should trust corporations more than our own government.
A sweeping, eye-opening account of how the myth of the free market seeped into American political culture. Looking back at the history of the organizations and individuals who attempted to erase the reality of our mixed public-private system,
The Big Myth busts the myth of market fundamentalism that has weakened our ability to tackle major policy challenges.
A wonderful book. It is St. George slaying the dragon.
The Big Myth can free American minds from a dangerous enthrallment.
Market fundamentalism has been profoundly damaging to human and economic welfare, in terms of ill health, environmental harms, inequality, and more. How did this belief system become so prominent in ideas and politics, particularly in the USA? This fascinating and important book tells that extraordinary story with care and rigor, setting out the cast of characters, their motivations, and the modus operandi. Please read this book. And be warned.
This urgent and compelling book should be required readings in board rooms, business schools, and beyond to challenge pervasive bad assumptions and ignorance about the role of government and the importance of governance.
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