Davos Man: How the Billionaires Devoured the World

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HarperCollins, Jan 18, 2022 - Business & Economics - 480 pages

A San Francisco Chronicle Bestseller  • An NPR Best Book of the Year

The New York Times’s Global Economics Correspondent masterfully reveals how billionaires’ systematic plunder of the world—brazenly accelerated during the pandemic—has transformed 21st-century life and dangerously destabilized democracy.

“Davos Man will be read a hundred years from now as a warning.” —Evan Osnos

“Excellent. A powerful, fiery book, and it could well be an essential one.”  —NPR.org

The history of the last half century in America, Europe, and other major economies is in large part the story of wealth flowing upward. The most affluent people emerged from capitalism’s triumph in the Cold War to loot the peace, depriving governments of the resources needed to serve their people, and leaving them tragically unprepared for the worst pandemic in a century.

Drawing on decades of experience covering the global economy, award-winning journalist Peter S. Goodman profiles five representative “Davos Men”—members of the billionaire class—chronicling how their shocking exploitation of the global pandemic has hastened a fifty-year trend of wealth centralization. Alongside this reporting, Goodman delivers textured portraits of those caught in Davos Man’s wake, including a former steelworker in the American Midwest, a Bangladeshi migrant in Qatar, a Seattle doctor on the front lines of the fight against COVID, blue-collar workers in the tenements of Buenos Aires, an African immigrant in Sweden, a textile manufacturer in Italy, an Amazon warehouse employee in New York City, and more.

Goodman’s revelatory exposé of the global billionaire class reveals their hidden impact on nearly every aspect of modern society: widening wealth inequality, the rise of anti-democratic nationalism, the shrinking opportunity to earn a livable wage, the vulnerabilities of our health-care systems, access to affordable housing, unequal taxation, and even the quality of the shirt on your back. Meticulously reported yet compulsively readable, Davos Man is an essential read for anyone concerned about economic justice, the capacity of societies to grapple with their greatest challenges, and the sanctity of representative government.

 

Contents

Prologue
Global Pillage
High Up in the Mountains
The World That Our Fathers in World War II Wanted Us to Live
Suddenly the Orders Stopped
Our Chance to Fuck Them Back
It Had to Explode
Every Stone I Looked Under Was a Blackstone
This Is Killing People
Is This a Time to Profit?
We Will Get 100 Percent of Our Capital Back
Resetting History
Not Somebody Who Is Going to Disrupt Washington
The Money Is Right There in the Community Now
Put Money in Peoples Pockets
At War Against Monopoly Power

They Are Now Licking Their Lips
Profiteering Off a Pandemic
They Are Not Interested in Our Concerns
Theres Always a Way of Making Money
Grossly Underfunded and Facing Collapse
We Are Actually All One
Were Not Safe
Taxes Taxes Taxes The Rest Is Bullshit
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
About the Author Copyright About the Publisher

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About the author (2022)

Peter S. Goodman is the Global Economics Correspondent for the New York Times. He was previously the NYT’s European economics correspondent, based in London, and the national economics correspondent, based in New York, where he played a leading role in the paper’s award-winning coverage of the Great Recession, including a series that was a Pulitzer finalist. Previously, he covered the Internet bubble and bust as the Washington Post’s telecommunications reporter, and served as WashPo’s China-based Asian economics correspondent. He is the author of Davos Man and Past Due: The End of Easy Money and the Renewal of the American Economy. He graduated from Reed College and completed a master’s in Vietnamese history from the University of California, Berkeley.