Bethany McLean est réputée pour ses reportages pointus sur les fautes des entreprises, notamment le scandale Enron. En tant que rédactrice collaboratrice et ancienne chroniqueuse pour d'éminentes publications économiques, elle apporte une compréhension approfondie des transactions financières à son écriture. L'expérience de McLean dans la banque d'investissement lui offre une perspective unique sur le fonctionnement interne du monde de l'entreprise. Son travail dissèque méticuleusement des récits financiers complexes, offrant aux lecteurs un aperçu clair des rouages du monde des affaires moderne.
As soon as the financial crisis erupted, the finger-pointing began. Should the
blame fall on greedy traders, lazy regulators, or clueless home buyers? This
book states that the real answer is all of the above.
Just as Watergate was the defining political story of its time, so Enron is the biggest business story of our time. And just as All the President's Men was the one Watergate book that gave readers the full story, with all the drama and nuance, The Smartest Guys in the Room is the one book you have to read to understand this amazing business saga
Named one of Vanity Fair's 11 Nonfiction Books to Read this Fall 800-CEO Reads
Editor's Choice: McLean exposes the faulty foundation not only of our supposed
energy independence, but of the very desire for it....The sloganeering of
drill, baby, drill, and the false, geopolitically fraught hope of energy
independence it implies, ignores these basic business, economic, and
existential human realities. In exposing them, McLean offers hope for a more
reasonable discussion, a more sustainable and profitable industry, and,
perhaps, a more integrated energy policy. As journalist Bethany McLean
sketches with clarity and concision in this book, the shale revolution has had
profound effects on the US, creating jobs and cutting energy costs, but many
of the claims made for it have been overblown....Unlike some who have taken a
skeptical view of the shale industry, McLean is not trying to debunk it--those
who have tried have been made to look foolish by its success in recent years
-- but she does urge us to be cautious about being too trusting.-- Financial
Times Bethany McLean explores fracking's nuanced success, but also cautions
that this energy revolution is not the country's golden ticket to energy
independence.--NPR, Marketplace
What the Pandemic Revealed about Who America Protects and Who It Leaves Behind
448pages
16 heures de lecture
The book presents a critical examination of American capitalism's failures during the COVID-19 pandemic, highlighting the government's inability to protect citizens and the resulting devastation. It explores the blunders of officials, the complicity of economists, and the indifference of elites who profited from the crisis. Through detailed analysis, the authors investigate supply chain issues, the impact on healthcare systems, and contrasting responses from political leaders. This insightful account aims to uncover the systemic flaws in capitalism and their implications for the future.
In a way, the situation is ironic: housing was at the root of the financial crisis, and six years after the meltdown, housing finance is still the greatest unsolved issue. The U.S. housing market is roughly $10 trillion, making it one of the largest segments of the bond market. Roughly 70 percent of the American population has a mortgage, and for most people, the mortgage is the most important financial instrument in their lives. But until the financial crisis, few people knew the essential role that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac play in their mortgages. Given the $188 billion government bailout of the two firms the most expensive bailout in history the politics surrounding housing are worse than they've ever been, and the two gigantic firms sit in limbo. Best-selling investigative journalist Bethany McLean, the coauthor of The Smartest Guys in the Room andAll the Devils Are Here, explains why the situation is dangerous and unsustainable, and proposes a few solutions from the perfect, but politically unfeasible to the doable, but ugly.