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Roger Bootle

    22 juin 1952
    Money for Nothing
    The AI Economy
    Making a Success of Brexit and Reforming the EU
    The trouble with markets : saving capitalism from itself
    The Trouble with Europe
    • The Trouble with Europe

      • 353pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      4,1(12)Évaluer

      'This is a credible plan for life outside Europe and deserves to be widely read' The Week - Business Books of the Year FULLY REVISED EDITION FOR THE 2016 UK EU REFERENDUM The EU hasn't delivered the prosperity and growth it promised; the euro has turned out to be a disaster; and the EU's share of world GDP is set to fall sharply. Moreover, no one is clear what the EU is for, or how 'ever closer union' can be matched with expanding borders and huge disparities of income and culture. The EU is the most important thing that stands between Europe and success. Outside the EU, the UK could thrive, shorn of the EU's regulatory burden and free to develop close trading links with everyone - a truly global Britain. Moreover, BREXIT could provide the spur for the EU either to reform or break up. The UK can lead the way to a better Europe. This updated and expanded Third edition of Roger Bootle's critically acclaimed book includes further material on European reform, mass migration and a major new chapter on the UK referendum and its consequences.

      The Trouble with Europe
    • The AI Economy

      • 352pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      3,4(128)Évaluer

      Understand the way in which AI and robots will change the world and the way we live in it.

      The AI Economy
    • Money for Nothing

      Real Wealth, Financial Fantasies and the Economy of the Future

      • 390pages
      • 14 heures de lecture

      The world is at a critical juncture, poisted delicately between a surge in wealth and a descent into outright recession. In The Death of Inflation, Roger Bootle rocked the economic establishment with his predictions and was proven right. Now, he embraces controversy again with a fascinating and far-reaching book that analyses the prospects of deflation and depression and the great illusion of the economic bubble, which represents the difference between real and illusory wealth, or money for nothing. In Money for Real Wealth, Financial Fantasies and the Economy of the Future, Bootle argues that if we can avoid the twin perils of protectionism and a deflationary slump, there is hope for a global leap in real wealth in the future through an acceleration of global trade. Bootle asserts that the old economic obsession with tangible things, such as land and machinery, has been replaced by a new economy of non things, such as intellectual property and knowledge. The result may be a change in our circumstances, making our lives today every bit as unreocgnizable to the next generation as the pre- and post-Industrial Revolution generations were to each other.

      Money for Nothing