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Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets: Surviving the Public Spectacle in Finance and Politics (Agora Series)

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Company: Wiley

Author : William Bonner,Lila Rajiva

Publisher : Wiley

Manufacturer : Wiley



 

Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets: Surviving the Public Spectacle in Finance and Politics (Agora Series) 

Description

Why Going Against the Grain Pays.

Bestselling author Bill Bonner has long been a maverick observer of the financial and political world, sharpening his sardonic wit, in particular, on the vagaries of the investing public. Market booms and busts, tulip manias and dotcom bubbles, venture capitalists and vulture funds, he lets you know, are best explained not by dry statistics and obscure theories but by the metaphors and analogies of literature.

Now, in Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets, Bonner and freelance journalist Lila Rajiva use literary economics to offer broader insights into mass behavior and its devastating effects on society. Why is it, they ask, that perfectly sane and responsible individuals can get together, and by some bizarre alchemy turn into an irrational mob? What makes them trust charlatans and demagogues who manipulate their worst instincts? Why do they abandon good sense, good behavior and good taste when an empty slogan is waved in front of them. Why is the road to hell paved with so many sterling intentions? Why is there a  fool on every corner and a knave in every public office?

In attempting an answer, the authors weave a light-hearted journey through history, politics and finance to show group think at work in an improbable array of instances, from medieval crusades to the architectural follies of hedge-fund managers. Their journey takes them ultimately to the desk of the chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank and to a cautionary tale of the current bubble economy. They warn that the gush of credit let loose by Alan Greenspan and multiplied by the sophisticated number games of Wall Street whizzes is fraught with perils for the unwary. Boom without end, pronounces The Street.  But Bonner and Rajiva are more cynical. When the higher math and the greater greed come together, watch out below!

Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets ends by giving concrete advice on how readers can avoid what the authors call the public spectacle of modern finance,  and become, instead, private investors -  knowing their own mind and following their own intuitions. The authors have no gimmicks to offer here -   but instead give a better understanding of the dynamics of market behavior, allowing prudent investors to protect themselves from the fads and follies of the investment markets.


Customer reviews for 'Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets: Surviving the Public Spectacle in Finance and Politics (Agora Series)'

«Mobs, Messiahs and Markets.»

A very entertaining book but unfortunately very true. The crowd goes for a supremely confident demagogue who, when everything comes crashing down, is unable to recognize his culpability. Obama anyone?

[Monday, November 03, 2008]

«Very Informative Read...»

I liked the writing style of any of Bonner's books and this one book, the subject is very appropriate for today's markets. I'd advice anyone concerned about where to invest their money right now to take a read.

[Friday, October 24, 2008]

«Sweeping assertions and poorly researched.»

As i read this book, it felt more and more like a heavily opinionated diatribe that belonged on an editorial page of your local newspaper. By the time i got to chapter 6, War and Rememberance, it was more than i could take. For example, "And thus though the history of warfare is a history of appalling spectacles, though in every chapter of it the bodies are pressed like flies between the pages, almost nowhere will you find any explaination for why they are there. Who can find a single reason for World War I that justifies the inconvenience of even a single person, let alone the deaths of nine million of them?" The cause of WWI specifically is complex and subject to debate. However, to generalize this to all wars is inaccurate. Prepare youself there are numerous claims like this through out the text in different historical contexts. There are few footnotes to justify assertions or statements. The authors present themselves as historians, psychologists, economists, and i do not know what else as the text proceeds. That people could swallow this whole only affirms maybe their only central premise that people are like lemmings who accept doctrine without critical analysis. There are many books written and much cogent historical analysis of wars and their causes. The authors seem to conveniently forget that periodically tyrants rouse their populations into aggressive wars to spread their ideologies. Am i to think that those being attacked have no good reason to defend themselves? For example, am i to think that the world should have just accepted Hitler's super race program and their fate? I am sorry but this book is nonsense for the most part and it is not even worth finishing. If you desire to read a decent book on mob psychology or market psychology I recommend the following books as far superior - The Devil Take the Hindmost, Manias, Panics, and Crashes by Kindleberger, Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds (1841) by Charles Mackay, or for the Psychology Perspective on Crowds and Mass Movements The True Believer by Eric Hoffer. I am sorry but this book is drivel.

[Thursday, September 11, 2008]



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