Leave Me Alone and I''ll Make You Rich: How the Bourgeois Deal Enriched the World
English
By (author): Art Carden Deirdre Nansen McCloskey
For readers looking for a distillation of McCloskeys magisterial work, Leave Me Alone and Ill Make You Rich is what youve been waiting for. In this lively volume, McCloskey and the economist and journalist Carden bring together the trilogys key ideas and its most provocative arguments. The rise of the west, and now the rest, is the story of the rise of ordinary people to a dignity and liberty inspiring them to have a go. The outcome was an explosion of innovation after 1800, and a rise of real income by an astounding 3,000 percent. The Great Enrichment, well beyond the conventional Industrial Revolution, did not, McCloskey and Carden show, come from the usual suspects, capital accumulation or class struggle. It came from the idea of economic liberty in Holland and the Anglosphere, then Sweden and Japan, then Italy and Israel and China and India, an idea that bids fair in the next few generations to raise up the wretched of the earth. The original shift to liberalism arose from 1517 to 1789 from theological and political revolutions in northwest Europe, upending ancient hierarchies. McCloskey and Carden contend further that liberalism and innovism made us better humans as well as richer ones. Not matter but ideas. Not corruption but improvement.
Leave Me Alone and Ill Make You Rich draws in entertaining fashion on history, economics, literature, philosophy, and popular culture, from growth theory to the Simpsons. It is the perfect introduction for a broad audience to McCloskeys influential explanation of how we got rich. At a time when confidence in the economic system is under challenge, the book mounts an optimistic and persuasive defense of liberal innovism, and of the modern world it has wrought.
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