... and one of the very best:
http://michael-hudson.com/2010/07/fr...ious-capital1/
I think there is a lot of very rewarding thinking going on here, even if you've read a lot of Hudson.
The main value to me is this: Hudson is the quickest way to a "Holy Sh!t" moment you can get, at least regarding our economic moment in time. He gives you the tinker-toy elements to seeing why the whole model is hopelessly incoherent and illusory. (By "whole model" think of the asset-price / credit fueled boom that has been the dominant feature of our lives since roughly Thatcher and Reagan.) And to see the value of this, think of the trouble one has in explaining to those around you that the experience of roughly anyone they can talk to has "just" become precisely irrelevant. That's a difficult turn to negotiate on an intellectual level, much less an emotional one. You can get there through more circuitous routes, but there's no better guide in a desert-island-discs sort of way than Hudson. And this essay distills the basic analysis while also adding a lot more detail regarding banking history in the Anglo-Saxon world versus, for instance, continental Europe that is new to me at least and gives a startling and slightly disturbing new perspective on 20th century conflicts.
http://michael-hudson.com/2010/07/fr...ious-capital1/
I think there is a lot of very rewarding thinking going on here, even if you've read a lot of Hudson.
The main value to me is this: Hudson is the quickest way to a "Holy Sh!t" moment you can get, at least regarding our economic moment in time. He gives you the tinker-toy elements to seeing why the whole model is hopelessly incoherent and illusory. (By "whole model" think of the asset-price / credit fueled boom that has been the dominant feature of our lives since roughly Thatcher and Reagan.) And to see the value of this, think of the trouble one has in explaining to those around you that the experience of roughly anyone they can talk to has "just" become precisely irrelevant. That's a difficult turn to negotiate on an intellectual level, much less an emotional one. You can get there through more circuitous routes, but there's no better guide in a desert-island-discs sort of way than Hudson. And this essay distills the basic analysis while also adding a lot more detail regarding banking history in the Anglo-Saxon world versus, for instance, continental Europe that is new to me at least and gives a startling and slightly disturbing new perspective on 20th century conflicts.
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