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Paperback Dumb Money: How Our Greatest Financial Minds Bankrupted the Nation Book

ISBN: 1439159874

ISBN13: 9781439159873

Dumb Money: How Our Greatest Financial Minds Bankrupted the Nation

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

The financial crisis that has gripped this country since last September has had so many twists and turns, it would make for a great drama -- if it all were not so real and damaging. Companies are... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

It's Not Baloney, it's just the facts (ma'am)

This is a very basic explanation of what caused the collapse of the financial system. Basic. The intent was not to provide all the financial rationale or details of what happened. The intent is to give a broad based overview of what caused the collapse. To completely understand it all in detail you would have to first be very experienced in this field and/or very financially literate (which most are not), and you would need to read tome after tome on the subject. But, if you have said, "Could someone just explain what happened?" then this is the book for you. It's not a class on economics or an in depth analysis of the psychology behind it all, or a textbook with citations and footnotes. This guy is just trying to explain to you "what happened." I believe that was his goal and I believe he achieved it successfully.

Interesting and Entertaining -

Recently I read a Newsweek column by Daniel Gross documenting that U.S. private employment today is less than in 2000, despite population having grown 9%. That bit of basic insight led me to read his "Dumb Money" about how the Ownership Society quickly degenerated into the Bailout Nation during the same time period. The book is short (101 paperback-sized pages), interesting (even entertaining), yet comprehensive, covering all the decade's financial 'stars' - Ben Bernanke - keeping interest rates low, continuing Greenspan's rosy forecasts), Christopher Cox (ineffectual SEC head), Alan Greenspan (keeping interest rates too low for too long, lobbying for deregulation, blindly following philosopher Ayn Rand instead of economic data and theorists), Edward Lambert (acquired K-Mart and Sears early in the decade, then spent $4.9 billion to buy back shares at an average $118 - now $70), Richard Fuld (named a #1 CEO by Institutional Investor magazine in 2006, received a $22 million bonus in 2007, and then watched the 28,000+ firm Lehman Brothers collapse in a market-terrorizing bankruptcy in 2008), Angelo Mozilo (making mortgages available to almost everyone in his pursuit of #1 market share), Henry Paulson (a latecomer to the crisis, he then created a bailout for the institutions that created the crisis), Robert Rubin (lobbyist for deregulation, Citibank board member while sailed into a major government rescue), John Thain (CEO NYSE from 2004-2007, paid $83,785,021 in 2007 - mostly by his not-yet employer Merrill Lynch, requested a $10 million 2008 bonus for 'saving' Merrill by selling it to Bank of America for $28 billion + $20 billion in government money, spent $1.22 million in 2008 corporate funds to renovate two conference rooms, a reception area, and his office, and was fired in January, 2009), the fine folks (both legislators and regulators) behind the Community Reinvestment Act, and countless financial geniuses that bought up every exotic three-letter financial instrument, company M & A or LBO, and mirage within sight. Gross even managed to 'share the blame' (sarcastically) with China for our low interest rate-fueled housing bubble. Institutional players involved and included in Gross' accounting included insurance giant AIG, banks, bond rating agencies, builders, Congress (bought, paid-for, and asleep), Fannie-Mae and Freddie-Mac (repeatedly raised their loan limits, allowing the bubble to keep inflating), mortgage originators, and the shadow bankers. Dumb money players were not limited to the private sector - California and the U.S. government also were major participants, followed by New York, New Jersey, Illinois, etc. - all but North Dakota, Wyoming, Montana and Alaska. And none of this could have happened without the little people (you and I) who bought ARMs, balloons, HELOCs, liar's loans, and no-down loans by the millions and then got stuck with them after the crash; regardless, we're all paying now for the private and public sector ba

To the Point

Gross has managed to write one of the most clearly stated, precise and condensed versions of the origins and nature of the current economic crisis currently on the market. Gross is not interested in finding a ideologically motivated one-stop-shopping-style guilty party ("It's Clinton's fault!"). Instead, he concentrates on the mechanics of how things got to the point they are at now - and in a way easily accessible to the layperson, without sacrificing accuracy.

Dumb Money

Very well organized, very clear explanation, very easy read. This book confirms everyone's suspicions that from the President's cabinet, through corportate execs and down to those actually responsible for the money, all were completely out of tune, uneducated, and dismally unqualified to be a decision maker. Kudos to Daniel Gross for writing this clear financial explanation and putting those responsible into shameful exposure.

Great read

Daniel Gross does a masterful description of the current economic climate and how we got to this point. None of that Right wing or Left wing crap. I highly recommend this book. Daniel is able to take a very dry subject and turns it humorous.
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