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Business & Economics General

The Post-Widget Society

Economic Possibilities for Our Children

by (author) Lawrence Summers H.

Publisher
Farrar Straus & Giroux
Initial publish date
Mar 2018
Category
General
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780374115654
    Publish Date
    Mar 2018
    List Price
    $35

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Description

We are buffeted by the sense that everything is accelerating: Digital technology is changing the way we work, shop, and socialize. And yet for all the talk about disruptive innovations, economic growth is largely stagnant. We are told that with new technologies average citizens are empowered as never before, and yet wide swaths of the population feel powerless and can no longer count on stable careers and a better life for their children. As Lawrence H. Summers shows in The Post-Widget Society, these are the paradoxes that define the economic revolution that is transforming our world.

At the heart of this revolution are two dramatic developments in Western economies: the declining significance of widgets (mass-produced goods) and the rise of design goods (products that cost a lot to design but little to produce); and the controversial prospect of secular stagnation, the long-term phenomenon of negligible economic growth and depressed employment in a dynamic market economy. Summers's trenchant analysis of these trends reveals that they have profound implications not only for the future of jobs and widening income inequality but also for the nature of the state and the very stability of society. A bold, pathbreaking book by one of our most important economists, The Post-Widget Society is necessary reading for every American concerned about our economic and political future.

About the author

Awards

  • Short-listed, Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers
  • Long-listed, Washington Post Best Books of the Year

Contributor Notes

Lawrence H. Summers is the Charles W. Eliot University Professor and president emeritus of Harvard University. During the past two decades, he has served in a series of senior policy positions in Washington, D.C., including as the seventy-first secretary of the Treasury for President Clinton, the director of the National Economic Council for President Obama, and the vice president of development economics and chief economist of the World Bank.

Editorial Reviews

Praise for Lawrence H. Summers

"[Summers] has the rare ability to see the world that is taking shape and the skill to help bring it into being." -President Bill Clinton