If you want to buy the book, you can buy it here: 13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and
the Next Financial Meltdown.
13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and
the Next Financial Meltdown, by James Kwak, Simon Johnson, Pantheon 15.
13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and
the Next Financial Meltdown (Pantheon) Simon Johnson and James Kwak
Not exact matches
Indeed, little of substance about our vast, interconnected, highly leveraged, nontransparent, global
financial system has changed since the crisis (see «Are We Ready for the
Next Meltdown?
Having lived through the corporate crisis of 2002 - 03 and the
financial system
meltdown of 2008 - 09, the
next generation of leaders has learned the pitfalls of charismatic, ego - driven leaders who focus on their self - interest, and is prepared to lead entirely on behalf of their organizations and the impact they can have.
Amazon Editorial reviewsProduct Description A practical guide to preparing for the
next phase of the
financial meltdown From the authors who were the first to predict Phase I of our current economic downturn - in their landmark 2006 book, America's Bubble Economy - comes...
It is no different this time around except that in the environment characterized by fear, uncertainty, and doubt (FUD) that's prevailed since the 2008
Financial Panic, each instance of ebbing in data is feared to be the start of the
next economic and market
meltdown.
Q: My husband and I have been very happy Couch Potato investors, but I'm questioning the strategy after reading the latest edition of Aftershock: Protect Yourself and Profit in the
Next Global
Financial Meltdown, which says massive U.S. money - printing and debt will eventually cause rampant inflation and spiking interest rates.
For anyone following my series of book reviews on the
financial crisis my
next book will be More Mortgage
Meltdown by Whitney Tilson or This Time is Different by Kenneth Rogoff.
After all, if you're retired and no longer collecting a paycheck, you're apt to feel a lot more secure if you know where your
next spending dollar is coming from — and you don't have to worry whether your standard of living will decline if the
financial markets slip into
meltdown mode.
Between
financial meltdowns and departing directors, at least half a dozen museums ended the year wondering what comes
next.
Over the course of the
next forty years or so (or however long you have until you retire), you're probably going to realize an overall gain, even if there are a few
financial meltdowns on the way there.