The Untold Story of Economics
by Antara Haldar
A bold retelling of the story of capitalism that blends fiction and fact to upend 250 years of economic orthodoxy.
For a quarter of a millennium, Adam Smith's invisible hand, ghostly and bloodied, has written the script of our lives. Everyman makes the ethereal ink in which it is etched legible by embodying the solitary, self-interested homo economicus as Neo. Telling the tale as a novel, Everyman traces global capitalism's arc from boom to bust through its key characters: economics' textbook "rational actor," Neo, and his reckless apostles—model "finance bro," Finn; ambassador of globalization, Davos; envoy to distant lands, Wash; and the quintessence of the tech industry, Tek. In a dazzling saga spanning generations and continents, Neo's epic journey takes us from Chicago to New York to London, from Wall Street to Burning Man, from the factories of the Rust Belt to the farmlands of India, introducing us to the economic minds and political figures who have shaped our world, everyday people, and even runaway monsters.
An entertaining magical realist romp, Everyman touches on the most significant economic events in global history, from the Great Depression to the 2008 Financial Crisis, Britain's Brexit vote to the inexorable rise of populism globally. Drawing on moral psychology, philosophy, evolutionary biology, and beyond, it animates the possibilities for how we might build on our capacity for cooperation to reinvent our broken institutions—and ourselves. By breaking form to ignite our moral imaginations, it presents a vision for rewriting our modern-day mythology, our economic theory. Everyman asks: by recasting economics strawman protagonist as a flesh-and-blood character, can we turn the plot of our lives from an inevitable tragedy to a redemption story and alter the destiny of our civilization?
"Everyman is not a book. It is an exorcism. For 250 years, economics has armed the bloodied hand that clenches our throat. Antara Haldar's new book is a psychological drama unveiling an oppressive pseudoscience, a tragedy that refuses its own curtain. Read it and you will no longer ask who economics is for." —Yanis Varoufakis, former finance minister of Greece, author of Technofeudalism: What Killed Capitalism
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Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.
Antara Haldar is a globetrotting economist, philosopher, and lawyer. She is a professor at the University of Cambridge and visiting faculty at Harvard University. Her internationally syndicated column for Project Syndicate has been published in 150 countries, and her writing has appeared in The Atlantic, The Times Literary Supplement (London), WIRED, The Independent, and more. She has been a consultant to the United Nations and the World Justice Project, and her award-winning research has been cited by the World Bank, the White House, and other organizations. She lives between London and New York.

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