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The World Is Curved: Hidden Dangers to the Global Economy
The World Is Curved: Hidden Dangers to the Global Economy

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Author: David M. Smick
Publisher: Portfolio Hardcover
Category: Book

List Price: $26.95
Buy New: $15.35
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New (39) Used (10) from $15.35

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 28 reviews
Sales Rank: 2902

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 272
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 8.7 x 6 x 1.3

ISBN: 1591842182
Dewey Decimal Number: 337
EAN: 9781591842187
ASIN: 1591842182

Publication Date: September 4, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand new Book, ALL days Low Price !

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
David Smick keeps a low profile, but experts consider him one of the most insightful financial market strategists in the world. For more than two decades, he has conferred with central bankers (such as Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke) and advised top Wall Street executives and investors, from George Soros to Michael Steinhardt to Stan Druckenmiller. Political leaders (from Bill Bradley to Jack Kemp) have regularly sought his policy advice.

The World Is Curved picks up where Thomas Friedmans The World Is Flat left off, taking readers on an insiders tour through the private offices of central bankers, finance ministers, even prime ministers. Smick reveals how todays risky environment came to beand why the mortgage mess is a symptom of potentially far more devastating trouble. He wrestles with the two questions on everyones mind: How bad could things really get in todays volatile economy? And what can we do about it?

Drawing on riveting anecdotes in language anyone can understand, Smick explains:

Why the churning cauldron we call China (the next great bubble to burst) represents a powerful threat to everyones pocketbook
How Japanese housewives have taken control of their nations savings, and why it matters to us
How greed-driven bankers and investment bankers have put everyones pensions and 401(k)s at risk
Why todays incredible shrinking central banks may not be able to save us when the next crisis hits
Why the big-money Russian, Chinese, Saudi, and Dubai sovereign wealth funds represent a tectonic shift in global financial power, away from the United States, Europe, and Japan
Why the world desperately needs a big think financial doctrine to guide todays dangerous ocean of money

The World Is Curved is the rare book that speaks simultaneously to the Wall Street, Washington, and London elite, yet its apt storytelling shows Main Street readers how to survive in these turbulent times.



Customer Reviews:   Read 23 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars Don,t waste your money.   January 8, 2009
Mr Smick's book is so full of obvious contradictions and disconnected propositions leading to illogical conclusions, that it is funny. The only things he omitted are cartoons to illustrate the ridiculous text.
If your I.Q. is above 50, you might want to skip this one unless you would like to see the kind of thinking that got us into the mess we're in. Also, you might want to Google the guys who recommend this book and the people he calls entrepreneurs.



5 out of 5 stars Insightful   January 1, 2009
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Very informative book. Provided excellent insight into China and the possible pitfalls that every investor should consider. Also, the chapter on Japan was of significance especially given the parallels of their crisis and now ours. Hopefully, the US will not make the same mistakes, but after reading the book one realizes that the government and private sector actions and rhetoric are earily similar to the mistakes of Japan's lost decade.


5 out of 5 stars The biggest threat: the demise of globalization. Read why...   December 18, 2008
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

Within the books I have read about financial crises, the authors develop one core analytical concept. For Morris in the excellent The Two Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, High Rollers, and the Great Credit Crash the concept is the over leveraged hedge funds supporting the securitized credit markets. And, how their demise may cause crashes in commercial real estate, credit cards, etc... For Kindleberger in his outstanding Manias, Panics, and Crashes: A History of Financial Crises (Wiley Investment Classics) the concept is the Hyman Mynski model explaining how the credit cycle exacerbates the business cycle. For Shiller in The Subprime Solution: How Today's Global Financial Crisis Happened, and What to Do about It the concept is an improved economic information infrastructure.

Smick concept is the demise of globalization. Smick states globalization fuels trade and rising living standard. The U.S. with the broadest markets has been a huge beneficiary of globalization. But, Smick warns globalization may wane because of:
a) protectionist policies out of Washington;
b) politics of class warfare with rising taxes on capital;
c) upcoming over-regulation of the financial markets; and
d) restriction on foreign investments.

In combination those policies would impair trade, capital flows, economic growth, innovation, and job creation.

One of Smick's interesting "curve" is that Western Central Banks do not control much. Greenspan in "An Age of Turbulence" also stated this is because world capital markets have become so large. Smick mentions that pension funds control $25 trillion, Japanese retail investors $11 trillion, OPEC $4 trillion, Asian central banks and their sovereign wealth funds $3 trillion, and hedge funds and private equity $3 trillion. In such an ocean of money, the Federal Reserve controls only risk free short-term rates. Other short-term rates depend on credit spreads controlled by traders. And, Fed has no control whatsoever on long term rates.

Another interesting Smick curve is his dire China outlook. The Communist Party Leadership controls everything ineptly. They control the banking system as their political instrument. Thus, banks are devoid of any credit management. The Leadership controls monetary policy and maintains rates that are way too low. Those have caused bubbles in real estate, stocks, and industrial production. When those bubbles burst, it will have a devastating deflation impact on the World. The Chinese have no social safety net. So, they save everything resulting in plummeting consumer demand from 50% of GDP in 1992 to only 36% in 2006. The only way China can grow is through exports supported by an artificially low Chinese currency. Smick indicates China does that to protect its unproductive domestic companies that employ 97% of the people and account for only 45% of exports. If the Chinese let their currency float upward, it would cause millions of unemployed. The Leadership censors information that prevents innovation and keeps the economy stuck in low-cost manufacturing. To read more on this, I recommend Zakaria's The Post-American World. Also, China one child policy has caused the population to age rapidly; that will lower economic growth.

Smick's views on Japan are not encouraging because:
1) society is aging rapidly;
2) its culture that forbids risk taking;
3) its excessive savings rate and weak domestic demand;
4) Bad government policies that turned their asset bubbles in 1990 into two decades of economic stagnation;
5) Japan is a fiscal basket case with a public Debt/GDP ratio of 170% meanwhile the U.S. is under 40%. Thus, the Bank of Japan has no flexibility and has to keep rates low not to exacerbate their Budget Deficit.

Smick is not anti-regulation. He promotes better disclosure so traders can evaluate complex securities without relying on bond ratings. He would reform the credit rating agencies by eliminating conflict of interests (they are paid by the bond issuers they rate!). Securitization must become transparent to reestablish trust in financial innovation. He would forbid off-balance sheet vehicles so regulators could accurately measure banks' risk based capital.

However, Smick is concerned the upcoming regulations will over reach. A Sarbanes-Oxley II could cause the demise of the U.S. financial service industry leadership.

Smick sees evidence mercantilism is rising. The WTO's effectiveness is waning. The Doha round was a disaster. Government trust in free trade and free capital flows is declining. The U.S. and French farm subsidies have reached egregious levels.

His Japanese contact, Tadasi Nakamae envisions a world plagued with overcapacity. China and all emerging market economies will exacerbate excess capacity. Manufacturing profitability will plummet. The West environmental standards will result in protectionism against Asian products. Asians will respond by increasingly closing their markets to foreigners. The better alternative for them would be to stimulate domestic demand. Both, Japan and China have failed to do so. Europe will muddle through in a slow growth, high unemployment, and protectionist mode. The U.S. will have the headache of dealing with a huge pile of Chinese goods on the world markets. He sees a nefarious combination of contracting trade with rising trade imbalances.

At the end, Smick summarizes that the most formidable curves we will have to deal with include:
1) growing fiscal imbalances due to social entitlements throughout the industrialized World;
2) the Chinese excess capacity juggernaut that will cause deflation worldwide;
3) class warfare leading to rising taxes against capital;
4) lack of trust in the financial system that will lead to restriction on capital flows.

Together those curves will weaken economic growth and increase market volatility.

However, if Smick had written his book four months later, he would be more positive. That's because he would have liked the government policy responses so far, including:
a) The U.S. Treasury and Bernanke's unprecedented steps to shore up the economy and the financial system;
b) Obama's upcoming cabinet of pragmatic centrists that will provide the leadership Smick wants;
c) Obama's upcoming huge infrastructure fiscal stimulus.

But, Smick fully deserves the credit of uncovering all the nasty curves we should be aware off beyond the housing crisis.



2 out of 5 stars a big bunch of interesting ideas, not worth the money   December 10, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Overall I enjoy the many interesting discussions in the book on macro-economics, international finance and issues on public policy decision making. But the materials presented by the author often lack clear direction. You will find the author presents a large number of ideas without giving a clear conclusion or summary at the end of the chapters. After I read through each chapter, although interesting, I had a sense of not knowing what exactly I just learnt. May be this is the nature of macro-economic issues, which are often complex and the various factors affecting the outcomes can have different effects if observe / apply at different times. But I still think the author can do a better job of summarizing his ideas and present his materials in a more organized way.


2 out of 5 stars Not because of content....   December 2, 2008
 0 out of 3 found this review helpful

I wouldn't know whether this book is good or not. The reader seemed adequate, if not terrific. But, 3 of the first 5 discs had flaws and skipped and sputtered and made whole sections incomprehensible. We had a car trip ruined.



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