Broke: How to Survive the Middle-Class Crisis
By (Author) David Boyle
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
20th January 2014
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
330.9410861
Paperback
352
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 22mm
250g
The average UK price of a house in 1952 was 1,800.
The average debt per UK household in 2011 was 53,000.
For the first time ever, todays middle classes will struggle to enjoy the same privileges of security and comfort that their grandparents did. How did this situation come about What can be done about it
In this beautifully shaped inquiry, David Boyle questions why the middle classes are diminishing and how their status, independence and values are being eroded. From Thatchers boost of the mortgage market in 1980 to the move from regional to centralised institutions; from the collapse of Barings Bank to the 1986 Big Bang, Broke examines the key moments in recent history that threatened the middle-class way of life.
What he discovers is that the triumphs of the middle classes have been just as influential in their undoing as their disasters.
Praise for Broke:
The tone of the book may be gloomy but there is plenty of entertainment value Could even be your holiday read if you are unable to afford a house in a suburb that your parents thought scruffy but is now ultra-smart, thanks to an influx of foreign bankers engrossing and contentious Anne Ashworth, The Times
Exhilarating Daily Mail
There is endless interesting stuff in this book he explains what he calls the middle-class crisis and hes spot on William Leith, Evening Standard
He tells these stories, on the whole persuasively and with some startling asides New Statesman
A book that is engagingly sensitive to the sentiments of what is sometimes called middle England Dominic Lawson, Sunday Times
At the heart of Broke is a competent account of how the economic upheavals of recent decades have impacted upon the population, from the point of view of those in the middle income bracket By assigning the "great British virtues" solely to his own class, Boyle is merely setting himself up for an unmissable televised showdown with Owen Jones. Alastair Mabbott, The Herald
David Boyle has been writing about the past and the future, and new ideas in economics, for more than a quarter of a century. He is a fellow of the New Economics Foundation and has just completed an independent review for the Cabinet Office. He is the author of The Tyranny of Numbers, The Human Element and Authenticity: Brands, Fakes, Spin and the Lust for Real Life. He lives in London.