Open World: The Truth about Globalisation
By (Author) Philippe Legrain
Little, Brown Book Group
Abacus
1st November 2003
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
327
Paperback
384
Width 201mm, Height 133mm, Spine 26mm
270g
Globalization is one of the most controversial issues in the world today. While protestors take to the streets at international summits, it is becoming conventional wisdom that companies are taking over the world, that governments' ability to tax, spend and regulate is under threat from global competition, that globalization harms the poor and that democracy is at risk. The author of this text argues that this is not so. Aiming to demolish some of these myths, Legrain shows how, without globalization, the poor are never going to get richer. It is simply the only way, he argues, to give governments the means to combat poverty: money for schools, hospitals and welfare. Focusing on the history of world trade as well as topical issues such as the power of corporations, whether globalization is bad for poor countries, whether it threatens the environment and Americanizes indigenous cultures, Philippe Legrain shows why elected governments are still very much in control and why a more open world offers greater opportunity for everyone, rich and poor, to better their lives.
THE ECONOMIST 'The world did need another book about globalisation; OPEN WORLD is it' FINANCIAL TIMES 'At last a good book on globalisation ... lucid and persuasive' SUNDAY TIMES '[Legrain] engages with the big issues much more convincingly than Klein' NEW STATESMAN 'If you have been convinced by Naomi Klein or Noreena Hertz, you owe it to yourself to hear Legrain's persuasive defence' INDEPENDENT 'a rapid rebuttal of the flimsy critique of anti- globalisation activists'
Philippe Legrain studied econonmics & int'l politics at LSE. Until recently he was special adviser to the D.G. of the WTO. He has also been trade & economics correspondent for THE ECONOMIST & written the FT, Guardian, New Statesman, Prospect, Foreign Policy & Ecologist