Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 306
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-1-4422-7260-6 • Hardback • October 2016 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
978-1-4422-7261-3 • eBook • October 2016 • $47.50 • (£37.00)
Edward Alden is the Bernard L. Schwartz senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, and the author of The Closing of the American Border: Terrorism, Immigration and Security Since 9/11 (Harper, 2008), which was a finalist for the J. Anthony Lukas Book Prize.
Acknowledgments
1 The End of the World’s Greatest Autarky
2 Confronting the Competition: The Limitations of Trade Policy
3 Confronting the Competition: How a Strong Dollar Has Hurt
4 Investment: The Winners and the Losers from Offshoring
5 Helping the Losers: The Tragedy of Trade Adjustment Assistance
6 Tiger Moms and Failing Schools – The Competitive Challenge at Home
7 How to Think About Economic Competitiveness
8 A Strategy for Competing in a Globalized World
Notes
Index
About the Author
In this critical—and thorough–—analysis of US government policies regarding the country’s involvement in the global economy during the last half century, the author (Council on Foreign Relations) concentrates on the changing competitive environment the US faces. In the process of assessing the impact of those changes, he discusses a wide range of policies and how they affect US economic progress and international relations. Those policies include not only tariffs and trade agreements but also domestic tax policies, government support for enhanced investment, improvements in the education system, immigration issues, and monetary policies as they influence the international role of US currency. Part of the analysis deals with state and local governments’ attempts to take advantage of international economic opportunities in the face of insufficient federal commitments. In the process, the author also provides an insightful history of worldwide economic transformation over the last 50-plus years. This analysis is very well written and documented and is strongly recommended to anyone interested in international trade and global economic development, especially as national policy pertains to them.
Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.
— Choice Reviews
Rising opposition to globalization has thrown an already polarized political environment in America into near mayhem, with our key economic partnerships hanging in the balance. Ted Alden provides a cogent and constructive analysis of the origins of opposition to economic openness that charts a viable path forward. It is essential reading for all who care about America's role in the global economy.
— Gordon Hanson, Pacific Economic Cooperation Chair in International Economic Relations at UCSD and Director, Center on Global Transformation
“Ted Alden hits the nail on the head with this cogent analysis of the trade issue, its impact on American workers, our failure to meaningfully help those adversely affected and what we should now be doing to save globalization by adopting more thoughtful and far-reaching policies.”
— Steven Rattner, Chairman, Willett Advisors LLC
"Ted Alden's new book, Failure to Adjust, captures vividly the inherent tension in America’s role in the post-war global economy: that between the principal architect and guardian of an open system, on the one hand, and a participant and competitor within that system, on the other. That tension cannot be removed. But in Alden’s thoughtful analysis, as the global economy grows, the balance between player and referee that needed to shift in America in favor of the former, has been late in coming. It is a really interesting and detailed assessment, that avoids overly simple diagnoses and prescriptions."
— Michael Spence, Nobel Laureate and William R. Berkley Professor in Economics and Business, New York University
[Alden] demonstrates how four decades of market-friendly economic and trade policies have been insufficiently inclusive, setting the stage for the populist backlash we’re now experiencing.
— Sebastian Mallaby, The Wall Street Journal
[Alden] demonstrates how four decades of market-friendly economic and trade policies have been insufficiently inclusive, setting the stage for the populist backlash we’re now experiencing.
— Sebastian Mallaby, The Wall Street Journal
• Short-listed, Bloomberg Best Books of 2016 (2016)