The Finance Curse: How Global Finance Is Making Us All Poorer – review
In its final decades, the Soviet Union was hooked on alcohol. It needed the revenue from selling vodka, and it needed the booze to keep its citizens happy. But there was a problem: the more Soviet citizens drank, the less they worked, and the more the economy withered. It was a vicious circle, with no clear exit, that helped doom the whole communist project.
I was reminded of this parlous trap while reading Nicholas Shaxson's excoriating analysis of the City of London's effect on our economy in The Finance Curse. Coming seven years after his groundbreaking Treasure Islands, which told the story of Britain's tax havens, this new book broadens his assault on the foundations of the modern globalised financial system.
Related: Britain can't prosper as a tax haven. It has to stop these hollow threats | Nicholas Shaxson
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