Harold James
The New Economy of Fealty
PRINCETON – Since the 2008 financial crisis, most industrial economies have avoided anything like the collapse that occurred during the Grea…
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PRINCETON – Since the 2008 financial crisis, most industrial economies have avoided anything like the collapse that occurred during the Grea…
PRINCETON – Margaret Thatcher was much more respected outside Britain than she was in her own country. In the United States, but also in Cen…
PRINCETON – Europe can choose its own musical accompaniment to its latest crisis. In Berlin, 50 Cent’s “All Things Fall Apart” has just had …
PRINCETON – What is the point of Europe? The threat of an explosive disintegration of the eurozone – and with it of the European Union – is …
PRINCETON – Albert Hirschman, who died at the end of last year, was a great economist with a gift for producing striking insights by focusin…
PRINCETON – In constructing Europe’s monetary union, political leaders did not think through all of the implications, which led to major des…
PRINCETON – Any economic slowdown increases debt burdens, whether for households or for states. Today, both are looking for ways to reduce t…
FRANKFURT – Europe’s politicians nowadays are desperately looking for someone to blame for the euro crisis. Germany blames France, and vice …
PRINCETON – James Carville, Bill Clinton’s chief campaign strategist in 1992, famously expressed a bit of established insider wisdom about w…
PRINCETON – For the last century, economic-policy debate has been locked in orbit around the respective roles and virtues of the state and t…
Is globalization reversible? Do currencies rise and fall like empires? How does culture influence economic development and performance? Is “authoritarian capitalism” in China and Russia viable? Can international institutions like the IMF really shape the world economy?
George Santayana’s famous gibe that those who do not learn from the past are condemned to repeat it leaves open the question of what, exactly, is to be learned from history. Of course, the past, particularly where economics is concerned, can inform our judgments about what is happening today. But, too often, history is misremembered, or manipulated in order to cater to the interests of the moment. Indeed, Santayana might just as well have said that those who misinterpret the past are condemned to bungle the present.
Harold James, professor of history and international affairs at Princeton University and one of the premier economic historians of our time, is renowned for his scrupulous investigations of how the ideas, trends, and forces of the past have shaped – and continue to shape – the way we bank, how we trade, and what we tax. His insights illuminate the most complex aspects of historical change: how economics shapes the fates of nations, how inflation or bad policies can bring dictators to power, what previous attempts at free trade and globalization tell us about the future of today’s international economic order.
Each month, Harold James' commentaries in Capitalism Then and Now, written exclusively for Project Syndicate, bring his commitment to historical truth and balanced judgment to the vital economic questions of our times. Will the euro, or perhaps one day China’s yuan, replace the dollar as the world’s reserve currency? Does the future belong to economic nationalism? How should policymakers and regulators ensure appropriate risk management?
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Harold James is Professor of History and International Affairs at Princeton University and Professor of History at the European University Institute, Florence. A specialist on German economic history and on globalization, he is the author of The Creation and Destruction of Value: The Globalization Cycle, Krupp: A History of the Legendary German Firm, and Making the European Monetary Union.
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