“This
book’s great service is that it challenges us to consider the ways in which our
institutions and systems, and the assumptions, positions and divisions that
undergird them, leave us ill prepared for the next crisis.”—Robert Rubin, The
New York Times Book Review
Deftly
weaving finance, politics, business, and the global human experience into one
tight narrative, a tour-de-force account of 2020, the year that changed
everything–from the acclaimed author of Crashed.
The shocks
of 2020 have been great and small, disrupting the world economy, international
relations and the daily lives of virtually everyone on the planet. Never before
has the entire world economy contracted by 20 percent in a matter of weeks nor
in the historic record of modern capitalism has there been a moment in which 95
percent of the world’s economies were suffering all at the same time. Across
the world hundreds of millions have lost their jobs. And over it all looms the
specter of pandemic, and death.
Adam Tooze,
whose last book was universally lauded for guiding us coherently through the
chaos of the 2008 crash, now brings his bravura analytical and narrative skills
to a panoramic and synthetic overview of our current crisis. By focusing on
finance and business, he sets the pandemic story in a frame that casts a
sobering new light on how unprepared the world was to fight the crisis, and how
deep the ruptures in our way of living and doing business are. The virus has
attacked the economy with as much ferocity as it has our health, and there is no
vaccine arriving to address that.
Tooze’s
special gift is to show how social organization, political interests, and
economic policy interact with devastating human consequences, from your local
hospital to the World Bank. He moves fluidly from the impact of currency
fluctuations to the decimation of institutions–such as health-care systems,
schools, and social services–in the name of efficiency. He starkly analyzes
what happened when the pandemic collided with domestic politics (China’s party
conferences; the American elections), what the unintended consequences of the
vaccine race might be, and the role climate change played in the pandemic.
Finally, he proves how no unilateral declaration of ‘independence” or isolation
can extricate any modern country from the global web of travel, goods,
services, and finance.
Shutdown by Adam Tooze review – how Covid shook
the world economy
A cosmopolitan analysis of what went wrong and how we
can avoid it next time – because there will be a next time
Oliver
Bullough
@oliverbullough
Fri 10 Sep
2021 06.00 EDT
Everyone
has someone who made them feel inadequate in lockdown, whether it was a
neighbour who grew tomatoes in their window box, one of those Twitter people
who learned three languages between March and May, or just a friend who didn’t
feel the need to get drunk every night. For me, that person was Adam Tooze.
While I was
struggling to teach long division to my kids and begging editors for deadline
extensions, he was – seemingly effortlessly – being a voice of sanity on social
media; writing an improbable number of lengthy articles about how Covid-19 was
rewiring the world economy; coherently explaining the long-term consequences on
multiple podcasts; and sending a regular email newsletter, which discussed
China, the EU or Vasily Grossman with equal felicity. As if that wasn’t enough,
he was also – it turns out – writing a book.
Tooze is a
professor at Columbia University, and Shutdown: How Covid Shook the World’s
Economy is his fourth book. He specialises in analysing how the high-level,
seemingly technocratic decisions of central bankers and finance ministries
drive history in a way few people understand.
His last
book, Crashed, analysed the financial crisis and showed how largely overlooked
aspects of the response – particularly the “swap lines” between the US Federal
Reserve and other central banks – proved crucial to its long-term consequences.
That book was published within a decade of the crisis, and at the time seemed
daringly contemporary, since few historians will tussle with events so close to
the present day. Compared with Shutdown, however, it was ancient history. This
book analyses events that were occurring as he wrote about them.
Tooze
approaches economics from a liberal Keynesian perspective and, as a US-based
Briton who grew up in Germany, is proudly cosmopolitan. He does not hide his
opinions – not least, about the foolhardiness of Brexit – so he will presumably
be accused of the usual things by the usual people, but Shutdown is a seriously
impressive book, both endlessly quotable and rigorously analytical. Tooze
synthesises a huge volume of information to argue that we must prepare for a
new wave of crises or risk being sunk by them. Hopefully, governments
everywhere will heed his warning.
The core of
his analysis is that this is the first crisis of the Anthropocene – the epoch
of significant human impact on the planet or, as he calls it, “an era defined
by the blowback from our unbalanced relationship to nature”. We have been
consuming too recklessly, and eventually the planet was always going to bite
back. With Covid-19, the result of humans getting too close to viruses
previously safely contained in wild animals, that finally happened. The wonder
is only that it took so long. “For the last century we have been riding our
luck,” Tooze writes.
He tells
the story of the crisis chronologically, and roams the world freely as he
follows the virus from China to Italy to the United States, picking out
examples to reveal how unprecedented its impact has been. Traffic at Heathrow
Airport dropped to levels last seen in the 1950s, the US stimulus was the
largest ever, economic output dropped more quickly than had ever been recorded.
Conservative
administrations everywhere were taking radical measures long demanded by
politicians of the left
The scale
of government intervention was so huge that he calls it a revolution, but he
also points out that it was a strange one. Conservative administrations
everywhere were taking radical measures long demanded by politicians of the
left, and were egged on in doing so by the usual guardians of orthodoxy in the
World Bank and IMF. But they were doing so not to build a new society, but to
preserve the old one. The result is paradoxical: they wanted to support the
market, and used the full power of the state to do so; central bankers
justified their interventions by the need to maintain the integrity of
financial markets, as if that were a more legitimate aim than improving
people’s lives.
For
progressives, this is depressing. The state can still use its powers to do huge
things but it can apparently only use them in the service of the powerful and
the wealthy. As soon as their crisis is over, those powers will be put back in
their box.
Tooze
insists that this would be a mistake. By virus standards, Covid-19 isn’t that
bad, but just look at the damage it’s done. We need to be prepared for the next
crisis, because it will be worse. Failing to act will condemn us to more
deaths, more shutdowns and more expense, so we need to start preparing now. It
is a message encapsulated in a line from John Maynard Keynes, spoken in 1942 in
the depths of the last crisis as complete as this one, and which Tooze quotes
more than once: “anything we can actually do, we can afford”. There’s something
hopeful in that.
NONFICTION
Can American Democracy Survive Another Pandemic?
Sept. 2,
2021
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/02/books/review/adam-tooze-shutdown.html
SHUTDOWN
How Covid Shook the World’s Economy
By Adam Tooze
Where
there’s a will, there’s a way. But what if our collective will is so divided
that we can’t decide which way to go? Or, more to the point, what if we can’t
agree on how much to spend, what to spend it on, who should benefit and when to
pay for it (on a continuum from now to … never).
These are
the questions raised — directly and by implication — in Adam Tooze’s engaging
account of the twin health and economic crises that enveloped the world in
2020. Tooze leaves the reader with a clear sense of foreboding: about our
preparedness for the next crisis, and about its imminence. It’s a warning we
should take seriously.
Tooze is a
historian, and “Shutdown” reads like a history, though, as Tooze notes, we are
in the middle of the story. Like any historical narrative, it is abridged. (And
there are no unabridged histories, only the historian’s choice as to what
events to focus on, in the hope that they reveal the wider landscape and the
forces shaping it.) Tooze juxtaposes the patchwork pandemic response of most of
the world with China’s coherent but coercive response. Though China’s official
reporting deserves skepticism, it seems clear that the United States and China
had the two largest responses to Covid, especially in aggregate — the combined
public and private response in the United States and the state-sponsored
operation in China. The similarities begin and end with scale. China’s response
was swift, centralized and severe, in ways a democracy would never — and should
never — tolerate. Early mistakes in Hubei Province were met forcefully by
Beijing. By Feb. 3, 2020, China was locked down and on its way to effectively
containing the virus. In the United States, the previous administration’s
response veered from denial to warning to blame-mongering, and back again. The
result was a hodgepodge of local lockdowns, conflicting mask guidance, the
politicization of scientific advice and an astounding death toll.
Tooze’s
implication is clear: The West has no systematic ability to prevent or effectively
fight large-scale crises. Our political systems are broken by cultural division
and, in Tooze’s view, hamstrung by outmoded economic principles. The best we
can hope for, he argues, is what we in the United States got: disjointed
“subnational” action, crisis management by “ad-hockery.” (Europe, Tooze writes,
is even less capable.)
On some of
these issues, Tooze suggests a point of view, especially his belief that
constraints on spending are artificial. He writes that the scale of government
spending and central bank intervention in 2020 “confirmed the essential
insights of economic doctrines … like Modern Monetary Theory.” He quotes John
Maynard Keynes — “Anything we can actually do we can afford” — and concludes,
“There is no fundamental macroeconomic limit that anyone can discern.” On this,
we disagree. Not with the scale of coronavirus response (or the potential scale
of future crisis responses), but with the notion that it forever obviates the
need for responsible fiscal policy. You don’t have to know where the limit is
to believe it’s highly likely there is one.
But
resolving policy debates is not Tooze’s aim. Rather, he largely allows the
facts to put the questions he raises into sharp relief. To whose benefit do we
mobilize the machinery of the state? Who is left behind? Do those choices
contribute to the fracturing of our politics? Was 2020 “the death of the
orthodoxy that had prevailed in economic policy since the 1980s?” Can the
democratic, decentralized vision of the West ultimately triumph against China’s
“ruthlessly effective regime?” Can American democracy survive, and American
government function, in our “disarticulated state”?
And, most
urgently, what happens next time? Whether another pandemic, or another deadly
wave of this one; nuclear proliferation from rogue states or nonstate actors;
extreme weather or simply the irreversible, existential threat of climate
change, the next crisis gets closer every day. As Tooze writes, “It was those
who have for decades warned of systemic megarisks who have been crushingly
vindicated.” The first of these questions — why do we intervene and for whom? —
is perhaps the most important. When the pandemic threatened economic damage so
broad that the global financial system itself was imperiled, it was
(comparatively) easy to mobilize Western governments to respond with economic
policy that was equally broad. The bipartisan CARES Act and its progeny were
breathtaking in scope and a dearth of conditions. In Europe, the usual rules on
state-funded support were likewise suspended.
At the same
time, the exception proves the rule. It took an overwhelming threat to the
institutions at the core of our financial system to produce the first
meaningful relief in decades for those living in poverty. The coronavirus was
“wartime,” and it remains impossible to imagine similar peacetime spending to
combat the entrenched inequality that so threatens our country’s future — and,
as Tooze underscores, enormously compounded the pandemic’s risks to the least
fortunate. The question of who benefits, and whom we want to benefit, is a
critical question that I believe should underlie all policy issues. Tooze
suggests that it is often ignored because America’s policy debates are
constrained by inherited orthodoxy. This is core to his implied criticism of
traditional concerns about fiscal largess and it connects directly to our
political paralysis.
Such a
concern is surely correct — even if some readers may disagree on the specifics
— but this book’s great service is that it challenges us to consider the ways
in which our institutions and systems, and the assumptions, positions and
divisions that undergird them, leave us ill prepared for the next crisis. You
don’t need to believe that a never-ending cycle of deficit-funded spending,
offset by monetary intervention, is sustainable in order to believe that the
scale of spending generally contemplated to deal with an existential threat
like climate change, or a societal threat like poverty, is woefully inadequate.
You can just believe we need to pay for it.
On the
book’s final page, Tooze offers this understated observation about the cohesion
of thinking at the heart of China’s institutions: “The intellectuals of the
Chinese regime are loyal to their party’s political project.” (This reads a bit
like praise, and “Shutdown” does gloss over the dangerous underside of
Beijing’s authoritarian regime.)
Of course,
there is no such cohesion of thinking in the United States, or anywhere in the
West. Pluralism, for all its messiness, is one of democracy’s great strengths.
But we have entered a state of dangerous incoherence: The separate understandings
of our world and its risks have become so divergent and so entrenched that they
pose their own existential threat by impeding our ability to plan for, prevent
and react to the crises to come.
Whether we
can overcome that incoherence and meet the challenges ahead while protecting
the values at the heart of the American idea — freedom, pluralism, democracy —
is the essential question posed by “Shutdown.” How we answer it is the
dispositive issue of our time.
Robert E.
Rubin, co-chairman emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations, was Treasury
secretary from 1995 to 1999.
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