"A highly approachable and illuminating argument in political economy ... The story is packed with thought-provoking reframings: financial irresponsibility is now a 'collective good'; and 'the idea of a "job"' now seems very weird to me indeed."<br /> <i><b>The Guardian</b></i> <p>"This highly accessible book makes its case persuasively."<br /> <i><b>Times Higher</b></i> <b>Education</b><b><br /> <br /> </b></p> <p>"a valuable book that not only gives a very good overview of neo-liberalism and its failings, but also points to government errors and serves as a good primer in such things as imperfect information in markets."<br /> <i><b>Irish Journal of Sociology</b></i></p> <p> "A rich and powerful book. It pushes towards an analysis of neoliberalism not as the set of liberalizing forces that it depicts itself as being, but rather as a grouping of impulses that have both hampered government and weakened market competition."<br /> <i><b>Crooked Timber</b></i></p> <p>"An excellent contribution to the study of political economy that directly resolves the puzzle it has identified."<br /> <i><b>Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research</b></i><br /> <br /> "A well-reasoned and tightly argued analysis of our present predicament. Although written for the intelligent general reader, rather than subject specialists, his insights constantly provoke and illuminate. Far from being merely a dry dissection of neoliberal theory, the book also addresses how to make corporations behave better."<br /> <i><b>LSE Politics Blog</b></i></p> <p>"Takes forward and moves beyond Karl Polanyi’s (1957) analysis of state/market relationsto match the changing conditions of the twenty-first century."<br /> <i><b>Journal of Contemporary European Studies</b></i><br /> <br /> "The most important work on the political economy of modern capitalism since Keynes, Kalecki and Schonfield."<br /> <b>Philippe C. Schmitter, European University Institute</b></p> <p>"Colin Crouch shows how neoliberalism as embodied in large corporations brought about the Great Recession of 2007 and yet, ironically, they profited in wealth and power from it - at everyone else's expense. A compelling read."<br /> <b>Michael Mann, University of California, Los Angeles</b></p> <p>"An excellent contribution to the debate about neoliberalism. Crouch gives us a tightly reasoned and well balanced critique of the neoliberal philosophy that contributed significantly to the 2008 financial crisis. And his call for a more frank discussion in civil society of the moral and ethical assumptions behind neoliberalism is a refreshing addition to the traditional call for simply bringing the state back in to tame market forces."<br /> <b>John L. Campbell, Dartmouth College</b></p>