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User Review - Flag as inappropriate

I really liked this book.
It was mostly analysis, not lots of facts. Some of his conclusions I thought were lacking in evidence.
It explained a lot of things to me, though, that I never knew. It
explains how, exactly, the Chinese government keeps its currency's exchange rate fixed. It explains why it was somewhat plausible for a security made up only of subprime mortgages to be rated AAA. But mostly it explains why the world economy is so unstable, and makes serious suggestions for improvement.
Definitely worth a read for anyone with an interest in or patience for macro economics.
 

User Review - Flag as inappropriate

I had been wanting to read this book for many months since it had been billed as the Goldman Sachs/Financial Times 2010 business book of the year.
Unfortunately, this book was hard to read
, stylistically simple and lacked any truly captivating narrative. It was like reading a power point presentation. Although the ideas put forth were sometimes interesting I found the prose to be uninspiring.
Also, it seemed that the author was biting off more than he could chew. Each chapter covered a rather large issue over the course of about 20 pages, not nearly enough to craft a thorough argument.
There was one very interesting section called The Cost of Undervaluation, very near the end of the book, about the relationship of the renminbi to the dollar and the various repercussions of that policy. The section gave me new insight into this topic. Yet, again, it could have just as easily been put in bullet point format and been as interesting.
 

User Review - Flag as inappropriate

One can't argue with Raghuram Rajan on any aspect of the 'fault-lines' defined by him as responsible for the present economic crisis. At all times, he keeps the bigger picture in mind without getting stuck by bias or prejudice especially against the investment banking thieves - Pradeep Kabra

Review: Fault Lines: How Hidden Fractures Still Threaten the World Economy

User Review  - Dhiraj Sharma - Goodreads

A must read book for those interested in the seeds of the Econmomic crisis of 2008, how it unfolded in the US and engulfed the whole world in the process. Along with Fault Lines I would also recommend ... Read full review

Review: Fault Lines: How Hidden Fractures Still Threaten the World Economy

User Review  - Nikhil Kumar - Goodreads

Rajan presents an analysis sufficiently detailed for a student of economics, yet accessible enough for a well-informed layman in a very thoughtful, balanced way. Although a noted proponent of the free ... Read full review

Review: Fault Lines: How Hidden Fractures Still Threaten the World Economy

User Review  - Ecoute Sauvage - Goodreads

Prof. Rajan is one of the best financial economists around. His main fault line is one that only gets deeper by the day and consists of blithely assuming that people making $4,000/year (say, China ... Read full review

Review: Fault Lines: How Hidden Fractures Still Threaten the World Economy

User Review  - John Griffin - Goodreads

Great analysis of how domestic political pressures lead to macro-economic instabilities in the United States and abroad. Less insightful into why income disparities are a root cause, and even less ... Read full review

Review: Fault Lines: How Hidden Fractures Still Threaten the World Economy

User Review  - Jon - Goodreads

Rajan takes a worldwide view of the financial crisis—factoring everything from global trade to education to government intervention to health care to Wall Street. While I felt that it was sometimes ... Read full review

Review: Fault Lines: How Hidden Fractures Still Threaten the World Economy

User Review  - Julie - Goodreads

This paragraph, in my humble opinion, says it all: Education plays a far greater role than simply improving an individual's income and career prospects: it has intrinsic worth of its own, allowing us ... Read full review

Review: Fault Lines: How Hidden Fractures Still Threaten the World Economy

User Review  - Kevin Tharayil - Goodreads

In 2005, the author, at an elite economists gathering honoring the then Fed Reserve governor, Alan Greenspan, made the point that financial development had made the world riskier. He met with scorn ... Read full review

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5 stars - 11
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All reviews - 35
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All reviews - 35