Home Books Price Wars: How the Commodities Markets Made Our …

Price Wars: How the Commodities Markets Made Our Chaotic World

Price Wars: How the Commodities Markets Made Our Chaotic World

by Rupert Russell

Doubleday ·2022 ·288 pages ·Investigative Journalism
Bottom of the Pile
Bottom of the Pile
I Index
18/99
Bottom of the Pile

12/99

Critics

Maybe Someday

25/99

Readers

n/a

Scholars

10/99

Rating

15/99

Volume

24/99

Rating

26/99

Volume

Sign in to add to your shelf, rate, or review this book.


About This Book

A fascinating, groundbreaking exposé of how commodity traders in New York and London have destabilized societies all over the world, leaving the most vulnerable at the mercy of hunger, chaos, and war. For Rupert Russell, the Brexit vote was only the latest shock in a decade full of the unstoppable war in Syria, huge migrant flows into Europe, beheadings in Iraq, children placed in cages on the U.S. border. In Price Wars , he sets out on a worldwide journey to investigate what caused the wave of chaos that consumed the world in the 2010s. Russell travels to Tunisia, Iraq, Venezuela, Ukraine, East Africa, and Central America and discovers that unrest in all these places was triggered by dramatic and mysterious swings in the price of essential commodities. Deregulation of the commodities markets means that food prices can shoot up even in years of abundant harvests, causing hunger and protest. Oil prices and real-estate values can surge even when supplies are normal, enriching and emboldening dictators. It is this instability--fueled by banks and hedge funds in faraway New York and London--that has toppled regimes and unsettled the West. Price Wars is a fascinating, original, and groundbreaking exposé of the power of the commodities markets to disrupt the world.


Preview


Reviews

"Deeply reported and thoroughly accessible, this investigation into the far-reaching consequences of economic speculation deserves a wide readership."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"A fresh look at some of the mostly deeply held dogmas of economics, exploding many along the way."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Near the Top

"And he has neoliberalism backward."

Roger Lowenstein· The Wall Street Journal Read review ↗ Bottom of the Pile

Reader Reviews

0 reviews

Sign in to write a review.

No reader reviews yet. Be the first!