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Ferguson examines the systems of credit, insurance, bond trading and stock markets that have transcended all national boundaries to create a truly global economic system, opening the door to unprecedented growth, but also worldwide instability in the event of one nation’s downturn.
By the beginning of the 21st century, the systems of credit,
insurance, bond trading and stock markets had transcended all
national boundaries to create a truly global economic system,
opening the door to unprecedented growth, but also worldwide
instability in the event of one nation's downturn. In an effort to
establish more stability following the Great Depression, the U.S.
government's New Deal created a "property owning Democracy," a
system of federally backed savings and loans that allowed more
people than ever before to buy homes by offering low interest rates
and long-term mortgages. Rampant inflation in the 1970s, however,
led the government to remove regulations on interest rates and
opened the door to a massive scandal in the 1980s and one of the
country's worst economic crises. The vulnerabilities of America's
property-based economy would be felt again 20 years later, in the
current economic crisis that has shaken the world. The crisis
threatens "Chimerica," the symbiotic relationship between China and
America in which China's vast savings from the manufacturing of
cheap goods has been lent to America to fuel growth. But at what
point will America's battered economy lead China to cut off its
line of credit? And how might America respond? The answer, Ferguson
suggests, may be found in the history of the ascent of money.