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I**Z
Detailed and Fascinating Economic History--Every Single Page Highly Enjoyable
Graeber's book is a long, slow read, yet it is a fascinating page-turner for which I enjoyed EVERY SINGLE PAGE. I would highly recommend this five-star book to anyone who enjoys investigating the mysteries of economics in our modern world and to anyone who enjoys history, sociology, anthropology, or looking for major historical trends which tie together and explain world events.I saw a few critical reviews while reading this book, and now that I have finished, my opinion is that anyone who negatively reviews this book only read a portion of it. Most of the critical reviews are dismissive of his "point-of-view" as being "wrong." However, anyone who has actually read the whole book realizes that he has stepped back and looked at these issues from multiple perspectives and through the lens of multiple disciplines. People who are upset by this book (or by the introductory chapters) are upset because today's economics teaching focuses only on a small piece of the "economics thought pie" (my term) which is out there. Graeber steps out into discussing pieces which are less covered (or not covered at all) in typical economics classes in the West of today. So, rather than reading through his arguments, and seeing where they wind up by reading the whole book, I am certain these people gave up only part-way into the book, and then wrote a negative review because the ideas are different (much wider and more complicated) than they have been taught, and they find it "out of their paradigm" and just can't accept reading further. Yet, anyone should be able to read alternative ideas that challenge traditional ideas in order to see if their beliefs really stand up under scrutiny.So much information is packed into Debt: The First 5,000 Years, that it could easily have been written as five separate stand-alone books. As an anthropologist at the London School of Economics, Graeber wrote a massive, sprawling history of debt, credit, and the development of markets and money; he ties it to war, slavery, taxes, tribute, government bureaucracy, religious thought, and both local and international trade, by looking at societies from ancient Mesopotamia, to India, to China, to ancient Greece and Rome, to Latin America, to the Middle Ages, and to the Modern Ages.Why did he do it this way? Several reasons. First, as an anthropologist, he felt he was in a unique position to help us completely rethink our sense of the rhythms of economic history. Economists and historians, he points out, normally come at history in opposite directions. "Economists tend to come at history with their mathematical models--and the assumptions about human nature that come along with them--already in place: it's largely a matter of arranging the data around equations. Historians .....often refuse to extrapolate at all; in the absence of direct evidence.....they will not ask whether it is reasonable to make (certain) assumptions....this is why we have so many "histories of money" that are actually histories of coinage....Anthropologists, in contrast, are empirical--they don't just apply preset models--but they also have such a wealth of comparative material at their disposal they CAN actually speculate about what village assemblies in Bronze Age Europe or credit systems in ancient China were likely to be like. And they can reexamine the evidence to see if it confirms or contradicts their assessment." Second, as a admirer of French anthropologist Marcel Mauss, by writing this book, Graeber feels he has put to rest the real "pet peeve" of anthropologists everywhere--the myth of barter. I found this a shocking idea when introduced to it at the beginning of the book, but he has really convinced me as a reader through his extensive and comprehensive looks at every possible facet of this question.I will try to summarize in one paragraph the large sweeping ideas covered in this book. What is money, really? What determines what gets used as money, and why? Certain historical ages operated on mutual credit systems, with practically no coinage at all in circulations (for hundreds or even thousands of years at a time); other ages operated with coin made out of various precious metals. What were the differences between the types of ages when these different types of systems occurred in societies around-the-world, and what were the causes of these differences? Historically, when did these various ages occur, and why? What is happening now, and is the current situation in the world changing? We seem to have recently entered a new age of credit, but in many ways, completely unlike past ages of credit, with historical trends now completely reversed between creditors and debtors compared to past credit ages. How does war and slavery factor into all of this? What is capitalism and how did it come about? Does it really work as it claims to? What are the problems and myths associated with capitalism? What does faith and credit in government and society mean, and what has it meant throughout all historical ages around-the-world? These are just a few of the book's largest questions.Now I will touch on what this book meant to me personally. As an American living overseas in North Africa, I really enjoyed his discussion of how credit was handled during the Middle Ages in Europe, with most people living on credit in regards to each other. It reminded me of the system we even continue to use in North Africa, even in cities, with the merchants at the corner stores (which are our societal equivalents of 7-11 stores). Each family has a notebook which they bring with them to the store each time they want to purchase something. The merchant notes it in the book, and accounts are settled up at the end of the month. Without cash or coin available to most of the populace in the European Middle Ages, everyone operated on such bases with their neighbors, everyone kept accounts, and accounts were settled up in the whole village once or twice a year, usually at specific times or festivals. I found this really interesting. Many such examples from the book meant something to me in my own life, but they would be too numerous to list here.The price of this paperback was one for which I got more than my money's worth, many times over, for the many pleasurable hours of reading, and all I learned, in a highly-enjoyable and extremely well-written text. I wish I could sit in on David Graeber's class. Be prepared--you will want to discuss this book with friends, so try to get a friend or a book club group to read it with you.
T**D
Another fun and fascinating Myth-buster from David Graeber
This book came into my home because I was still high and happy on the full-on trip of reading 'The Dawn of Everything' by David Graeber and David Wengrow. That book radically re-organizes our (totally, provably, embarrassingly wrong) ideas about human history, to ask questions like 'how did we get stuck with governments. My type-a deal all the way.This book is equally interesting, and similar in many ways. The title conveys matte-dull economics blather, but (a little unlike 'capital in the twenty-first century' by Thomas Picketty, who wrote the intro to the updated edition) this book is no snoozer. It's engaging and irreverent, and funny. The author has a great formula for using common sense and deep knowledge of the Anthropology field to revise our automatic assumptions about his subjects. He certainly throws debt into a different light.I recommend this book for anyone who has read Dawn of Everything and wants more. But more directly, I recommend this book to anyone who has genuine questions about Debt, and the background for our present day state of affairs.At this writing the U.S. Senate republicans have recently challenged a bill to forgive student debt, claiming (of all things) that it is 'Unconstitutional'. While many of us have our minds reel over that one, it's a good time to recall that slavery and debt peonage and criminal persecution of those who are forced into debt are not new. They are schemes as old as writing, and older than money (as Graeber aptly demonstrates here). Give it a try.Also: I have the book and the audio book, and I would give the audio book a favorable review as well.
S**R
Good, Interesting, Mind-broadening, but Not Perfect
This book was very interesting, with much information and a way of looking at economics that I had not considered before. Graeber is an anthropologist, not an economist, so he sees things in an unusual way, and that is good. Graeber sees that in most societies debt is very personal. The notion that economics is dominated by wealth-maximizing individuals bartering goods and services, then inventing money to facilitate this trading, is contrary to the findings of anthropologists. According to Graeber, the evidence shows that people used to live in small groups where everyone knew everyone else. The debts they incurred were personal and not precisely quantifiable. If you do me a favor, or give me something, then I owe you. When you ask me for a favor, I shall be obliged to do it. If someday I have excess stuff, I shall be obliged to give some of it to you because you previously gave me something. Until the moment when I repay you, you have a type of moral or psychological superiority over me. This moral or psychological superiority was highly valued. That type of system worked, so the notion that money had to be invented to fix a dysfunctional system is wrong. Money was created by governments; it gave them power. With money, governments could pay thousands of soldiers and control the economy of the entire country.There is much good about this book, so I almost gave it five stars, but Graeber allows his left-wing political opinions to influence his scholarship, which I do not approve. Also, there are many typographical errors throughout this book; someone should have proof-read it more carefully before publishing it.
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