Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Meltdown: A Free-Market Look at Why the Stock Market Collapsed, the Economy Tanked, and Government Bailouts Will Make Things Worse
Meltdown: A Free-Market Look at Why the Stock Market Collapsed, the Economy Tanked, and Government Bailouts Will Make Things Worse
Meltdown: A Free-Market Look at Why the Stock Market Collapsed, the Economy Tanked, and Government Bailouts Will Make Things Worse
Audiobook6 hours

Meltdown: A Free-Market Look at Why the Stock Market Collapsed, the Economy Tanked, and Government Bailouts Will Make Things Worse

Written by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.

Narrated by Alan Sklar

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

4.5/5

()

About this audiobook

The media tells us that "deregulation" and "unfettered free markets" have wrecked our economy and will continue to make things worse without a heavy dose of federal regulation. But the real blame lies elsewhere. In Meltdown, bestselling author Thomas E. Woods, Jr., unearths the real causes behind the collapse of housing values and the stock market-and it turns out the culprits reside more in Washington than on Wall Street.

And the trillions of dollars in federal bailouts? Our politicians' ham-handed attempts to fix the problems they themselves created will only make things much worse.

Woods, a senior fellow at the Ludwig von Mises Institute and winner of the 2006 Templeton Enterprise Award, busts the media myths and government spin. He explains how government intervention in the economy-from the Democratic hobby horse called Fannie Mae to affirmative action programs like the Community Redevelopment Act-actually caused the housing bubble.

Most important, Woods, author of the New York Times bestseller The Politically Incorrect Guide to American History, traces this most recent boom-and-bust-and all such booms and busts of the past century-back to one of the most revered government institutions of all: the Federal Reserve System, which allows busybody bureaucrats and ambitious politicians to pull the strings of our financial sector and manipulate the value of the very money we use.

Meltdown, which features a foreword by Congressman Ron Paul (R–Texas), also provides a timely history lesson to counter the current clamor for a new New Deal. The Great Depression, Woods demonstrates, was only as deep and as long as it was because of the government interventions by Herbert Hoover (no free-market capitalist, despite what your high school history teacher may have taught you) and Franklin D. Roosevelt (no savior of the American economy, in spite of what the mainstream media says). If you want to understand what caused the financial meltdown-and why none of the big-government solutions being tried today will work-Meltdown explains it all.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 16, 2009
ISBN9781400182091
Author

Thomas E. Woods, Jr.

Thomas E. Woods Jr. is the New York Times bestselling author of 12 books, creator of the EWTN program "The Catholic Church: Builder of Civilization," and host of The Tom Woods Show, a weekday podcast. Find out more at TomWoods.com.

More audiobooks from Thomas E. Woods, Jr.

Related to Meltdown

Related audiobooks

Business For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Meltdown

Rating: 4.433734831325301 out of 5 stars
4.5/5

83 ratings9 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is a very nice book/ audiobook. For a while now I've been trying to study economics and this book made me realized how little I know about the topic. Also, perhaps, similar to fields economic experts differ significantly in their opinions and their approaches to various problems.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    It's like it was written yesterday. Politicians are certainly blocking the commodity money path.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This was one of the first books to be written about the 2008 finical crisis. I know Woods wrote the book in something like a month. With all the information in this book that had to be an arduous undertaking. Woods' approach is to look at the cause of the '08 crisis under the Austrian economic business theory. Essentially, this theory says that value of something is subjective and people act to their ends, according to ideas. From this, order, money, value emerges. This is comparable to other methods that attempt to try and quantify every aspect to make predictors. Unfortunately, this takes out the factor of human action.

    Without doing the job of the book, this approach explains what we saw in '08 from an approach that not many have ever thought about it. Having listened to enough Tom Woods' podcasts, I had a decent grasp of the concept but this book presents an amazingly complete case from the Austrian side of things.

    This book forms concentric circles around the '08 crisis. It covers the reasons and people who were responsible for the crisis. Then it covers other countries who experienced their own financial crisis and what the Austrian model says. Then it covers what is money, value, currency backing, and other basis economic issues that someone might not have thought of. A decent presentation on gold and silver backed currency is also made. Then, a great look on the 1930's Great Depression and the reasons behind it and the outlook from the Austrian POV is also made. The term, "they didn't teach that in school" can be uttered throughout this portion - and most areas of this book.

    This really is a great book on the topic and the topic of economics. Woods writes not with an air of elitism but he really tries to communicate and educate the reader of the book. The areas he writes about in the detail he does, and in the limited amount he had to write is impressive.

    The one area that I could say that needed a little help is in explaining a few of the topics with a little bit more beginner outlook. Unless I missed it, there wasn't a definition of Austrian economics and it would have been good to really drive home the definition and basic factors throughout the book for someone who is just picking up a book on the subject for the first time.

    If you have an interest in economics or the politics of the '08 crisis or libertarian ideas this is a great book to pick up. Final Grade - A
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Good explanation of the current financial crisis from an free-market (Austrian school) perspective.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Don't expect this author to hurl the blame for the nation's fiscal woes in the direction of any one political faction. Woods makes a compelling argument that there is more than enough blame to go around. The premise of this work is that government intervention -- not deregulation -- causes economic chaos. While the book's review of economic theory and monetary policy becomes necessarily dry in spots, it's highly educational. Woods makes a Herculean effort to simplify some incredibly complex issues. He lays out the tenets of Austrian Economics, then explores some of the historic economic crises the nation has weathered. The housing bubble, Woods asserts, was the result of government entities and private sector players pushing people to buy homes who simply didn't have the financial instrastructure to sustain ownership. He also argues that cheap money (artifically depressed interest rates) lures people into speculative ventures who do not belong in this arena. The author even argues that some of the New Deal policies advanced in response to the Great Depression actually prolonged the economic pain. It takes some patience and discpline to make it through "Meltdown," but the journey is worth the effort.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Wow! No doubt in my mind that all herein is correct but then, I've been part of the choir for some time. The material is presented simply (which is good, right?) and the conclusions should flow like lava across the Fed's printing presses already! I have to admit, however, that I'm not left uplifted after having finished the book, the obvious next steps each seem a pill the size of an elephant and my fellow humans are risk averse and, frankly, quite a few of us are relatively comfortable in our part of the economic bell-curve trying to grasp the opportunities that present themselves right now - if not, are you a teacher?
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A book like this will never be read by the people who need to read it and certainly never be believed by those who argue for massive government intervention. Although I am familiar with most of the tenets of the Austrian school of economics, there is always something more to learn. In this case Thomas E. Woods addresses why regulators (and rating agencies) are so upset with short sellers. It is because when an investor sells a stock short and succeeds, it only points out how wrong the regulators were in claiming that there was nothing wrong with this stock, this sector, or the entire economy. But my favorite quote was from William Leggett, who wrote in 1837 that the average person "is bewildered in his attempts to investigate the cause of the confusion, and is ready to listen to an explanation that fixes the blame of the disaster on those whom he had previously regarded with dislike." This perfectly explains the immense amounts of ire that people are heaping on bankers, brokers, and businessmen. Some of this is certainly well earned, but misses the entire point of where the problem lies - with the manipulation of interest rates and the money supply by the federal reserve. If you were a bank and were offered "free money", you would certainly take some. So why castigate the bankers for doing exactly what the federal government told them to do? Unfortunately though the suggestions for ending this current depression are sound, they will never be politically possible as long as the government is handing out "free money" to those "in need".
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Having followed adherents of the Austrian school of economics for some time, I knew exactly what point of view to expect from Tom Woods. I knew I would buy and read this book with the primary intention of lending to others who were not already familiar with the ideas contained within. However, I was pleasantly surprised that even with some familiarity of the subject matter, the book was an interesting read. More importantly, I was extremely impressed with the scope and depth of coverage contained in the ~160 pages of text. Woods and his editor did an excellent job in choosing what material to include and how much time to devote to it. The result is an astoundingly simple presentation of a very complex issue. This is not an easy thing to do, and Woods pulled it off without a hitch. This truly is as close as you can get to one-stop shopping for a concise analysis of the current recession. To readers who are not already familiar with the Austrian school of economics, and especially to those readers who have a healthy skepticism of the views of the book, please do not overlook the Acknowledgments, Further Reading, and Notes sections at the end of the book, as they provide reference to the intellectual clout that stands at the foundation of the ideas and analysis offered an overview.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    In discussions of today's economic meltdown and what to do about it, the Federal Reserve is a stealth helicopter: it never shows up on the radar. With the exception of a few esoteric specialists and those Ron Paul Revolutionaries who burst into chants of "Abolish the Fed!" during campus rallies last year, it's like something has been put in our water to cause our eyes to glaze over and our minds to wander off at the very mention of centralized banking.Which is, of course, a Problem, since as historian Thomas Woods notes in this important book, the Federal Reserve bears a large part of the blame for the mess we're in. In the first part of "Meltdown," Woods shows how both in theory (the Austrian School, to be precise) and in practice, Fed policy fueled an artificial boom and instead of allowing the necessary, if unpleasant, short-term bust that will lead to recovery, is pursuing policies guaranteed to drive us deeper into the abyss. Little of this finds its way into the popular or business press, suggesting that the people who know the truth aren't talking, and the people who are talking either don't know or are deliberately trying to keep the helicopter hidden. As Woods writes, "critics of the market who ignore the arguments raised in this chapter are, to say the least, not being honest" (p. 86).But to paraphrase Will Rogers (no relation), it's not so much the things we don't know that are a problem, it's the things we DO know that aren't really true. That's why every bit as important as Woods' explanation of the role of the Federal Reserve in the unnecessary cycle of boom and bust is his taking down of decades' worth of myths about the government's role in the economy. As the author points out, historians have more or less abandoned the idea that New Deal intervention "got us out of the Depression," but the myth remains stronger than ever among journalists and the public. The result of this is not only a profound misunderstanding of American history, but more to the point, a widespread delusion that "history proves" massive government spending promoting consumer demand is the way out of a recession. Here again we see the apocalyptic power of bad ideas.All this suggests the economic crisis, and particularly the stimulus-driven response to it on the part of the Bush and Obama administrations, are a domestic equivalent of the Iraq War (I want to note that this is my metaphor, not Woods'): an over-reaction to a situation by and large of our own creation, and sold to the American people through a series of lies, the plan largely benefits those who argue for it most strongly while the rest of us end up poorer. The "opposition" is arguing over details while conceding the fundamental principle -- an intervention that gives the government a foothold of occupation it will probably never relinquish.That's why "Meltdown" is so important -- and why the Austrian School, which alone not only foresaw the coming crash but understood why it was going to happen, deserves so much wider attention. If I could improve anything about "Meltdown," I would have made even more prominent the citations of thinkers and books interested readers should pursue. Woods does do this in an appendix, and I strongly recommend you read the footnotes closely. But something like the "additional reading" or "books they don't want you to read" call-outs of the author's The Politically Incorrect Guide to American History would, I think, have been even more useful.If "respectable opinion" does pay attention to this book and the ideas it promotes, it will do so with the same combination of pity and contempt that earlier book received. As Woods writes, "You do not win friends in the political and media establishments by proposing a monetary system that cannot be exploited by governments to enrich their friends, enable their addiction to spending and looting, and fund their bailouts" (p. 134). But out here among the non-establishment, you DO make friends by telling the truth. And Tom Woods has a lot of friends.