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The growth delusion : the wealth and well-being of nations

By: Pilling, David
Publisher: London : Bloomsbury, c2018.Description: viii, 338 p. ; 24 cm.ISBN: 9781408893715Other title: Wealth and well-being of nations.Subject(s): Industrial productivity | Economic development | Poverty | WealthDDC classification: 338.9 PI GR Online resources: Location Map
Summary:
"In The growth delusion, author and prize-winning journalist David Pilling explores how economists and their cult of growth have hijacked our policy-making and infiltrated our thinking about what makes societies work. Our policies are geared relentlessly towards increasing our standard measure of growth, Gross Domestic Product. By this yardstick we have never been wealthier or happier. So why doesn't it feel that way? Why are we living in such fractured times, with global populism on the rise and wealth inequality as stark as ever?" --Publisher description.
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Item type Home library Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds
REGULAR University of Wollongong in Dubai
Main Collection
338.9 PI GR (Browse shelf) Checked out may2018 12/04/2023 T0059691
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references and index.

The cult of growth
Part one. The problems with growth
Kuznet's monster
The wages of sin
The good, the bad, and the invisible
Too much of a good thing
The internet stole my GDP
What's wrong with the average Joe
Part two. Growth and the developing world
Elephants and rhubarb
Growthmanship
Black power, green power
Part three. Beyond growth
Wealth
A modern Domesday
The lord of happiness
GDP 2.0
The growth conclusion.

"In The growth delusion, author and prize-winning journalist David Pilling explores how economists and their cult of growth have hijacked our policy-making and infiltrated our thinking about what makes societies work. Our policies are geared relentlessly towards increasing our standard measure of growth, Gross Domestic Product. By this yardstick we have never been wealthier or happier. So why doesn't it feel that way? Why are we living in such fractured times, with global populism on the rise and wealth inequality as stark as ever?" --Publisher description.

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