As the world enjoyed the prosperity of an unparalleled boom, an economic
earthquake was looming, and then struck abruptly. Bastions of finance
collapsed, long-standing policy beliefs were abandoned, and governments
charged into the rubble without time to watch their steps. But for those
who were looking, the faultlines that ran beneath the boom had been
apparent for years.
In The Great Crash of 2008, Ross Garnaut and David Llewellyn-Smith
take us through the imbalances that led to the global financial crisis,
tracing the cracks that were appearing within the modern economy and
presenting a whole-world view of reasons for the downturn. They assess
the implications of the global financial crisis and offer hope for
finding order in the wreckage, in restoring development and building a
stronger and more sustainable world.