Confessions of an Economic Hitman

by John Perkins
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Confessions of an Economi...
 
by
John Perkins
 
published 2008
isbn   
date added
03-27-08



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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 3044)



Seth
02/07/08

bookshelves: currently-reading
recommends it for: appropriately skeptical people; not Oliver Stone
if you are not familiar with this book, it is the memoir of a purported "economic hit man" (he says people of this profession call themselves that) who has seen the error of his ways and wants to alert the world to a vast corporate conspiracy that enslaves us in a vicious cycle of global economic hegemony, debt and warfare.

i should say that i think the basic structure of his observations is true - that is, i believe the events he describes, and more or less in his observations of c...more
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Scott
01/27/08

bookshelves: 2008
Read in January, 2008
recommends it for: Anybody who thinks Capitalism is a good thing.
Here's what banks and international corporations, with the aid of governments do:

First, you take a resource rich country, and aside from maybe Tuvalu (an island nation that is about to disappear into the ocean), all countries are resource rich in one way or another. Next, you send a speculator, or, what this book refers to as an economic hitman, in to the country to resource the amount of economic growth the country can support. The economic hitman, or EHM, then creates a report with grossly...more
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Myles
01/13/08

Read in January, 2008
Certainly this is an important book, and more of its kind are really needed.

I recalled a good essay about America's missing literature of empire, which may be found here:

http://www.laweekly.com/la-vid...

"Few stories could be more compelling than that of Americans building an empire in the name of freedom, yet for every novel that tackles this subject — for instance, Henry Bromell's fine, un...more
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Mona
04/16/07

bookshelves: life-stories, nonfiction
Read in March, 2007
Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, while purportedly the author's memoir and hard-hitting expose of his work in the "corporatocracy", reads more like a flat and repetitive mass market thriller. In the 1970s, John Perkins began working for MAIN, an international consulting firm, as an economist who developed inflated projections of development in poor countries, so that they would then become dependent on richer countries like the United States. As Perkins explains, the "corporato...more
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Chris
02/08/08

bookshelves: current-events, politics
Read in January, 2006
This book probably would have enraged me if I hadn't already more or less known what it was talking about. As it was, I was resigned and depressed.

The book is a short autobiography of an Economic Hit Man (EHM) who saw the error of his ways. The idea of the EHM, as he describes it, is to manipulate the governments of developing nations to accept huge loans from the IMF and the World Bank based on inflated projections of future income, under the theory that they would experience huge economic ...more
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Mark
01/02/08

Read in January, 2006
"Confessions of an Economic Hit Man" by John Perkins is a compelling first hand account of U.S. empire building over the past 40 years. Amazing stuff detailing a general strategy of convincing foreign governments to take on huge amounts of debt from the IMF and World Bank in order to fund massive electricity and infrastructure projects benefiting US Corporations such as Bechtel and Haliburton. The Economic Hit Men would use econometric witchcraft to justify ridiculously unrealistic gro...more
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Ilya
03/21/08

Read in March, 2008
recommends it for: ahren
the main point of the book is to describe the way the US uses its economic power to seduce developing countries into debt with promises of rapid growth, a debt it then uses for political leverage. the author rejects the notion of a hierarchical mass conspiracy, and instead describes the way those in power, whether economic or political, collude through a combination of relatively small decisions to perpetuate and enhance the power of American empire.

i have mixed feelings after reading this ...more
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Alif
02/02/08

bookshelves: politics
Saya lupa kapan saya pertama kali baca buku ini. Sebenarnya sebelum buku ini dipasarkan di Indonesia saya sudah sering baca review tentang buku ini dari beberapa orang di internet. Namun, hingga buku ini sudah dipasarkan di Indonesia, saya belum juga tertarik untuk membaca buku ini, karena saya pikir buku ini paling hanya sekedar buku yang ditulis oleh orang yang hanya ingin mencari sensasi dengan mengumbar berbagai macam hal yang menurutnya 'rahasia' kemajuan ekonomi Amerika (atau istilah penul...more
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Maura
02/10/08

bookshelves: economics, non-fiction
Read in January, 2006
I'd had high expectations of this book and was very disappointed--mostly because I wasn't able to get past the fact that Perkins is a chauvinistic pig who I hated from the beginning til the end. He must have thought the fact that he later wrote a "confessional" about being a chauvinistic pig would make his readers forgive him or feel sorry for him, but that definitely wasn't the case for me. Also, he writes like a horny 10th grader--very poorly, and in the middle of discussing serious...more
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Dima
08/27/07

bookshelves: historyandrelevance
Read in April, 2006
recommends it for: anyone
John Perkins should be questioned about his claim that he was actually employed to become an Economic Hit Man. Being a seasoned writer, John also has a keen way of telling a story. For the writing part in this book (http://www.economichitman.com/... he should get 5 stars, if not 6.

But, his story I find unconvincing, though highly interesting. If it was fiction, then it would've been just perfect. But since it had, what he claims, ...more
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Amanda
02/27/08

Read in December, 2007

Confession/Disclaimer: I dropped the book at page 101

I enjoyed sinking into this book - until Perkins became just a touch to self righteous. Throughout the book he seemed pretty honest with his presentation of his own understanding of international affairs (admitting naivety at times and identifying critical moments)... but he seemed a little too self oriented at right about Pg 57 with this share:

"On my last night in Indonesia, I awoke from a dream, sat up in bed and switched on...more
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Jeffrey
Read in August, 2007
Confessions of an Economic Hit Man (EHM) is supposed to motivate us to recognize the dangers of wide open capitalism on the world economy. The author even includes his suggestions as to how to carry forward his ideas.

Perkins was once an EHM. He used his influence and his economic projections to convince developing countries to invest in huge development projects, built by US companies, of course, which would cause the country to go into debt. When the economic forcasts fall short, and repaym...more
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Gabriel
Read in April, 2008
recommended to Gabriel by: Michael Scott
This book's content and concept was interesting... the author participated in the USA's "march toward global empire" by shackling less developed countries with billions of dollars of debt. These billions of dollars are then funneled directly back into the American economy in the form of huge contracting deals to engineering corporations like Haliburton, Bechtel, and the once powerful MAIN. The debt (which the U.S. never really expects the LDC to repay) serves as a form of leverage fo...more
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Naila
01/17/08

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in January, 2008
recommends it for: people who don't read
This is currently the worst book I have recently read. It really makes me really wish that A People's History of the US was the standard Public School history text book. If you have never read a newspaper, book, or left your house and never plan on doing the above mentioned activities, then maybe you should read this book, it really is a quick read (all you really need is the last 3 chapters, if that). Not only was it terribly written, the author focused way to much on his underdeveloped self...more
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Breck
09/19/07

Read in September, 2007
First, Perkins is a second-rate writer. Second, he's selling his interpretation after introducing himself (through a colleague's words) as someone who's "not afraid to stick his neck out without knowing all the facts", and he never presents any hard evidence of his claims. Third, he seems to think that writing these "Confessions" absolves him, and he comes off as moralistically self-serving and egotistical beyond what one would already expect from a memoirist.

Mitigating...more
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Dan
08/13/07

Read in March, 2005
recommends it for: hippies, anti globalization folks, people curious about the controversy
This book is autobiographical by a former economist for the world bank. He describes how he undermined the economies and governments of third world countries by making wildly optimistic projections about their growth as to facilitate getting them into debt to first world countries. There is lots of personal cloak and dagger type anecdotes about how he was supposedly trained by the NSA.

This book is written simply and it reads quickly. The writing in simplistic and narrative. Although it i...more
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Mary
bookshelves: recentlyread
Read in April, 2008
recommends it for: everyone!
Everyone: Read. This. Book.

If you want greater insight into how incredibly powerful private companies and corporations are in guiding many foreign policy decisions in the U.S., read this book.

If you wonder how it is that the IMF and World Bank grant enormous loans to newly-industrialized countries and, yet, their economies and social structures remain stagnant - or worse, collapse - further entrenching their populations in poverty while a few at the top of the social strata get filthy ...more
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Steve
09/06/07

Read in August, 2005
Perkins claims to be part of a shadowy group of consultants called Economic Hit Men, who were supported by the U.S. government as a way of building the global empire. These consultants would go into third world countries and sell them on infrastructure improvements, and deliberately inflate economic growth predictions to justify their development. The World Bank, with U.S. backing, would approve massive loans that these countries had no chance of repaying. Saddled with debt, the countries would ...more
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Jocelyn
bookshelves: biographies---autobiographies
recommends it for: Those who dare to seek the true story
The accounts in this book are presented by the author as facts, although this has been called into question by many critics. I have to think at least 50% of the information in the book is true, if not more. And if that's the case, we're all in big trouble.

John Perkins' experiences are shocking, and cast the U.S. government in a very evil light. The short version of the EHM's job is: travel to an underdeveloped country (which has a resource the U.S. wants such as oil), convince its leaders to...more
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Emily
07/02/07

bookshelves: booksofthepast
recommends it for: those who don't think that the US is doing some dirty stuff!
Hah, this book PROVES it! Now anyone who wants to argue that the American government is involved in the economies of foreign counries puerly for humanitarian reasons can take off the blinders! For that matter, anyone who doesn't think that MOST of what the US is doing in other countries is screwed up can also remove said blinders. This book, while not incredibly well written, chronicles the experiences of John Perkins, a former Peace Corps volunteer, as he embarks on the career of "econo...more
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.70 (2313 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 4.07 (42 ratings)
number of reviews: 536