It would make a a great political speech.
JDN 2456476 EDT 11:24.
A review of Beyond the Crash by Gordon Brown
As a political speech, Beyond the Crash would be like Bill Clinton's lecture at the Democratic National Convention: Long, wonky, full of numbers, but ultimately brilliant. As a book, on the other hand, it has some serious flaws.
First is length, and with it, redundancy: Brown keeps saying the same things multiple times in slightly different ways, and you find yourself shaking your head and saying, "Okay, I get it: A global plan for trade growth." Most of his ideas are actually pretty good; you just get tired of hearing them over and over again.
Second, Gordon Brown is a politician, and it shows: He's never willing to say anything bad about anyone, even the national governments and corporations responsible for the crash in the first place. He never outright disagrees with any ideas, merely saying, "Yes, but we should also…" even to things that you'd think the Labour Party (you're supposed to be the left wing, guys!) would find abhorrent. The result is a lot of mealy-mouthed statements that are almost meaningless, what Less Wrong calls "applause lights" that nobody would disagree with.
Indeed, it seems like the Labour Party, if Gordon Brown is representative, has now become a center-right party. There is no Left in the US or the UK; there is a center-right (Democrats, Labour) and a far right (Republican, Tory). The UK also has a mainline right (Liberal Democrats), which in the US is taken up by RINOs and DINOs.
There is one thing that makes Beyond the Crash worth reading, and that is the final chapter: "Markets Need Morals." This is exactly right, and exactly what we need to be talking about. Markets do not exist without human action; they are not a law of nature. Together, we decide what goes on in markets. We decide what is considered "fair business practice", what is ethical, what is legal. We must cease talk of "deregulation", and instead talk about what sort of regulation we want. Without rules, you can't have a market; you just have chaos. So there will be regulation; the question is, how will it work, how will it be enforced, who will benefit from it?