Philippe Aghion is Professor at the Collège de France, INSEAD, and the London School of Economics and was previously Professor of Economics at Harvard. He is coauthor, with Peter Howitt, of Endogenous Growth Theory and The Economics of Growth. Céline Antonin is Senior Researcher at OFCE, the French Economic Observatory at Sciences Po in Paris, and Research Associate in the Innovation Lab at the Collège de France. Simon Bunel is Senior Economist at INSEE, the French National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies, and at the Bank of France. He is also Research Associate in the Innovation Lab at the Collège de France.
Sweeping, authoritative and—for the times—strikingly upbeat…The
overall argument is compelling and, with creative destruction
falling out of political favor, it carries a trace of Schumpeterian
subversion.
*The Economist*
[An] important book…[It] is lucid, empirically grounded,
wide-ranging, and well-argued…Schumpeter himself feared capitalism
would perish. So far, he seems to have been wrong. Another
possibility is that democracy will die, as plutocracy allies with
demagoguery. Either way, the civilizations of the contemporary
high-income democracies would perish. By promoting a better
understanding, this book could, with wisdom and luck, help us avoid
that fate.
*Financial Times*
Successfully navigating the supply chain disruptions created by
COVID-19 requires strong political leaders to implement smart
policies, but not leaders so strong that they can suppress
organizational innovations that will disfavor them or their allies.
The authors explain these dynamics and more in an eminently
accessible fashion.
*Foreign Affairs*
Marvelous…Consistently thoughtful and, in its way, fearless. In The
Power of Creative Destruction, readers will find much that
transcends the facile arguments and moral posturing that too often
characterizes today’s economic debates.
*City Journal*
Gather a group of economists together and ask what most concerns
them, and a wide variety of topics would soon emerge…Decade after
decade, numerous books have been written about each of these
issues. But here we have in one compact package a blockbuster book
that deals with all of them…A magisterial book with something new
and imaginative to say on such a wide and important range of
topics.
*Business History Review*
[A] rigorous education in the economics of innovation…Extend[s]
economic analysis to illuminate a wide range of contemporary
political and cultural issues.
*Project Syndicate*
An impressive study…It convinces, to my mind, on what the path to a
better world, with less inequality, injustice, environmental
catastrophe might look like.
*Society of Professional Economists*
An important book for the times…The authors succinctly connect
politics to economics and argue that ‘Innovation Needs
Democracy.’…To paraphrase a quote referring to Keynes, another
famous economist, this book may convince readers that we should all
be Schumpeterians now.
*New York Journal of Books*
Offers Americans much needed insight into the sources of economic
growth and the kinds of policies that will promote it…All in
Washington would do well to read this volume carefully.
*Forbes*
Philippe Aghion is one of the founders of the new growth theory
focused on the origins and implications of technological progress.
This book, based on thirty years of research, shows the richness
and usefulness of this approach. It is a fundamental document for
thinking about the nature of growth, industrial policy, and the
organization of the labor market.
*Olivier Blanchard, Peterson Institute for International Economics
and former Chief Economist, International Monetary Fund*
Accelerating technological change, global warming, pandemics,
individual and national stagnation, over-indebtedness: this century
decidedly provokes anxiety. Armed with legitimate concerns,
anti-globalization protestors and neo-Luddites look inwards and
denigrate innovation. The Power of Creative Destruction offers
another vision, more persuasive and based on the innovation that
creates wealth and jobs. Philippe Aghion, Céline Antonin, and Simon
Bunel dismantle contemporary myths about such economic phenomena as
secular stagnation and the impact of automation on employment. They
show the need for competition and the fight against rents. They
advocate a regulated capitalism that will allow us to keep society
prosperous and the planet green. They explain, in short, how to
manage the creative destruction that over the past two centuries
has brought to our society a previously unimaginable prosperity.
Provocative and rigorous, this book is an important milestone in
our reflections on the future of our societies. A must-read.
*Jean Tirole, Nobel Laureate, Toulouse School of Economics*
The term ‘creative destruction’ expresses a contradiction at the
core of capitalism; creation brings innovation, growth, and
prosperity while the destruction that it demands engenders
resistance and stagnation. Philippe Aghion, Céline Antonin, and
Simon Bunel are the leaders in exploring and understanding this
story of action and reaction. Their insights are essential if
policy is to restore growth in today’s faltering capitalism.
*Angus Deaton, Nobel Laureate in Economic Sciences*
Anyone curious about where modern capitalism is going and whether
economic growth can be sustained should read this book. In
accessible prose, based on cutting-edge economic analysis, the
authors dissect the dynamics of the modern economies. They show
brilliantly how capitalism in the twenty-first century is indeed as
creative as it is destructive, and how innovation will affect
modern economies and hence the life of every human on the planet,
for better and for worse. Deeply researched and intelligently
written, this is a genuine tour de force.
*Joel Mokyr, Northwestern University*
Philippe Aghion has been the leader of modern growth theory for the
last three decades. He has shown that innovation and disruption,
Schumpeter’s creative destruction, are at the heart of the
productivity and power of a capitalist economy. In this book that
story is clearly and compellingly told, but now he and his
colleagues go still deeper into the kind of society we want to
build, whilst keeping the power of creative destruction. We really
can create a prosperous future which brings a supportive community
and social cohesion, and a much better environment, climate, and
biodiversity. This fine and crucially important book is ultimately
optimistic about what we can do, but challenges us as to whether we
will.
*Nicholas Stern, London School of Economics*
The authors…argue that the socioeconomic problems revealed during
the global pandemic—welfare, health, inequality, and many
others—will not be fixed by abolishing capitalism but rather by
inventing a better capitalism through the power of creative
destruction, which they define as innovations that disrupt and lift
societies.
*Fast Company*
A refreshing take on large, important societal questions. By making
the case for a rightful role for government, institutions, civil
society organizations, and issues of equity and fairness in the
production of capitalist society, the authors produce a
justification for a new political economy—one in which capitalism’s
innovative power to produce novel, entertaining, and imaginative
products is harnessed to increasing collective welfare and a more
interesting and secure future for citizenry.
*Administrative Science Quarterly*
An ambitious story of how Western countries escaped the Malthusian
population-growth trap, hitting upon an innovation-lead growth
trajectory that has so far resulted in immense improvements in
longevity and quality of life for the vast majority of humankind.
It was a pleasure to read this well-written book, which is full of
easy examples and background data.
*Economic Record*
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