Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: The New Deal Order, 1930-1980
Chapter 1: Rise
Chapter 2: Fall
Part II: The Neoliberal Order, 1970-2020
Chapter 3: Beginnings
Chapter 4: Ascent
Chapter 5: Triumph
Chapter 6: Hubris
Chapter 7: Coming Apart
Chapter 8: The End
Notes
Index
Gary Gerstle is Paul Mellon Professor of American History Emeritus
and Paul Mellon Director of Research at the University of
Cambridge. He is the author and editor of more than ten books,
including two prizewinners, American Crucible (2017) and Liberty
and Coercion (2015). He is a Guardian columnist and has also
written for the Atlantic Monthly, the New Statesman, Dissent, The
Nation,
and Die Zeit, among others. He frequently appears on BBC Radio 4,
BBC World Service, ITV 4, Talking Politics, and NPR.
Fascinating and incisive.
*Jennifer Szalai, The New York Times*
Enlightening . . . Gerstle carefully recreates the new order Reagan
wanted . . . [and] emphasizes its market side . . . [A] fine
book.
*The New York Times Book Review*
It's rare that one can use the term instant classic in a book
review, but Gary Gerstle's latest economic history, The Rise and
Fall of the Neoliberal Order, warrants the praise.
*Rana Foroohar, Financial Times*
Gerstle offers a rich and sophisticated discussion of neoliberalism
. . . an important and beautifully written book.
*The Washington Post*
His American focus might also finally allow British readers to
escape their factional trenches and appreciate the shape of
neoliberalism. It is a terrific service . . . . a joy to read.
*Tom Clark, Prospect*
Masterfully blends compelling analysis with a propulsive
narrative.
*Irish Times*
Brilliantly conceived, capaciously argued, and written with great
clarity . . . For those interested in a meaningful historical
perspective on where we are now, I can think of no better book.
*Steven Hahn, The Nation*
A cogent, erudite historical analysis.
*Kirkus Reviews*
[A] splendid and stimulating history of neo-liberalism's rise and
possible 'fall.'
*Australian Book Review*
This book is an interesting account of what is exceptional about
"America".
*Michael Laver, Society*
Essential reading.
*Adam Tooze, author of Crashed*
One of the smartest, most perceptive books I've read in years.
*Christopher Leonard, author of The Lords of Easy Money*
Anyone baffled at how the U.S. could possibly have moved over a
half-century from embracing a state-centered New Deal to
relentlessly unraveling it will be greatly enlightened by Gerstle's
beautifully written, engrossing, and powerful telling of the rise
of the neoliberal order. And some may take heart from his claim
that it too is in free-fall, albeit leaving behind enduring
vestiges of free market orthodoxy. I know no better guide to the
complex transformations that have shaped our own times.
*Lizabeth Cohen, Howard Mumford Jones Professor of American
Studies, Harvard University, and author of Saving America's
Cities*
Gerstle's important book offers us an illuminating and rich
interpretation of the power and popularity of neoliberalism in
America. A true history of the movement, situating neoliberalism in
relation to classical liberalism, the New Deal and global
Communism. Essential reading.
*Adam Tooze, Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Professor of History,
Columbia University*
Expertly synthesizing a vast body of new scholarship—on
international trade, the Cold War, race, polarization, Ralph Nader,
the labor movement, and the rise of conservatism—Gary Gerstle
delivers the most compendious and commanding history of neoliberal
America to date. Along the way he opens new windows on the
unexpected collaboration between Bill Clinton and Newt Gingrich in
deregulating America into the internet future. Gerstle also
provides the best account I've read of how neoliberal" came to be
the word of choice for an order that promises liberation and
delivers subjection, that divides our two parties on some issues
but conjoins them on others.
*Corey Robin, Distinguished Professor of Political Science,
Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center*
Among the foremost chroniclers of the American past, Gary Gerstle
deploys in this bold book the powerful notion of 'political order'
to examine our most recent history—the past forty years when the
nation fastened its fortunes to marketization, global economic
integration, a harsh penal state and sharpening inequality. By
charting the rise and fall of the neoliberal order, this fast-paced
account helps us make sense of the arch of American history from
Ronald Reagan to Bernie Sanders, from Bill Clinton to Donald Trump.
A must read for anyone interested in the world we inhabit today,
with all its mortal dangers and yet-to-be fulfilled promises.
*Sven Beckert, Laird Bell Professor of History, Harvard
University*
Gary Gerstle offers a brilliant, engaging, and provocative
first-draft history of the last half century, a period sorely in
need of scrutiny. With characteristic big-think flair, he shows
that the neoliberal wisdom of that era—that markets would bring
democracy, that the age of big government was over—emerged from
specific historical forces and circumstances. He also suggests that
many of those ideas can and should now be consigned to the
past.
*Beverly Gage, Professor of History & American Studies, Yale
University*
Just beneath the surface of our fractured and polarized polity,
Gary Gerstle argues that there has been a Neoliberal Order under
which both parties worked in the 1990s and early 2000s. Even as
they bitterly disagreed, the nation's political debate moved far
away from the class-based pillars of the New Deal. In another of
his characteristically eye-opening analyses, Gerstle takes readers
through the rise and fall of the political order that has shaped
our leaders and electorate—that is, until powerful forces over the
past decade, on the right and left, have opened the door to a new
era.
*Julian Zelizer, author of Abraham Joshua Heschel*
Gerstle, a political historian specializing in contemporary history
of the U.S., provides a comprehensive political history of the U.S.
over the past six decades (Gerstle 2022)...Full of revelations.
*Thomas König, Austrian Journal of Political Science*
Southern historians might best use it as a provocation for graduate
students regarding the role of the South in the rise and decline of
neoliberalism.
*William D. Goldsmith, Journal of Southern History*
Gerstle's book has achieved the rare feat of both critical success
and popular acclaim, having been shortlisted for the FT Business
Book of the Year Award in 2022. It deserves it.
*The OEconomia*
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