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For fans of The Snowball by Alice Schroeder, The State We're In by Will Hutton and The Long Tail by Chris Anderson Anatole Kaletsky was Newspaper Commentator of the Year in BBC Press Awards and has twice received the British Press Award for Specialist Writer of the Year, as well as the Wincott Award for economic journalism and the first Cernobbio-Europe prize for European Journalist of the Year
'Anatole Kaletsky is a brilliant economist and a gifted writer, a combination as valuable as it is unusual. Capitalism 4.0 will add greatly to our understanding of the future of global finance' George Soros 'Anatole Kaletsky is one of the handful of heavyweight UK commentators who set the tone of public discourse on economic policy. His book goes well beyond typical comment to give an insightful analysis of the recent financial crash in a broad historical context' Vince Cable 'Idiosyncratic, entertaining and contrarian' Sunday Times 'A hugely ambitious and controversial account of the credit crunch which brilliantly traces the hotchpotch of economic theories that underpins it, and convincingly explains how it came to go so catastrophically wrong ... Kalestsky offers a genuinely new take on the credit crunch' Literary Review
Anatole Kaletsky is Editor-at-Large of The Times, where he previously served as the Economics Editor and Associate Editor. Kaletsky began his career in journalism writing about business and finance for the Economist, and for twelve years worked at the Financial Times, where he served as New York Bureau Chief, Washington Correspondent, International Economics editor and Moscow Correspondent. He is a founding partner of GaveKal Capital, a Hong Kong-based financial boutique. He lives in London.
'Anatole Kaletsky is a brilliant economist and a gifted writer, a combination as valuable as it is unusual. Capitalism 4.0 will add greatly to our understanding of the future of global finance' George Soros 'Anatole Kaletsky is one of the handful of heavyweight UK commentators who set the tone of public discourse on economic policy. His book goes well beyond typical comment to give an insightful analysis of the recent financial crash in a broad historical context' Vince Cable 'Idiosyncratic, entertaining and contrarian' Sunday Times 'A hugely ambitious and controversial account of the credit crunch which brilliantly traces the hotchpotch of economic theories that underpins it, and convincingly explains how it came to go so catastrophically wrong ... Kalestsky offers a genuinely new take on the credit crunch' Literary Review
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