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Magazine

TIME PACIFIC
December 4, 2000 | NO. 48

Weighty Waltz
An unusually enjoyable guide to the money world
By ELINOR SHIELDS

Economic history is not an obvious crowd pleaser, as it lends itself more to questions of theory than human interest. Think again, argues Peter Jay, economics editor of the bbc and author of the newly published Road to Riches or The Wealth of Man (Weidenfeld & Nicolson; 383 pages); mankind's economic story is an epic of appetite and Darwinian struggle, of inspiration and endeavor in the face of adversity.

Jay dances across time from the first agricultural revolution to the second industrial revolution, through man's roles as hunter-gatherer, farmer, citizen, imperialist and capitalist. Ancient Rome provides an example of the importance of good governance, for example, while late 17th century Britain had stability and a liberal economic structure. But famine, plague and war have interrupted progress throughout history.

Jay fires off an arsenal of facts, from the curious to the mundane. While readers may not be gripped by the significance of double-entry bookkeeping in medieval Italy, Jay is nothing if not lucid. This is history by "a layman for laymen," as he puts it, and he defends his choice to oversimplify "bravely, but not intolerably."

The contemporary philosophy of "economic bliss" holds complacently that the "good guys-in the shape of political democrats and economic liberals-have finally won," but Jay is skeptical. Despite untold material comforts, the world remains as precarious as ever-if not more so-because of inequality, strife and the threat of catastrophic climate change. Road to Riches may ultimately be the story of progress, but in many ways, Jay warns soberly, the economic waltz of the third millennium may have the same jerky rhythms as those of the first two.
 

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More Stories

December 4, 2000 | NO. 48

UNITED STATES
COVER: The War Between the Candidates
As lawyers clash in the courts and electoral deadlines loom, the bitterness grows between Vice President Al Gore and Governor George W. Bush-and among their supporters

DICK CHENEY: A Sudden Hospitalization
He is key to Bush's brains trust and the heart of a p.r. imbroglio
The Trouble This Time
: A medical prognosis

THE SENATE: Gridlock Looming
Can power be shared if the chamber is split 50-50?

LEGAL MANEUVERS: In the Labyrinth of the Law
Adam Cohen's guide through the maze of lawyerly stratagems

VIEWPONTS: Of Courts and Campaigns
Charles Krauthammer on America's imperial justice system;
Lance Morrow dispenses advice about 2004

DAVID BOIES: Battling for Every Ballot
Margaret Carlson on the superlawyer turned street fighter

THE FLORIDA LEGISLATURE: Getting in the Game
Dominated by angry Republicans, the body wants to play

AL GORE: Spoiling or Fighting?
Peggy Noonan on why Gore should give in graciously;
Michael Kinsley on why he has the right to fight on

SOUTH PACIFIC
NEW ZEALAND: A Yen for Whale Meat
Indigenous groups sing Japan and Norway's pro-whaling tune

T H E   A R T S
CINEMA: The egg-citing Chicken Run

THEATER: Tallulah Bankhead takes to the stage

BOOKS: Kapow! A superb novel about the comics
A readable guide to economic history

TRAVELER'S ADVISORY