The Frugal Superpower: America's Global Leadership in a Cash-Strapped Era
Autor Michael Mandelbaumen Limba Engleză Paperback – 8 aug 2011
In
this
incisive
new
book,
Michael
Mandelbaum
argues
that
the
era
marked
by
an
expansive
American
foreign
policy
is
coming
to
an
end.
During
the
seven
decades
from
the
U.S.
entry
into
World
War
II
in
1941
to
the
present,
economic
constraints
rarely
limited
what
the
United
States
did
in
the
world.
Now
that
will
change.
The
country's
soaring
deficits,
fueled
by
the
huge
costs
of
the
financial
crash
and
of
its
entitlement
programs—Social
Security
and
Medicare—will
compel
a
more
modest
American
international
presence.
In
assessing
the
consequences
of
this
new,
less
expensive
foreign
policy,
Mandelbaum,
one
of
America's
leading
foreign
policy
experts,
describes
the
policies
the
United
States
will
have
to
discontinue,
assesses
the
potential
threats
from
China,
Russia,
and
Iran,
and
recommends
a
new
policy,
centered
on
a
reduction
in
the
nation's
dependence
on
foreign
oil,
which
can
do
for
America
and
the
world
in
the
twenty-first
century
what
the
containment
of
the
Soviet
Union
did
in
the
twentieth.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781610390545
ISBN-10: 1610390547
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: none
Dimensiuni: 207 x 139 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.25 kg
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
ISBN-10: 1610390547
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: none
Dimensiuni: 207 x 139 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.25 kg
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
Notă biografică
Michael
Mandelbaumis
the
Christian
A.
Herter
Professor
of
American
Foreign
Policy;
Director
of
the
American
Foreign
Policy
Program
at
Johns
Hopkins,
SAIS.
He
is
a
former
faculty
member
at
Harvard
University,
Columbia
University
and
the
U.S.
Naval
Academy;
his
Ph.D.
in
political
science
came
from
Harvard
University.
Recenzii
Thomas
Friedman,The
New
York
Times,
September
4,
2010
“Very
timely”
Harvard Magazine
“It’s
easy
to
be
powerful
(if
not
loved)
when
rich.
But
what
happens
when
the
chief
guarantor
of
world
security
becomes
less
so?
The
author,
of
Johns
Hopkins
School
of
Advanced
International
Studies,
sees
a
more
modest
U.S.
profile,
and
less
imported
oil.”
Norfolk
Virginian-Pilot,
December
13,
2010
“In explaining the connection between recent domestic policy developments and U.S. foreign policy, the author provides an uncomplicated foundation for understanding the direct line between politics and economics.”
“In explaining the connection between recent domestic policy developments and U.S. foreign policy, the author provides an uncomplicated foundation for understanding the direct line between politics and economics.”
WashingtonDiplomat,
February,
2011
“The book, released in August 2010, is timely not only because of lingering uncertainties surrounding the supposed economic recovery, but also because of the underlying, long-term issues it addresses. Mandelbaum makes a strong, clear case that America’s unrestrained foreign policy will crack under the weight of crippling deficits — fueled by the huge costs of the financial crash and the nation’s entitlement programs.”
“The book, released in August 2010, is timely not only because of lingering uncertainties surrounding the supposed economic recovery, but also because of the underlying, long-term issues it addresses. Mandelbaum makes a strong, clear case that America’s unrestrained foreign policy will crack under the weight of crippling deficits — fueled by the huge costs of the financial crash and the nation’s entitlement programs.”
Modern
Judaism,
February,
2011
The Observer(UK), August 8, 2010
“Cool and concise… It isn't often that you see foreign policy, healthcare and pensions discussed in the same breath, but it makes you sit up when you do.”
Financial
Times,
August
8,
2010
“Mr
Mandelbaum
has
been
preaching
the
gospel
of
petrol
taxes
for
a
long
time,
and
does
so
persuasively…
The
author
is
always
reasonable
and
clear.”
Sunday
Times(UK),
August
8,
2010
“Mandelbaum
is
persuasive
in
defining
the
structural
problems
of
the
American
economy,
and
the
consequences.”
Basil
&
Spice,
August
17,
2010
“Mandelbaum writes in... clear, easy-to-comprehend prose. I recommend The Frugal Superpower without reservation and I hope that President Barack Obama and his Cabinet and advisors and Congress will follow the sensible policies advocated by its author.”
“Mandelbaum writes in... clear, easy-to-comprehend prose. I recommend The Frugal Superpower without reservation and I hope that President Barack Obama and his Cabinet and advisors and Congress will follow the sensible policies advocated by its author.”
Pajamas
Media,
August
13,
2010
“My
friend
Michael
Mandelbaum
has
a
new
book
out
this
month
with
the
timely
title
and
themeThe
Frugal
Superpower.
It’s
also
short,
as
if
Michael
were
reminding
us
this
is
not
a
good
moment
to
overspend
on
excess
paper
in
our
cash-strapped
world.
As
an
advocate
of
the
short
book
in
general
(with
some
obvious
exceptions),
I
call
that
a
win-win.”