Profit Over People: Neoliberalism and the Global Order

Author(s): Noam Chomsky

Politics World

Why is the Atlantic slowly filling with crude petroleum, threatening a millions-of-years-old ecological balance? Why did traders at prominent banks take high-risk gambles with the money entrusted to them by hundreds of thousands of clients around the world, expanding and leveraging their investments to the point that failure led to a global financial crisis that left millions of people jobless and hundreds of cities economically devastated? Why would the world's most powerful military spend ten years fighting an enemy that presents no direct threat to secure resources for corporations? The culprit in all cases is neoliberal ideology â the belief in the supremacy of "free" markets to drive and govern human affairs. And in the years since the initial publication of Noam Chomsky's Profit Over People: Neoliberalism and Global Order, the bitter vines of neoliberalism have only twisted themselves further into the world economy, obliterating the publicâÂÂÂÂs voice in public affairs and substituting the bottom line in place of peopleâÂÂÂÂs basic obligation to care for one another as ends in themselves. In Profit Over People, Chomsky reveals the roots of the present crisis, tracing the history of neoliberalism through an incisive analysis of free trade agreements of the 1990s, the World Trade Organization, and the International Monetary Fund â and describes the movements of resistance to the increasing interference by the private sector in global affairs.

General Information

  • : 9781888363821
  • : Seven Stories Press,U.S.
  • : Seven Stories Press,U.S.
  • : 0.163
  • : 30 September 2011
  • : United States
  • : 01 October 2011
  • : books

Other Specifications

  • : Noam Chomsky
  • : Paperback
  • : 320.51
  • : 288

More About The Product

Noam Chomsky is Institute Professor emeritus of linguistics at MIT and the author of numerous seminal books, including Manufacturing Consent, Deterring Democracy and Hegemony or Survival. He was voted the world's leading public intellectual in the 2005 Prospect/Foreign Policy poll. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.