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The Collapse of Antiquity Hardcover – March 15, 2023
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This book traces the role of debt in Antiquity and suggests that it was the longlasting curse of interest-bearing loans being handed out that could not be repaid. It eroded the fabric of society.
- Print length512 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherIslet
- Publication dateMarch 15, 2023
- Dimensions6.69 x 1.13 x 9.61 inches
- ISBN-103949546111
- ISBN-13978-3949546112
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Product details
- Publisher : Islet (March 15, 2023)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 512 pages
- ISBN-10 : 3949546111
- ISBN-13 : 978-3949546112
- Item Weight : 2.22 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.69 x 1.13 x 9.61 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #133,324 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #87 in Financial Accounting (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Michael Hudson is a Distinguished Research Professor of Economics at the University of Missouri, Kansas City (UMKC), and Professor of Economics at Peking University in China. He gives speeches, lectures and presentations all over the world for official and unofficial groups reflecting diverse academic, economic and political constituencies.
Before moving into research and consulting, Prof. Hudson spent several years applying flow-of-funds and balance-of-payments statistics to forecast interest rates, capital and real estate markets for Chase Manhattan Bank and The Hudson Institute (no relation). His academic focus has been on financial history and, since 1980, on writing a history of debt, land tenure and related economic institutions from the Sumerian period, antiquity, and feudal Europe to the present.
Since 1996 as president of the Institute for the Study of Long Term Economic Trends (ISLET), he has written reports and given presentations on balance of payments, financial bubbles, land policy and financial reforms for U.S. and international clients and governments.
He organized the International Scholars Conference on Ancient Near Eastern Economies (ISCANEE) in 1993, and to-date has co-edited the preceedings of six academic conferences on the evolution of property, credit, labor and accounting since the Bronze Age.
His website and blog can be found at michael-hudson.com. He has been interviewed on Democracy Now, Marketplace, and Naked Capitalism. Many of his interviews and public appearances can be seen on YouTube.
• • •
Paul Craig Roberts’ Bio of Michael Hudson
(Paul Craig Roberts is former under-secretary of the U.S. Treasury (Reagan Administration) and author of The Failure of Laissez Faire Capitalism and Economic Dissolution of the West. This bio is excerpted from an introduction to Michael Hudson’s book, Killing the Host (2015), originally posted at paulcraigroberts.org and at NakedCapitalism.com, February 6, 2016.)
Michael Hudson did not intend to be an economist. At the University of Chicago, which had a leading economics faculty, Hudson studied music and cultural history. He went to New York City to work in publishing. He thought he could set out on his own when he was assigned rights to the writings and archives of George Lukács and Leon Trotsky, but publishing houses were not interested in the work of two Jewish Marxists who had a significant impact on the 20th century.
Friendships connected Hudson to a former economist for General Electric who taught him the flow of funds through the economic system and explained how crises develop when debt outgrows the economy. Hooked, Hudson enrolled in the economics graduate program at N.Y.U. and took a job in the financial sector calculating how savings were recycled into new mortgage loans.
Hudson learned more economics from his work experience than from his Ph.D. courses. On Wall Street he learned how bank lending inflates land prices and, thereby, interest payments to the financial sector. The more banks lend, the higher real estate prices rise, thus encouraging more bank lending. As mortgage debt service rises, more of household income and more of the rental value of real estate are paid to the financial sector. When the imbalance becomes too large, the bubble bursts. Despite its importance, the analysis of land rent and property
valuation was not part of his Ph.D. studies in economics.
Hudson’s next job was with Chase Manhattan, where he used the export earnings of South American countries to calculate how much debt service the countries could afford to pay to U.S. banks. Hudson learned that just as mortgage lenders regard the rental income from property as a flow of money that can be diverted to interest payments, international banks regard the export earnings of foreign countries as revenues that can be used to pay interest on foreign loans. Hudson learned that the goal of creditors is to capture the entire economic surplus of a country into payments of debt service.
Soon the American creditors and the IMF were lending indebted countries money with which to pay interest. This caused the countries’ foreign debts to rise at compound interest. Hudson predicted that the indebted countries would not be able to pay their debts, an unwelcome prediction that was confirmed when Mexico announced it could not pay. This crisis was resolved with “Brady bonds” named after the U.S. Treasury Secretary, but when the 2008 U.S. mortgage crisis hit, just as Hudson predicted, nothing was done for the American homeowners. If you are not a mega-bank, your problems are not a focus of U.S. economic policy.
Chase Manhattan next had Hudson develop an accounting format to analyze the U.S. oil industry balance of payments. Here Hudson learned another lesson about the difference between official statistics and reality. Using “transfer pricing,” oil companies managed to avoid paying taxes by creating the illusion of zero profits. Oil company affiliates in tax avoidance locations buy oil at low prices from producers. From these flags of convenience locations, which have no tax on profits, the oil was then sold to Western refineries at prices marked up to eliminate profits. The profits were recorded by the oil companies’ affiliates in non-tax jurisdictions. (Tax authorities have cracked down to some extent on the use of transfer pricing to escape taxation.)
Hudson’s next task was to estimate the amount of money from crime going into Switzerland’s secret banking system. In this investigation, his last for Chase, Hudson discovered that under U.S. State Department direction Chase and other large banks had established banks in the Caribbean for the purpose of attracting money into dollar holdings from drug dealers in order to support the dollar (by raising the demand for dollars by criminals) in order to balance or offset Washington’s foreign military outflows of dollars. If dollars flowed out of the U.S., but demand did not rise to absorb the larger supply of dollars, the dollar’s exchange rate would fall, thus threatening the basis of U.S. power. By providing offshore banks in which criminals could deposit illicit dollars, the U.S. government supported the dollar’s exchange value.
Hudson discovered that the U.S. balance of payments deficit, a source of pressure on the value of the U.S. dollar, was entirely military in character. The U.S. Treasury and State Department supported the Caribbean safe haven for illegal profits in order to offset the negative impact on the U.S. balance of payments of U.S. military operations abroad. In other words, if criminality can be used in support of the U.S. dollar, the U.S. government is all for criminality.
When it came to the economics of the situation, economic theory had not a clue. Neither trade flows nor direct investments were important in determining exchange rates. What was important was “errors and omissions,” which Hudson discovered was a euphemism for the hot, liquid money of drug dealers and government officials embezzling the export earnings of their countries.
The problem for Americans is that both political parties regard the needs of the American people as a liability and as an obstacle to the profits of the military/security complex, Wall Street and the mega-banks, and Washington’s world hegemony. The government in Washington represents powerful interest groups, not American citizens. This is why the 21st century consists of an attack on the constitutional protections of citizens so that citizens can be moved out of the way of the needs of the Empire and its beneficiaries.
Hudson learned that economic theory is really a device for ripping off the untermenschen. International trade theory concludes that countries can service huge debts simply by lowering domestic wages in order to pay creditors. This is the policy currently being applied to Greece today, and it has been the basis of the IMF’s structural adjustment or austerity programs imposed on debtor countries, essentially a form of looting that turns over national resources to foreign lenders.
Hudson learned that monetary theory concerns itself only with wages and consumer prices, not with the inflation of asset prices such as real estate and stocks. He saw that economic theory serves as a cover for the polarization of the world economy between rich and poor. The promises of globalism are a myth. Even left-wing and Marxist economists think of exploitation in terms of wages and are unaware that the main instrument of exploitation is the financial system’s extraction of value into interest payments.
Economic theory’s neglect of debt as an instrument of exploitation caused Hudson to look into the history of how earlier civilizations handled the buildup of debt. His research was so ground-breaking that Harvard University appointed him Research Fellow in Babylonian economic history in the Peabody Museum.
Meanwhile he continued to be sought after by financial firms. He was hired to calculate the number of years that Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico would be able to pay the extremely high interest rates on their bonds. On the basis of Hudson’s work, the Scudder Fund achieved the second highest rate of return in the world in 1990.
Hudson’s investigations into the problems of our time took him through the history of economic thought. He discovered that 18th and 19th century economists understood the disabling power of debt far better than today’s neoliberal economists who essentially neglect it in order to better cater to the interest of the financial sector.
Hudson shows that Western economies have been financialized in a predatory way that sacrifices the public interest to the interests of the financial sector. That is why the economy no longer works for ordinary people. Finance is no longer productive. It has become a parasite on the economy. Hudson tells this story in Killing the Host (2015).
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- Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2023In an enlightening, informative, and incredibly relevant perspective on how Antiquity collapsed, Michael Hudson reveals that the Greek and Roman civilizations collapsed was not an overextended empire, but Antiquity’s inability to conduct debt cancellations or to regulate itself from corporate takeover of its government, or as Hudson terms it, the rentier class. It was this failure to control the rentier class that would lead to the collapse of the Roman Empire due to the failure of absolving debts, a die-hard insistence on paying debts that would become unpayable, and a declining tax base due to the citizenship falling into debt slavery.
The book is organized into three sections; the first section discussing Ancient Greece’s rise and fall, then Rome’s rise and decline, and the last section about the fall of the Roman Empire and what it means to the modern world. Hudson traces the foundations of Greek and Roman economics from financial transactions conducted between the Greeks and the Near East/Mesopotamian Kingdoms. In an earlier work, …and forgive them their debts, Hudson states that the reason that the Mesopotamian kingdoms were financially and economically stable was that the kings would conduct “Clean Slate” laws that would wipe out all and any debts that were made. Echoes of “Clean Slate” laws were also made by Jesus, calling for a Jubilee Year among his subjects. The Greeks and Romans, on the other hand, did not conduct any “Clean Slate” laws or initiate Jubilee Years (the Greeks had at one point, but failed to conduct it regularly, nor reform the system so that debt would not be so predatory), but saw how high the short-term gains were from keeping debts intact. Thus, a centralized state was either gutted or made to serve wealthy interests along with a need to expand its base to continue the debt payments and the influx of slavery. The Greeks fell because of its failure (and self-brainwashing) to cancel debts, stripping its public finance and infrastructure and eventually voluntarily selling itself to Rome just so debts would not be cancelled via a revolution. Rome fell because its tax base could not possibly pay such enormous debts, its subjects forced into serfdom as a means of paying their debts. The barbarians at the gates (who have always been at the gates) did not destroy Rome. Rather, as Hudson brilliantly argues, Rome destroyed itself via debts. Its desperate search for payments made the Roman Empire more brutal, autocratic, and relentless towards its citizens that average Romans joined the barbarians just to escape the oppression and soldiers rallied around warlords who promised them a check (said warlords would pillage the cities and the countryside, also looking for money).
Hudson uses a wide variety of resources for his work, all ranging from classical literature and from the late 19th to 20th century. For the average history reader, the classics are good, but one should appropriately become skeptical when an author uses non-contemporary resources. Hudson brilliantly argues that the classical histories often talked about the dangers of greed, debt, and the selfish drive to obtain more money and that this message has often been ignored by contemporary historians and economists who find parallels between a collapsing Roman Empire and the collapsing Western world too uncomfortable to publish (that and potentially being fired by their bosses). Late 19th and early 20th century economists understood the dynamic, saw the parallels, and wrote about it, which is why their works are referenced in The Collapse of Antiquity.
Throughout the book, the reader is constantly being hammered in the head that the collapse of Ancient Greece and the Roman Empire is disturbingly similar to the many problems that the Western World, especially the United States, is facing. To me, it does not come off as annoying. Such reminders make me find parallels around the town that I live in (northeast Texas) and make me truly understand what I am living through. I can see businesses struggling to stay afloat, jobs that do not pay well (or even if such jobs exist) with employers placing ridiculous amounts of qualifications in their applications (or a reluctance to hire), roads and public infrastructure neglected and collapsing, inflation constantly climbing upwards, people withdrawing themselves from their surroundings to video games and cheap food, police forces trying to do their job with increasing brutality in a land that’s ever getting poorer (which encourages crime just to get by), public funding not being used to improve what we have here but instead for wars abroad. And to top it off, landlords; the rentier class using any means necessary to extract as much wealth as possible from the land that they own. It is all a quest for short-term gains. And when the money runs out (lets see if we’ll default at the end of this month!), then what? Reading The Collapse of Antiquity will make you uncomfortable, making you want to further understand how the world works and what is the solution. Hudson has a solution from antiquity and its modern parallels, but it is best to let the reader find out for himself.
For those who have not read The Collapse of Antiquity, do yourself a favor and by a copy and read it now. You do not have to be a college student deep into history or economics just to understand it. All that this book needs is the reader’s absolute attention. It is quite possibly one of the best books of history, Classical History, and economics. The Collapse of Antiquity is worth the time and effort to get and read as well as something worth discussing with friends, family, teachers, and students.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 12, 2024The focus is on the class struggles of ancient Greece and Rome, and the various ways they sought to coexist. Or more accurately, how they were FORCED to establish some kind of symbiosis, given the imbalance of power that always arises between the greedy "haves" and the essential "have nots." The iconic characters are woven throughout, though with more quotes and receipts than we usually get from the myriad histories of the period that tend toward epic war stories.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2023This is volume 2 of Michael Hudson's planned trilogy on debt cancellation. The premise of the series is that the ancient Semitic empires understood that debts grow uncontrollably. To maintain stability, they periodically cancelled debts. This reset the economy, keeping people from debt peonage. In this, the second volume, Hudson describes how the Greeks imported the idea of debts from the Semitic nations, but not the idea of debt cancellation. Thus debts grew along with inequality, leading to political instability. Any Greco-Roman leader who proposed legislation to reform the economic system was promptly assassinated by the leadership class. This was passed from the ancient Greeks into the Greek and Roman empires. Debt became not an economic issue but a moral one, and debtors were morally obligated to repay their debts. Interestingly, just as now, this obligation only applied to the lower classes, whereas the upper classes lived by a different set of rules. Ultimately, then as now, the increasing burden of debt becomes destabilizing, leading to lower classes opting out of a bad deal, fewer taxes being collected, and the system ultimately collapsing.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 30, 2023I write this just as the Committee for the Protection of the Rentier Class, otherwise known as the Supreme Court, has issued its ruling on student debt. But debt forgiveness was the supreme political question of the Near East state, the Greek States, and the Roman Empire, and they all followed a similar path to collapse, a path paved by the Rentiers. The names might sound antique, Appian, Aristotle, Cicero, Demosthenes, Lactantius, Livy, Polybius, Sallust, Suetonius, Tacitus, Thucydides, and Xenophon, but the subject is very much with us.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 23, 2024THIs is a very well documented book on how financial and economic history began and then changed over time. This book will explain why and how. It is the most thorough understanding of what occurred and how it morphed and destroys entire civilizations. An awesome read. This is a history and technical book so its not a popularized and simpleton story. But if you want to know economic history, a must read!
Western civilization has been the most unbalanced and destructive when it comes to economics! and why it must end.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 22, 2023Ever play Monopoly? Notice that at the end one person owned everything and all other players were bankrupt? You probably never asked why that is the only eventual outcome. and you certainly did not look up and note that the world you live in has the same rules.
Michael Hudson did, and wrote a book about how it all got that way. In a fascinating trip back through Bronze Age to ancient Greece, then Rome to illustrate how the rich, the oligarchs, eventually co-opted all other forms of government so that all wealth flows into their hands. It is summed up in two sentences on one of the last pages:
"A resilient economy requires restoring balance by public intervention from "above" the market to prevent creditors from impoverishing debtors. But the rentier classes fight to gain control of the the political and law-making sphere and prevent democratic, royal or socialist governments from providing economic resilience by checking their self-seeking."
Trigg Adams
Top reviews from other countries
Arthur G. YarishReviewed in Mexico on August 5, 20234.0 out of 5 stars Sr.
The present must be understood in process , MH strives , to present the deep perspective
Arturo
JeffreyReviewed in Canada on May 21, 20235.0 out of 5 stars Good product
Good product
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Jens-LagosReviewed in Germany on August 6, 20235.0 out of 5 stars lohnend für alle die den Zeitgeist sehr kritisch sehen
on Weltreichen aus finanzhistorischer Sicht-auch heute sehr relevant, wenn sich dieser Blick bestätigen sollte
MichaelReviewed in Australia on June 23, 20235.0 out of 5 stars Great Book by a great author
Marvellous book full of insights and historical revelations. Great work, Prof Hudson!
P BragoliReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 16, 20245.0 out of 5 stars The collapse of antiquity by prof Michael Hudson
A great follow up book to and forgive them their debt which conclusively shows how a debt based economy that was protected and promoted by the wealthy elites lead to the destruction of first the Greeks and then the Romans. A warning for the future that has been forgotten by our own elites.

