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The Value of Everything: Making and Taking in the Global Economy Kindle Edition
Shortlisted for the FT & McKinsey Business Book of the Year Award
A scathing indictment of our current global financial system, The Value of Everything rigorously scrutinizes the way in which economic value has been accounted and reveals how economic theory has failed to clearly delineate the difference between value creation and value extraction. Mariana Mazzucato argues that the increasingly blurry distinction between the two categories has allowed certain actors in the economy to portray themselves as value creators, while in reality they are just moving around existing value or, even worse, destroying it.
The book uses case studies-from Silicon Valley to the financial sector to big pharma-to show how the foggy notions of value create confusion between rents and profits, reward extractors and creators, and distort the measurements of growth and GDP. In the process, innovation suffers and inequality rises.
The lesson here is urgent and sobering: to rescue our economy from the next inevitable crisis and to foster long-term economic growth, we will need to rethink capitalism, rethink the role of public policy and the importance of the public sector, and redefine how we measure value in our society.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPublicAffairs
- Publication dateSeptember 11, 2018
- File size9211 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"A stimulating analysis of the underlying causes of inequality and growth which forces us to confront long-held beliefs about how economies work and who benefits"
―Martin Wolf, Financial Times
"Mazzucato's mission is to overturn the now dominant neoclassical theory of value."
―George Eaton for New Statesman
"Mariana Mazzucato offers an exposé of how value extractors and rent-seekers have been masquerading as value creators in the global economy. And, furthermore, how the conventional wisdom has indulged them in this."
―Fran Boait for Prospect
"[Mazzucato's] passionate call to empower policymakers to understand that the state's role is not secondary to the private sector is infectious."―PROSPECT
"Mazzucato is fast emerging as one of the world's leading public intellectuals... [she] has offered the left a positive vision of growth based on innovation and profit-sharing, rather than sterile and counter-productive analysis based on the politics of resentment and expropriation."―SPECTATOR
"Mazzucato sides with the actual makers, those who struggle in an economy tilted in favor of the ultrawealthy... she expresses specific incredulity about the banking sector's self-serving statements about wealth creation... She is especially eloquent when commenting on arrogant tech-giant billionaires such as Peter Thiel, who claims that his wealth accumulation occurred in spite of, rather than because of, government presence."―KIRKUS REVIEWS
"Mazzucato's trenchant analysis is a compelling call to reinvent value as a key concept to help us achieve the world we all want."―NATURE
"A fresh look at the meaning of value to the economy...This organized and easy-to-read book will appeal to curious readers as well as those interested in economics, investing, and public policy."―Booklist
"A fundamental re-think of what constitutes real value in the economy."―Stephen Denning, Forbes.com
"Mariana Mazzucato's insights into the current state of the economy, and how to think differently about it, are essential. Her new book, The Value of Everything, is outstanding."―Tim O'Reilly, author of WTF?: What's the Future and Why It's Up to Us
About the Author
She advises global policy makers on innovation-driven inclusive growth and is Special Advisor to the EU commissioner for research, science and innovation. She is a coeditor of Rethinking Capitalism: Economics and Policy for Sustainable and Inclusive Growth and the author of the award-winning The Entrepreneurial State: Debunking Public vs. Private Sector Myths.
Product details
- ASIN : B01NBQMXPT
- Publisher : PublicAffairs (September 11, 2018)
- Publication date : September 11, 2018
- Language : English
- File size : 9211 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 312 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #676,606 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #132 in Free Enterprise
- #418 in Economic Policy & Development (Kindle Store)
- #439 in Free Enterprise & Capitalism
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Mariana Mazzucato (PhD) is Professor in the Economics of Innovation and Public Value at University College London (UCL), where she is Founding Director of the UCL Institute for Innovation & Public Purpose (IIPP).
She received her BA from Tufts University and her MA and PhD from the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research. Her previous posts include the RM Phillips Professorial Chair at the Science Policy Research Unit (SPRU) at Sussex University. She is a selected fellow of the UK’s Academy of Social Sciences (FAcSS) and of the Italian National Science Academy (Lincei).
She is winner of international prizes including the 2020 John Von Neumann Award, the 2019 All European Academies Madame de Staël Prize for Cultural Values, and the 2018 Leontief Prize for Advancing the Frontiers of Economic Thought. She was named as one of the '3 most important thinkers about innovation' by the New Republic, one of the 50 most creative people in business in 2020 by Fast Company, and one of the 25 leaders shaping the future of capitalism by Wired.
Her highly-acclaimed book The Entrepreneurial State: debunking public vs. private sector myths (2013) investigates the critical role the state plays in driving growth—and her book The Value of Everything: making and taking in the global economy (2018) looks at how value creation needs to be rewarded over value extraction.
She advises policy makers around the world on innovation-led inclusive and sustainable growth. Her current roles include being a member of the Scottish Government’s Council of Economic Advisors; the South African President’s Economic Advisory Council; the OECD Secretary General’s Advisory Group on a New Growth Narrative; the UN’s Committee for Development Policy (CDP), Vinnova’s Advisory Panel in Sweden, and Norway’s Research Council.
She is a Special Economic Advisor for the Italian Prime Minister (2020), and through her role as Special Advisor for the EC Commissioner for Research, Science and Innovation (2017-2019), she authored the high impact report on Mission-Oriented Research & Innovation in the European Union, turning “missions” into a crucial new instrument in the European Commission’s Horizon innovation programme.
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I highly recommend this book not only for Economics interested people but for anyone who wants Capitalism be better for all.
The Value of Everything asks the reader to question value with much more scrutiny. She gives a history of how various jobs and commodities were valued in the past, discussing the earliest concepts of economic value as defined by the physiocrats and moving through the theories of history's most prominent economists, including Smith, Ricardo, Marx, Marshall, Samualson and Pigou. One is reminded that versions of value were very different in the past and the real consequence of defaulting to price as a means to judge value creation is it allows for an easy aggregate goal to embrace, namely GDP and its growth. By circumventing the verification that society believes price defines value we have perhaps made a grave oversight. The author highlights that financial services as a proportion of GDP is inefficiently high and that its share reflects monopoly rents rather than a measure of its productivity. The author takes aim at the idea that increasing margins in finance somehow is measured as productivity enhancing vs in the retail sector it is considered evidence of lack of competition. The author spends a lot of time discussing the failure to measure value creation in monopolized businesses. This to be fair is an addressable issue in marginal value theory as it is a market failure on the conditions required for marginal value to be discovered. Nonetheless the author spreads the argument into a host of other industries in which competition has been in decline. Internet giants where economies of scale created by network effects that deeply entrench monopoly interests are targeted. The author though is inconsistent, she brings up the increasing costs of the financial services as a sign of its monopoly power and then uses completely different arguments for internets which on the face of it generate substantial consumer surplus for not charging for their services. In addition the fees charged by financial services are in structural decline as the growth of passive products has been enormous. The author highlights UBER as a dangerous addition to the monopoly industries and is obviously unaware of the massive operating losses the firm digests as a function of investors willing to fund scale, perhaps foolishly. Thus exercises where there has been consumer surplus the author remains angry for new reasons eroding her academic consistency. It is the case that these industries disrupt capital labor relationships but the author takes aim at sometimes the wrong thing and is inconsistent. The author also takes aim at the pharmaceutical industry in the US which is truly predatorial, here the arguments are clean and obvious and the author highlights the problems that are being created by rent seeking intellectual property rights. This is an area where the author's ideas will most resonate as they are clear examples of monopolized power sitting on fragmented and powerless buyers. The author swings into how the government is not valued and ties this back to traditional economic thought on the subject but then highlights how crazy that is considering society is enabled by government. One need only look at how much basic research has been funded by government and how commercial technology development happens very late stage. The discussion of the state and its role is valuable and the author is right that the value of the state is not considered enough anymore. That being said the author is terrible at distinguishing between productivity enhancing states and rent seeking states. Clearly the Greek government was rent seeking as are aspects of the Italian governance, yet the author bemoans austerity by putting government on a pedestal of being the foundation. The author needed to have distinguished between governments investing for the long term and governments who waste, the recent book by Alesina- "Austerity" shows the stark difference in subsequent improvements in the economy between spending and taxed based plans. The author claims to not be political but she most certainly is and its a shame that certain powerful arguments are dulled in their effect as a consequence. The Singaporean government's investment in its own population is what we need more of, not more Southern European fiscal expenditure but there is no distinction in the author's work. The amazing contributions to basic research in the US came from government grants to universities, not from within government, this is not mentioned.
The Value of Everything brings up a vital point. We need to reconsider what we should be valuing so that our economic policy is not obsessed with a measure that is decoupled from what people care about. That being said the author does not convincingly argue around 50% of her cases while the other represent a real problem that she has well identified. The author's love of the potential of the state to drive foundational improvement isn't wrong but it has no metrics associated with it and as such is easily refutable with multiple cases and defendable in others. She needs to define value herself within an economy not claim the benefits of 1950's and 60's US research are the natural byproduct of any fiscal expenditure, such an assumption is ridiculous. Great concept, some good arguments, other very weak arguments.
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Future generations will look back at these times and visions with a deep state of gratitude for her perspective.





