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Empire of Debt: The Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis (Agora Series) Hardcover – November 11, 2005
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- Print length384 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherWiley
- Publication dateNovember 11, 2005
- Dimensions6.28 x 1.33 x 9.06 inches
- ISBN-100471739022
- ISBN-13978-0471739029
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Bonner and Wiggin enumerate a long list of chronic ailments that imperil the American financial system--a massive trade deficit, soaring personal and government debt, a housing bubble, runaway military expenditures. These problems "hardly disturb the sleep of the imperial race," the authors write. "[But] all empires must pass away." Bonner and Wiggin argue that American imperial delusions are similar to the fantasies that fueled the dot-com market mania. They recommend readers buy gold as insurance in the event of a financial crisis. Empire of Debt flounders when discussing how America indebted itself; the authors blame the Federal Reserve Board's low interest rates but gloss over the fact that rates were slashed because the U.S. teetered on the brink of deflation in 2002 and 2003 (a topic they give more attention to in Financial Reckoning Day). As hardcore free-marketeers, Bonner and Wiggin also seem to long for the pre-welfare days of the 1920s but forget how that period's policies led to the Great Depression. That said, Empire of Debt contains many revelations that will open eyes. --Alex Roslin
Review
From the Inside Flap
How could such a shift in the politics and economy of the United States have come about in a span of less than 100 years?
In Empire of Debt, maverick financial writers Bill Bonner and Addison Wiggin—the team that brought you the international bestseller Financial Reckoning Day—reunite to provide you with the first in-depth look at how the American character has shifted to accommodate its new imperial role; how we have abandoned the private virtues of personal liberty, economic freedom, and fiscal restraint; and how the "guv'mint" has gained control of public life and the economy. The result has been, among other horrors, unfettered deficit spending, gluttonous consumption, and fearless military adventurism. All the while, the nation slouches ever more precipitously towards bankruptcy.
Empire of Debt is a wry, witty, and erudite look at the state of the empire. To the delight of many, Bonner and Wiggin do not spare the political icons of either national political party. Casting a wide-angle lens through history and into the next century, the authors suggest a "great empire" is to the world of geopolitics what a great bubble is to the world of economics—it is attractive at first but will eventually end in catastrophe.
Unfortunately for some, the Empire of Debt will be received like an unwelcome guest who intends to spend the night. But for those who open the door to the often uproarious, but always sensible, wisdom within these pages, the future will be bright, indeed.
"They've done it again!" says financial commentator Eric Fry, "Once more, Bonner and Wiggin have weaved together the disparate worlds of politics, economics, and personal finance to produce an enormously entertaining snapshot of modern American life." We entreat you to sit back, relax, and drink in the splendor that is America's Empire of Debt.
From the Back Cover
Praise for EMPIRE OF DEBT
In America, we know what we have to do. We have an empire to run. Outlying places to police. People to boss around. Sabres to rattle. And an economy that has to remain Numero Uno. Unfortunately, history shows that running an empire is a disastrously expensive business. You pay in cash. You pay in blood. And you pay with your own soul.
"This is a powerful book. In addition to its depth, it is well written, well documented, and vastly readable. I had the feeling of seeing an X-ray of economic reality with the crust removed. It should be made mandatory reading in most circles. Read it, and your views of the world around you will no longerbe the same."
—Nassim Nicholas Taleb, founder, Empirica Capital, LLC, and author, Fooled by Randomness
"Now perhaps someone will finally listen!"
—Jim Rogers, author, Investment Biker, Adventure Capitalist, and Hot Commodities
"Instead of trade and work, imperialism breeds militarism, inflation, and debt, as Bonner and Wiggin show. Yet there is a golden hope in freedom and honest money."
—Llewellyn H. Rockwell Jr., Ludwig von Mises Institute
"[Empire of Debt] is a fantastic book. It's thoughtful, erudite, witty, well written, practical . . . and spot-on. If you value your financial health, you'll read it from cover to cover. Now!"
—Doug Casey, Chairman, Casey Research, LLC, and author, Crisis Investing
"I laughed, I cried, I renewed my passport. . . . Bonner and Wiggin deliver a steady diet of insight and wit that terrifies the reader, even as it amuses. Empire of Debt is not for everyone, only for those of us who hope to enjoy continuing prosperity amidst difficult conditions."
—Eric Fry, Editor, The Rude Awakening
About the Author
ADDISON WIGGIN is the Editorial Director and Publisher of the Daily Reckoning. The newsletter now has more than 500,000 readers in the United States and Great Britain and is translated into French, German, and Spanish. It has received praise from mainstream publications, including Money, Dow Jones' MarketWatch.com, and the New York Times Magazine. Mr. Wiggin is the author of The Demise of the Dollar . . .and Why It's Great for Your Investments (Wiley).
Product details
- Publisher : Wiley; 1st edition (November 11, 2005)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 384 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0471739022
- ISBN-13 : 978-0471739029
- Item Weight : 1.32 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.28 x 1.33 x 9.06 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,464,195 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #10,384 in Investing (Books)
- #17,214 in Economics (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors

Over the years, Bill has co-authored a number of New York Times Bestsellers including “Financial Reckoning Day”, “Empire of Debt”, and “Mobs, Markets and Messiahs”. He is also the author of “Hormegeddon,” which “Black Swan” author Nassim Taleb described as a “must, must, must read.” In his own opinion, his most recent title, “A Modest Theory of Civilization: Win-Win or Lose” is perhaps his best work yet.
Bill also founded the worldwide research network, The Agora, in 1979. Analysts within the group, including Bill himself, have exposed and predicted some of the world’s biggest shifts since that time, starting with the fall of the Soviet Union back in the late 1980s, to the collapse of the dot.com (2000) and mortgage finance (2008) bubbles, and more recently, the election of President Trump. Though begun in a ramshackle office in a bad neighborhood of Baltimore, The Agora now has offices in 10 countries and more paid subscribers than the Washington Post and the New York Times put together.
While most of The Agora publications focus on health or finance, some are sui generis. Les Belles Lettres, for example, is a company founded in 1919 to publish the writings that survive from the Classical Period — ancient and classical Rome and Greece. In recent years, it has expanded into Chinese classics. Another unique member of The Agora is International Living, a magazine founded by Mr. Bonner in 1979. It offers readers suggestions, information and advice about living overseas.
International Living led Bill and his partners to purchase 2,700 acres of land on the Pacific Coast of Nicaragua. Years later, the property became known to the world as Rancho Santana. By the time the widely celebrated Inn at Rancho Santana was completed in 2015, “the ranch” had positioned itself as Nicaragua’s premiere resort destination.
Long before guests arrived, however, Bill and his colleagues realized that the local inhabitants had an immediate need for health care services. They began amassing donations and recruiting volunteers. In 2004 the Roberto Clemente Health Clinic was built, staffed and ready to open its doors. Today, the clinic continues to serve and treat more than 8,000 local residents and visitors per year.
In his spare time, Bill enjoys restoring old properties or building new ones - usually with his own hands. One, in Argentina, is constructed of adobe, mud and stone, following Roman-era building techniques. It was put up with the help of two of his sons and a small crew of local gauchos. Another is a solar house built in Maryland, constructed of ferro-cement. The house was so unconventional – and perhaps uncomfortable – that his wife refused to live in it. “No one ever built a house like that before,” jokes Bill. “And no one ever will again.”

Addison Wiggin is the editorial director of The Daily Reckoning, and executive publisher of Agora Financial, an independent financial research firm based in Baltimore, Maryland. His second editions of international best-sellers Financial Reckoning Day Fallout and The New Empire of Debt, which he co-authored with Bill Bonner, were updated in 2009. His third book, The Demise of the Dollar… and Why it’s Even Better for Your Investments was updated in 2008, the same year he wrote I.O.U.S.A.
Wiggin is the executive producer and co-writer of I.O.U.S.A. an acclaimed documentary nominated for the Grand Jury prize at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival and the 2009 Critics Choice Award and shortlisted for a 2009 Academy Award. Wiggin is a three-time New York Times best-selling author whose work has been recognized by The New York Times Magazine, The Economist, Worth, The New York Times, The Washington Post as well as major network news programs.
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And I still have a ways to go before I have finished it. However, I seem to have entered the latter part of the book which does indeed focus on economics, and I believe I have a pretty good idea what the point is, a philosophy I am pretty much in agreement with, so I figured I'd just comment on the empire part.
Much of the book is devoted to criticizing the folly of America's aggressive military intervention, with a lengthy discussion of our involvement in the first world war and the Vietnam war.
However, they clearly disapprove of essentially ALL military intervention by the United States, including even the civil war and the second world war.
One reviewer suggested their view on the civil war indicated that they were comfortable with the slave economy of the south, which I think is way off the track. It seems clear to me that these guys just flat out believe that bloody warfare doesn't solve anything.
In that, it seems to me that their perspective, while it holds a lot of merit, is incomplete. And, I'm sure it is no accident that they chose to give detailed discussions on WW1 and Vietnam war rather than the Civil War and WW2, because the latter would be a lot harder to simply brush off as foolhardy military interventionism.
I am most intrigued by their view of WW1; unfortunately I don't know the history of that war very well, but I certainly don't get the impression that the history books provide any very coherent explanation as to what purpose we were serving by being involved in that.
Anyway, the bottom line is that the book contains an interesting look at empire-building in human history, and much of what they say rings true.
And the book is indeed a very witty and engaging piece of writing.
Don't let the title scare you. Bonner and Wiggin bring a dull subject to life with an irreverent but refreshing take on history.
"Would the nation be better off if Lincoln had not slaughtered so many Southerners?" they ask. "Would world history have been worse if Wilson had not meddled in World War 1."
Political correctness is cast aside. Party propaganda is ignored. National heroes get skewered. "The most popular American presidents were those who stole most beautifully," they intone, describing the logic of democratic larceny. These guys love to poke fun at pompous politicians.
The authors do get serious. After relating the rise and demise of past empires, they report that America is headed for the same fate. She has moved away from her founding principles, away from the freedoms of republic and into the clutches of empire.
With the inexorable rise of the state come delusions of grandeur and pseudo patriotism. Government intrusion crowds out free enterprise. Civil liberties are tossed in favor of fast money. Original thought gives way to corporate cool. History is relegated to the dustbin.
We are consumed with the running of empire. We mind everyone's business but our own. We shred the Constitution for wars without end.
Wave good-bye to the American Republic. Say hello to the Empire of Debt.
But an internet friend reported that listening to the authors' recommendations some years back cost him a good chunk of his retirement nest egg.
In other words, based on his experience, I'm not sure their ideas on how an individual should react to the problem are going to work--a least in any time line we are likely to be using.
But in this book he's saying (over and again) not much more than:
1. Empires are created by vainglorious self-deluded fools.
2. Empires always overreach and go broke and collapse.
3. America is an Empire.
4. America buys more from overseas than it sells there, and that's bad.
5. Americans spend too much and don't save enough.
6. The housing market is a bubble due to pop.
7. Gold is a good store of value.
That's about it, along with some fragments of schoolbook history. Hope I "saved" you some money!
For the rest of us, it is an amusing insight into the mind of the lunatic fringe, gold bug division. Bonner can certainly write, he's very entertaining. Gonzo financial journalism.
Like cold water thrown on someone sleeping, this book reveals the real reasons behind our country's indebtedness to China and others, and the dangers this debt presents to personal financial planning. It appalls me that our politicians prefer to debate what are primarily personal issues like abortion and gay marriage, instead of truly tending the core issues of government, more important perhaps evan than global warming: deficit spending, underfunded Social Security, and unfunded Medicare.
Even more discomfiting is learning that the formulae for the very economic statistics we read every day have been so altered that they are now essentially meaningless. The Gross Domestic Product, for example, now contains all mortgage payments (not, to my mind, a true "product") simply because the enormity of these monies hugely inflates the otherwise limp GDP.
How does this impact you? It's hard to underestimate it. A must read!
Top reviews from other countries
This was published back in December 2005, so as I read it I was wishing that I'd read it back then. I believe that there is a new edition out now that I would recommend to anyone who has yet to read this book. I have friends in the USA to whom I'll be recommending this book with some urgency, because if they think that their economy's gone to hell in a handcart they haven't seen anything yet. I know that many would have ended that last sentence with an exclamation mark, but this is seriously grim stuff that requires no cheap comic-book typographical hysteria themes...
It's already happening and you'll wish you understood it before it happens to you.
The writers are witty and very well-informed but I should like to see it brought up-to-date rather than 6 years old (2006)and recommended as being essential reading.





