Washington Post
 
 
Book review: ‘Age of Greed’ by Jeff  Madrick
By David Greenberg, Published: July 29, 2011
Once they’ve been carved out and stamped,  reiterated in books and taught 
to schoolchildren, the units of historical time  can seem as natural and 
apparent as the continents and oceans on a map of the  Earth: the Progressive 
Era, the Gilded Age, Reconstruction. We know that each of  these names is a 
human invention, each year dividing these periods a matter of  human choice. 
But we don’t notice the invention when it’s happening; we never  see anyone 
decide when an era begins, or what to call it, or what qualities mark  it as 
an epoch. 
What has defined our time — America since the 1960s? Historians are now  
trying to figure it out. In _“Restless  Giant,”_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0195305221?ie=UTF8&tag=washpost-opinions-20&linkCode=xm2&camp=1789&crea
tiveASIN=0195305221)  _James  T. Patterson_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/15/AR2005091501886.html)
  placed prosperity 
and freedom at the center of our fin de  siecle journey. For _Sean  Wilentz_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/05/01/AR2008050102
794.html) , it was _“The  Age of Reagan,”_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B001OW5OTA?ie=UTF8&tag=washpost-opinions-20&linkCode=xm2&camp=1789&creativ
eASIN=B001OW5OTA)  a time of ascendant conservatism. Daniel Rodgers calls 
it an  _“Age  of Fracture,”_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0674057449?ie=UTF8&tag=washpost-opinions-20&linkCode=xm2&camp=1789&creativeASIN=0674057449
)  when old and widely shared verities splintered into a jumble  of 
irreconcilable premises. 
Jeff Madrick, in his compelling new history, dubs it an Age of Greed.  
Madrick is not a professional historian but an accomplished economic  
journalist 
known for his essays in the _New York Review of  Books_ 
(http://www.nybooks.com/contributors/jeff-madrick-2/) . Nor is he surveying all 
of American 
politics since the 1960s, just  the major changes in business, finance and 
policymaking. Yet his book tries,  like the others, to define and explain the 
long era, creating a larger framework  by which future generations will 
understand our time. Ambitious in its scope and  frequently persuasive in its 
arguments, _“Age  of Greed”_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/dp/1400041716/ref=as_li_tf_til?tag=washpost-books-20&camp=0&creative=0&linkCode=as1&creativeASIN=1400041
716&adid=1R384VW8CRGPPKDGX665)  abounds with powerful men, ugly fights, 
infamous scandals, twists  and turns, and, true to the book’s title, lots of 
shameless cupidity. 
“Age of Greed” chronicles how Americans ended up with the highly 
unregulated  financial system that produced the meltdown of 2008 and the 
fallout that 
lingers  three years later. What’s most novel about the book, which relies 
heavily on  other secondary accounts, is that unlike other recent treatments 
of the  financial crisis, it traces the origins of the problem not to the 
Bush or  Clinton or even Reagan years, but all the way to the late 1960s. 
Back then, in the heyday of the post-World War II economy, a handful of  
bankers, businessmen, economists and politicians began campaigning to 
discredit,  repeal and, when necessary, evade the controls that had governed 
lending 
and  borrowing since the New Deal. Steadily, they made inroads, taking 
advantage of  hard times, such as the stagflation-plagued ’70s, as well as good 
times, such as  the tech-fueled ’90s. By 2008, as Madrick tells it, a 
once-worthy regime of  safeguards had ceased to meaningfully police Wall Street 
or 
many other realms of  American business. 
A 40-year march through the world of Eurodollar CDs, greenmail and credit  
default swaps might strain a general reader’s comprehension, let alone 
interest.  To relieve the tedium, Madrick breaks his story into 20 chapters, 
each 
a  biographical thumbnail of one or more key players. Laying out these 
sketches in  a strategic order, like a bridge player setting down his cards, 
Madrick  constructs a more or less coherent tale out of his many political, 
financial and  business-world fragments. 
At times the book can feel fractured. A chapter on Ronald Reagan precedes a 
 section on moguls Ted Turner, Sam Walton and Steve Ross, and then it’s 
back to  Jimmy Carter. But at its best, Madrick’s panoptic view illuminates the 
big  picture of American financial history in a way that a micro-study of 
_Fannie  Mae_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/reckless-endangerment-by-gretchen-morgenson-and-joshua-rosner/2011/05/11/AGs4cqCH_story.h
tml)  or _Bear  Stearns_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/20/AR2009032000979.html)
  or the Federal Reserve never could. 
Since history gets cloudier as time passes, the book’s most fascinating  
chapters are the earliest. Madrick’s capsule reviews of recent events — how 
Fed  Chairman Alan Greenspan or GE head Jack Welch deepened America’s 
economic mess —  are bound to feel familiar. More revelatory are his 
discussions of 
the malign  roles played by people often left out of the history books. 
Walter Wriston of  Citicorp (now Citigroup), for instance, worked to eliminate “
Regulation Q” of  the 1933 Banking Act, which limited the rates paid on 
savings accounts.  Corporate lawyer Joe Flom, now little remembered except as a 
philanthropist,  masterminded the hostile takeover. (Never again will I 
enter the Flom Auditorium  at Washington’s Woodrow Wilson International Center 
for Scholars, where I work  this year, with a clean conscience.) 
The book’s slightly lurid title recalls the Reagan years, when liberals  
seethed at a new culture that extolled an unfettered market and rampant  
acquisitiveness. (Illustrative of the zeitgeist was the way that Michael  
Douglas’
s “greed . . . is good” line in the 1987 movie _“Wall  Street”_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0038Z5T4Q?ie=UTF8&tag=washpost-opinions-20&linkCod
e=xm2&camp=1789&creativeASIN=B0038Z5T4Q)  — spoken by a villain and meant 
as an indictment of him — was  parroted without irony as a watchword for the 
times.) Despite the title’s  undertones, however, Madrick is no polemicist 
or ideologue. He writes in  restrained, dispassionate prose, letting out only 
hints of the outrage rumbling  below. And yet he has a clear interpretative 
slant. Unerringly critical of  financial adventurism and deregulation, he 
argues that his subjects’ relentless  quest for personal wealth, enabled by 
politicians who were either ideologically  compliant (Reagan) or politically 
timid (Carter), produced a society rife with  inequality and injustice. 
The problem with the book’s title, actually, isn’t its melodramatic  
oversimplicity — every author should be cut a little slack in trying to sell  
books. What “Age of Greed” elides, it seems to me — not only in its title but  
also in its analysis — is the difference between those rogues whose greed 
led  them to run afoul of the law and those whose greed the system has in 
fact smiled  upon. 
So, Madrick’s narrative rightly includes sordid characters such as Ivan  
Boesky, Michael Milken, Ken Lay and Sandy Weill — poster boys of financial  
malfeasance — whose transgressions appalled almost everyone. Even Wall Street’
s  defenders have sometimes claimed that high-profile miscreants such as 
these men  simply prove the rule that by and large the system functions well. 
More problematic are cases such as those of Welch or Flom — men who amassed 
 their fortunes by threading loopholes, breaking with customs and violating 
 unspoken codes of behavior, but never technically committing crimes. It’s 
fine  and well to condemn these men as greedy, but greedy people will 
inevitably  flourish in a system rooted in the profit motive. It’s naive to 
expect 
 civic-mindedness, a sense of social responsibility or even a human 
conscience to  restrain them when laws and regulations don’t. 
If you believe in capitalism — as most of us do — this stubborn truth 
points  to one humane alternative. The government needs to construct strict 
rules and  revise them often to clamp down on egregious practices as soon as 
they start. It  was possible, once, to stop the leveraged-buyout craze before 
it wrought so much  havoc or, years later, to blow the whistle on 
collateralized debt obligations  before the crash. Bankers who invent and 
exploit these 
tools are obviously  avaricious by most definitions, but it’s the government
’s job to look out for  those being victimized, and for the economy as a 
whole. 
The real scandal revealed by Madrick’s important book is not the well-known 
 tales of dastards such as telecom analyst Jack Grubman or Internet stock  
promoter Frank Quattrone, but the more elusive — and more consequential — 
story  of how the government came to abdicate this supreme responsibility. 
David Greenberg is a professor of history and of journalism and media  
studies at Rutgers University. He is a fellow at the Woodrow Wilson  
International Center for Scholars for the 2010-11 academic  year

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