What We Owe Each Other
A New Social Contract
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Narrated by:
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Minouche Shafik
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By:
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Minouche Shafik
About this listen
Brought to you by Penguin.
One of the world's most influential economists sets out the basis for a new social contract fit for the 21st century.
The social contract shapes everything: our political institutions, legal systems and material conditions, but also the organisation of family and community, our well-being, relationships and life prospects. And yet everywhere, the social contract is failing.
Accelerating changes in technology, demography and climate will reshape our world in ways many of us have yet to grasp. In this landmark study, Minouche Shafik, director of the London School of Economics, draws on evidence from across the globe to identify the key principles every society must adopt if it is to meet the challenges of the coming century, with profound implications for gender equality, education, healthcare provision, the role of business and the future of work.
How should society pool risks, share resources and balance individual with collective responsibility? Brilliantly lucid and accessible, What We Owe Each Other offers new answers to these age-old questions and equips every listener to understand and play their part in the urgent and necessary transformation ahead.
©2021 Minouche Shafik (P)2021 Penguin AudioDetailed, morally sound and inspired analysis
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Therapeutically informative
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A Must Read
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Share and care
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Shafik has accomplished a difficult feat. She has written a book about economic policy that – for someone whose eyes glaze over normally at the slightest mention of economics – is translucently clear, comprehensible and makes a forceful case for a different approach to the economic challenges facing the world as we emerge from the pandemic.
With a career spanning many countries and international and national institutions, Shafik has the experience and vantage point few can boast. Following the costs, demands and needs of the services and gains of the economy from the cradle to the grave – taking children, education, health, work, old age and intergenerational dependence – she makes a forceful argument for reformulating the social contract. Not out of her strong sense of social justice, but out of economic logic she shows repeatedly that when society looks after and invests in its greatest resource, its people, then everyone fares better. Armed with global comparative data, she shows again and again, that it pays for society to invest, to educate, to use the untapped potential of the poor, of women, and provides ample evidence of how economies flourish the more they invest through initial education and continued adult education, in better welfare and health care, shielding people from poverty and infirmity. She illustrates how common assumptions about how families and people live are out of date, how the flow of work and intergenerational care (unpaid work in families) has shifted and these shifts need to be accommodated in a new architecture of social and economic models. Shafik systematically examines the current working models for the provision of security, education and risk management across time and the globe, compares the costs and benefits of different solutions and approaches and evidences repeatedly that it benefits everyone, that we all profit by living in more equitable economies. Invest in people and their productivity increases. Care for people and they cost less.
I used the hard back copy of the book to reference the illustrations and charts, but in the end invested in Minouche Shafik’s own narration. Like listening to Michelle and Barack Obama’s own voices, it was just a pleasure to have the company of such clarity, searing intelligence and kind wisdom accompanying me as I negotiated my daily life. An uplifting, convincing read which I hope as many policy makers as possible read.
The Economics of Hope, BeKind:YouKnowItMakesSense
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