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Boom

Bubbles and the End of Stagnation

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Boom

By: Byrne Hobart, Tobias Huber
Narrated by: Rob Grannis
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About this listen

A timely investigation of the causes of technological and scientific stagnation, and a radical blueprint for accelerating innovation.

From the Moon landing to the dawning of the atomic age, the decades prior to the 1970s were characterized by the routine invention of transformative technologies at breakneck speed. By comparison, ours is an age of stagnation. Median wage growth has slowed, inequality and income concentration are on the rise, and scientific research has become increasingly expensive and incremental.

Why are we unable to replicate the rate of progress of past decades? What can we do to reinvigorate innovation?

In Boom, Byrne Hobart and Tobias Huber take an inductive approach to the problem. In a series of case studies tracking some of the most significant breakthroughs of the past 100 years—from the Manhattan Project and the Apollo program to fracking and Bitcoin—they reverse-engineer how transformative progress arises from small groups with a unified vision, vast funding, and surprisingly poor accountability. They conclude that financial bubbles, while often maligned as destructive and destabilizing forces, have in fact been the engine of past breakthroughs and will drive future advances. In other words: Bubbles aren’t all bad.

Integrating insights from economics, philosophy, and history, Boom identifies the root causes of the Great Stagnation and provides a blueprint for accelerating innovation. By decreasing collective risk aversion, overfunding experimental processes, and organizing high-agency individuals around a transcendent mission, bubbles are the key to realizing a future that is radically different from the present. Boom offers a definite and optimistic vision of our future—and a path to unleash a new era of global prosperity.

©2024 Byrne Hobart & Tobias Huber (P)2024 Stripe Press
Americas Business Development & Entrepreneurship Economics Entrepreneurship Theory United States Technology Innovation Capitalism New York Cryptocurrency Computer Science

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Most relevant
The author makes a number of ridiculous claims, such as saying that Bitcoin (or some other deflationary cryptocurrency) becoming a universal currency would encourage investment. This is completely backwards, as deflation encourages people to simply save the currency and minimise consumption. He also pluralises Bitcoin as “Bitcoins” when the correct pluralisation is “Bitcoin”, indicating a lack of understanding. Finally, the inclusion of Bitcoin as a supposedly positive innovative bubble is also highly suspicious, given that it is still impossible to use BTC for almost anything.

Partially interesting, partially nonsense

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