Age of
Greed: The Triumph of Finance and the Decline of America, 1970 to the Present
A vivid history of the economics of greed told through the stories of those major
figures primarily responsible.
Age of Greed shows how the single-minded and selfish pursuit of immense
personal wealth has been on the rise in the United States over the last forty years.
Economic journalist Jeff Madrick tells this story through incisive profiles of the
individuals responsible for this dramatic shift in our country’s fortunes, from the
architects of the free-market economic philosophy (such as Milton Friedman and Alan
Greenspan) to the politicians and businessmen (including Nixon, Reagan, Boesky, and Soros)
who put it into practice. Their stories detail how a movement initially conceived as a
moral battle for freedom instead brought about some of our nation's most pressing economic
problems, including the intense economic inequity and instability America suffers from
today. This is an indispensible guide to understanding the 1 percent.
Introduction ix
1 Revolution
Prologue: Lewis Uhler Believer 3
1 Walter Wriston Regulatory Revolt 10
2 Milton Friedman Proselytizer 26
3 Richard Nixon and Arthur Burns Political
Expediency 52
4 Joe Flom The Hostile Takeover and Its
Consequences 71
5 Ivan Boesky Wanting It All
86
6 Walter Wriston II Bailing Out Citibank
96
7 Ronald Reagan The Making of an Ideology
110
8 Ted Turner, Sam Walton, and Steve Ross Size Becomes Strategy 125
9 Jimmy Carter Capitulation 144
10 Howard Jarvis and Jack Kemp Tapping the
Anger 155
11 Paul Volcker, Jimmy Carter, and Ronald
Reagan Revolution Completed 160
2 The New Guard
12 Tom Peters and Jack Welch Promises Broken 179
13 Michael Milken "The
Magnificent" 202
14 Alan Greenspan Ideologue 222
15 George Soros and John Meriwether
Fabulous Wealth and Controversial Power 248
16 Sandy Weill King of the World
286
17 Jack Grubman, Frank Quattrone, Ken Lay,
and Sandy Weill Decade of Deceit 318
18 Angelo Mozilo The American Tragedy
351
19 Jimmy Cayne, Richard Fuld, Stan O'Neal,
and Chuck Prince Collapse 371
Epilogue 398
Notes 405
Acknowledgments 443
Index 445
480 pages, Paperback