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Average Is Over: Powering America Beyond the Age of the Great Stagnation Hardcover – September 12, 2013


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Widely acclaimed as one of the world’s most influential economists, Tyler Cowen returns with his groundbreaking follow-up to the New York Times bestseller The Great Stagnation.

The widening gap between rich and poor means dealing with one big, uncomfortable truth: If you’re not at the top, you’re at the bottom.

The global labor market is changing radically thanks to growth at the high end—and the low. About three quarters of the jobs created in the United States since the great recession pay only a bit more than minimum wage. Still, the United States has more millionaires and billionaires than any country ever, and we continue to mint them.

In this eye-opening book, renowned economist and bestselling author Tyler Cowen explains that phenomenon: High earners are taking ever more advantage of machine intelligence in data analysis and achieving ever-better results. Meanwhile, low earners who haven’t committed to learning, to making the most of new technologies, have poor prospects. Nearly every business sector relies less and less on manual labor, and this fact is forever changing the world of work and wages. A steady, secure life somewhere in the middle—average—is over.

With The Great Stagnation, Cowen explained why median wages stagnated over the last four decades; in
Average Is Over he reveals the essential nature of the new economy, identifies the best path forward for workers and entrepreneurs, and provides readers with actionable advice to make the most of the new economic landscape. It is a challenging and sober must-read but ultimately exciting, good news. In debates about our nation’s economic future, it will be impossible to ignore.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Praise for Average is Over

“A buckle-your-seatbelts, swiftly moving tour of the new economic landscape.” - 
Kirkus Reviews

"Cowen has a single core strength...his taste for observations that are genuinely enlightening, interesting, and underappreciated." - 
The Daily Beast

"
A bracing new book" - The Economist

"Tyler Cowen's new book 
Average is Over makes an excellent followup to his previous work The Great Stagnation and I expect it will set the intellectual agenda in much the way its predecessor did." - Slate

"The author roves broadly and interestingly to make his case, outlining radical economic transformations that lie in store for us, predicting the rise and fall of cities depending on their capacity to adapt to this machine-driven world and offering policy prescriptions for preserving American prosperity." - 
The Wall Street Journal

"Audacious and fascinating." - 
The Financial Times

"Thomas Friedman - move over. There's a new guy on the block." - 
Tampa Bay Tribune

"Eminently readable." - The Brookings Institute

"Cowen has a rare ability to present fundamental economic questions without all of the complexity and jargon that make many economics books inaccessible to the lay reader." - 
The American Interest

 

Praise for The Great Stagnation

“As Cowen makes clear, many of this era’s technological breakthroughs produce enormous happiness gains, but surprisingly little additional economic activity” —David Brooks,
The New York Times

“One of the most talked-about books among economists right now.” —Renee Montagne,
Morning Edition, NPR

“Tyler Cowen may very well turn out to be this decade’s Thomas Friedman.” —Kelly Evans,
The Wall Street Journal

“Perhaps it’s the mark of a good book that after you’ve read it, you begin to see evidence for it’s thesis in lots of different areas… it’s well worth the time and the money.” —Ezra Klein,
The Washington Post

“Cowen says over the last 300 years the U.S. has eaten all the low-hanging fruit. We’ve exhausted the easy pickings of abundant land, technological advance, and basic education for the masses. We thought the low-hanging fruit would never run out. It did, but we pushed ahead. And thus Cowen’s understated but penetrating summation of the financial crisis: “We thought we were richer than we were.” —Bret Swanson,
Forbes

"
The Great Stagnation has become the most debated nonfiction book so far this year." - David Brooks, The New York Times

"Cowen's book...will have a profound impact on the way people think about the last thirty years." - Ryan Avent, Economist.com


Praise for An Economist Gets Lunch

“Part Economic history… part guide to getting a better meal at home or a restaurant. Renowned economist…Professor Cowen is an expert on the economics of culture and the arts.” —Damon Darlin,
The New York Times Dining Section

“[a] Calvin Trillin-like ode to tamale stands and ethnic food, the more exotic the better” —Dwight Garner,
The New York Times Book Review Section

“If one’s goal is to eat well, Mr. Cowen’s rules are golden.” —Graeme Wood,
The Wall Street Journal

An Economist Gets Lunch is a mind-bending book for non-economists.” —USA Today

About the Author

TYLER COWEN is a professor of economics at George Mason University. His blog, Marginal Revolution, is one of the world’s most influential economics blogs. He also writes for the New York Times, Financial Times and The Economist and is the cofounder of Marginal Revolution University. The author of five previous books, Cowen lives in Fairfax, Virginia.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ 0525953736
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Dutton; 8/18/13 edition (September 12, 2013)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 304 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9780525953739
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0525953739
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.1 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.25 x 1 x 9.25 inches
  • Customer Reviews:

About the author

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Tyler Cowen
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Tyler Cowen (/ˈkaʊ.ən/; born January 21, 1962) is an American economist, academic, and writer. He occupies the Holbert L. Harris Chair of economics, as a professor at George Mason University, and is co-author, with Alex Tabarrok, of the popular economics blog Marginal Revolution. Cowen and Tabarrok have also ventured into online education by starting Marginal Revolution University. He currently writes a regular column for Bloomberg View. He also has written for such publications as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, Time, Wired, Newsweek, and the Wilson Quarterly. Cowen also serves as faculty director of George Mason's Mercatus Center, a university research center that focuses on the market economy. In February 2011, Cowen received a nomination as one of the most influential economists in the last decade in a survey by The Economist. He was ranked #72 among the "Top 100 Global Thinkers" in 2011 by Foreign Policy Magazine "for finding markets in everything."

Bio from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Customer reviews

4 out of 5 stars
543 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the thesis thought-provoking and interesting. They also say the book is easy to read and the first two chapters are interesting. However, some customers feel the book has too much chess content.

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73 customers mention "Content"56 positive17 negative

Customers find the thesis thought-provoking and interesting. They also say the book provides a good look at the future of the economy and makes a strong and highly plausible argument for a likely American future. Readers also say that the basic insight is simple and understandable. They say the first chapter is promising and engaging.

"...If, like me, you are a Cowen fan, you'll find here the most comprehensive exegesis of how he sees "things" developing over the next, say, 25..." Read more

"...Average is over. Cowen's argument is persuasive." Read more

"...His references and beliefs are well documented, 25% of the book are references-- it's well-known that Cowen may be the most well-read person on the..." Read more

"...from today Cowen's "Average is Over" makes a strong and highly plausible argument for a likely American future...." Read more

4 customers mention "Value"4 positive0 negative

Customers find the book worth the price.

"...And Chapter 12 is worth the price of the book (as some other reviewer has already said)...." Read more

"...The good news -The already expensive, livable, and elite cities become even more so...." Read more

"...I believe his views were well argued, and that made the book worth the price...." Read more

"...Chapter 12 was worth the price of the book to me...." Read more

6 customers mention "Chess content"0 positive6 negative

Customers find the chess content of the book too much.

"...He seems obsessed with the game of chess!!!..." Read more

"...First, he uses way too many chess analogies. Over 10% of the book talks about chess which becomes very tedious...." Read more

"...And way too much on chess :)" Read more

"Too much emphasis on Chess strategy and its relationship to computer analysis. It needed a broader context for his theory...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on September 21, 2013
I follow Cowen's blog closely enough that I was not at all surprised by any of his predictions. Nonetheless I consider this book an essential read, especially if you are interested in politics or economics or automation or science or chess. If, like me, you are a Cowen fan, you'll find here the most comprehensive exegesis of how he sees "things" developing over the next, say, 25 years. In contrast to Marginal Revolution, where Cowen often expresses his vision most eloquently in the text he uses to link to other writing on the Internet, Average Is Over is written in a sort of case-study or war gaming style, trying to tease out the most plausible scenario for the medium run future in a variety of areas. The subtitle is misleading. First, it suggests a horrible airport bookstore business development book for executives. Second, it harkens too much to Cowen's earlier book The Great Stagnation. While this is in some weak sense a "sequel" to TGS, that was a fundamentally more macroeconomically focused book than this. The most interesting parts of Average Is Over are microeconomic in nature and more directly concern chess and online dating. (These parts are interesting partly because of the insight they give into Cowen himself, and his personal and intellectual development. Marginal Revolution, when it reveals anything of Cowen, tends to do so through the lenses of art, travel and cooking, rather than chess or his personal life.)

I guess my main complaint about the book is that for someone as well-travelled as Cowen it is rather parochial in scope, basically a story about the US and Western Europe. I should mention that I read Cowen as essentially sanguine about the medium run, while being cognizant of the undesirable nature of some likely or inevitable societal developments. Yet geopolitical considerations are strangely absent from the scenarios he imagines, and it is easy to envision such global considerations making the political or economic situation in, e.g., the US dramatically worse. I know from his blog, for example, that Cowen is a Eurozone (and perhaps European Union?) pessimist; but we get no sense of how the automation trends underlying Cowen's prognostications may or may not influence the possibility of Eurozone breakup, nor what the likely results might be. Cowen explains how economic forces are making our workers want to move to Texas and how the likely continuation of these trends may convince our retirees to move to Mexico, or make our society look more like Mexico's. With the reshoring of manufacturing and the continuation of automation, he sees tighter economic ties between the US, Canada, and Mexico. But what does all this mean for international politics and trade in the Western Hemisphere, more broadly? Finally, and probably most importantly, there is little of Asia in this book, beyond fairly obvious predictions about how competition with China will be demagogued in American politics. Yet the same forces of automation are at work in China and India (witness the robotic noodle chefs in Shanghai Cowen blogged on MR), and China and India are very different from the US (as well as each other) on three crucial axes -- level of economic development, demography, and Internet penetration. So the medium run path for the Chinese and Indian societies and economies is not only opaque to an American economist (and his American readers), but it is also sure to diverge from the American trajectory in interesting ways that cannot help but impact the predictions Cowen makes about US politics and economics. More engagement with this issue would have been interesting. (I could go on to other global issues that surely bear upon Cowen's predictions for the US, such as the slowly simmering sectarian war that has engulfed the Mideast -- with sporadic violent flare-ups -- for 45 years. But now we're really getting beyond the intended scope of his book, so I can more easily forgive such omissions. )

Tldr: Tyler's vision for the short- to medium-run future is perhaps slightly surprising (depending on the reader), and maybe a bit unsettling, but pretty much familiar and therefore essentially convincing. The value of this book is not in the novelty of the broad macro arc of said vision --- which can be summarized by the word "automation" --- but in the not-easily-summarized micro-scale insights developed as the story is fleshed out. Despite being fascinating, the books is flawed (in my opinion) for being insufficiently international in scope.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 20, 2013
This book, which in many places feels like a blog (sniping at competing writer/economists, etc.), has some interesting parts and some not so interesting unless you like chess, a discussion of which fills a lot of pages spread over several chapters (maybe 100 pages if you include the chapter on Turing, which is interesting but not all that connected to the main theme of the book). The point of all this chess talk is to use recent changes in chess competition to illustrate how similar changes will (are) affecting society, culture and the economy at large. Man vs. man -> man vs. machine -> man+machine vs. man+ machine. So it is (will be) in many endeavors including work, education, science and even economics, at least according to Cowen. But you don't have to read 100 pages of chess talk to get the point. Better to focus your attention on the best chapters 1, 2, 3, 9 and 12. One through three look at the weak job market discussing it as much if not more from a cultural than an economic perspective (there are some charts but the heart of the analysis is that in a man+ machine world "conscientiousness" is what differentiates the job winners (high paying work)from the job losers (low paying work). Chapter 9 is a conceptually innovative look at offshoring (not nearly as big a problem as is often supposed according to Cowen) and immigration (which he sees as the "on-shoring" of jobs that would otherwise be offshored). Well worth reading. And Chapter 12 is worth the price of the book (as some other reviewer has already said). It takes a decidedly non-dystopian view of America over the next 20-30 years that sees us drifting toward what we might call the "Texas model": low taxes, lots of low-wage, "brute force" jobs, high crime, poor health care, sub-par schooling, no zoning, all culminating in cheap living for the 85% of Americans who are the "losers" in our rapidly bifurcating society. (The "winners" are in Austin presumably getting rich by working under the direction of "genius machine" computers.) Cowen sees Central-American-style "favelas" (400 sq ft homes with below average public services) spreading throughout America. The rest of us will live in concentrated gatherings of education, innovation and wealth, mostly urban. He sees Americans in both the winner and loser categories accepting of this tectonic cultural and economic shift because, despite all else, "hardly anyone need feel bad about being an American." America (or perhaps North America to include Canada and parts of Mexico, will continue to dominate the 21st century just as we have the second half of the 20th. Indeed, America will continue to be "one of the nicest places in the world." His point is that while the split is inevitable (at least insofar as current trends seem to predict) the outcomes are non-threatening, nothing to worry too much about. It will be an "oddly peaceful time." More wealthy people with much better health care, more poor people living on canned beans and lots of "cheap fun," not much in between, "two nations, a fantastically successful nation, working in the technologically dynamic sector, and everyone else." Average is over. Cowen's argument is persuasive.
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Top reviews from other countries

Ed O'Toole
5.0 out of 5 stars Good price
Reviewed in Canada on September 18, 2021
Good price
Puja Mehrotra
2.0 out of 5 stars Not good
Reviewed in India on June 16, 2021
Not good
Cliente Amazon
5.0 out of 5 stars Il futuro è qui, da ora in poi
Reviewed in Italy on January 21, 2017
Cowen è un economista, ma le sue considerazioni su muovono su un piano di ampia rielaborazione della stessa materia economica. Sono riflessioni che richiamano scenari ai quali dovremo adattarci e ai quali, soprattutto, dovranno ispirarsi le politiche economiche del futuro prossimo. Ricordano le riflessioni sul futuro di Keynes. A differenza dei catastrofisti, Cowen trasmette una salda positività. Una sana nostalgia del futuro. Nel sue parole il nostro presente: "That's about to change. It is frightening. but it is exciting too." Non a caso nei suoi frequenti collegamenti compaiono Keynes, così come Brynjolfsson e McAfee, Turing e Kahneman. Il futuro che ci presenta Cowen è molto vicino e cambierà le nostre visione del vivere in società. "When it comes to a lot of values issues - and what people really believe in their daily lives - the gap between conservatives and liberals isn't nearly as large as it might first seem."
Delta
5.0 out of 5 stars Lesenswertes Buch eines genialen Ökonomen
Reviewed in Germany on June 29, 2014
In der Frankfurter Allgemeinen Zeitung wurden sowohl das Buch als auch der Autor empfohlen. Daher bedurfte es keiner großen Überlegungen, mir dieses Buch zu kaufen. Meine Erwartungen wurden in jeder Hinsicht erfüllt. Die Auseinandersetzung mit den Problemen der Lohnentwicklung, Gewinnern und Verlierern auf dem Arbeitsmarkt und des Wiedererlernens der Bildung/Ausbildung u.v.m. ist auch für den vorgebildeten Laien in verständlicher Form geführt.
Wer sich jenseits trockener Statistiken mit brennenden Themen der Wirtschaft beschäftigen möchte, kommt an Tyler Coven nicht vorbei.
Dies ist mit ein Grund, mir auch die weiteren bisher von ihm erschienenen Bücher zu kaufen.
4 people found this helpful
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m
5.0 out of 5 stars recommend it
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 4, 2014
Its a good book for people like myself who dont know much about economy but are interested in the social and political impact of it.
2 people found this helpful
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