Description
About the Author
Arthur M. Diamond, Jr. is Professor of Economics at the University of Nebraska Omaha. He has published many journal articles on issues in labor economics, economics of technology, and economics of entrepreneurship.
Reviews
I highly recommend Openness to Creative Destruction and believe all economists and political economist will benefit greatly from reading this very well written and researched guide through the fascinating history of how ideas matter, institutions matter and, most of all, how when ideas and institutions align with policies the result are innovations that improve the human condition beyond the wildest dreams of our imagination; well until the next set of innovations supersedes even those. * Peter J. Boettke, Public Choice *
This is a well-written book with an easy style that will appeal to economists, students and perhaps the general public * Charles Oppenheim, Robert Gordon University, Prometheus: critical studies in innovation *
Read this book and discover what matters most in economics--ideas and knowledge--now summarized in the word 'innovation.' But to fuel innovation resources have to be released from their old incumbent uses and flow into the new and that is the destruction that creates new wealth and opportunity. * Vernon Smith, Nobel Prize in Economics *
What are the benefits of innovative dynamism? Arthur Diamond lays out the clearest positive case to date for innovation in this highly readable and historically comprehensive work. * Tyler Cowen, Professor of Economics, George Mason University *
Astoundingly rich in ideas and stories, Diamond's sweet and beautiful book is more: an open-handed guide to what really matters in explaining, and sustaining, the Great Enrichment of 3,000 percent per person from 1800 to the present. Diamond assuages the ancient fear of betterment, recently haunting us with spooks of AI and technological unemployment. He shows conclusively that an "innovative dynamism" enriches us all, materially and spiritually. The poor are bettered. The jobs are bettered. Read the book and be bettered, freed from specious and politically poisonous worries about economic change. * Deirdre McCloskey, UIC Distinguished Professor of Economics and of History Emerita *
In Openness to Creative Destruction, Art Diamond tells amazing story after story of entrepreneurs who have made our lives better. Read it and pinch yourself at your luck in being alive in the 21st century. And learn about how, as a citizen, to keep the innovations coming. Hint: Don't give government too much power over us. * David R. Henderson, Hoover Institution *
We are told that robots are about to make us superfluous andthat the giants of Silicon Valley will swallow the economy. Art Diamond's Openness to Creative Destruction provides a healthy antidote to all this gloom and doom. He gives us the necessary historical perspective: we owe our comfort and even our lives to generations of disruptive innovation. Yet each disruption bred apocalyptic portents like those we hear today. Diamond provides a timely warning against heeding the pessimists of the moment by imposing legal and regulatory shackles on the innovators. * Sam Peltzman, Professor Emeritus of Economics, University of Chicago *
Book Information
ISBN 9780190263676
Author Arthur M., Jr. Diamond
Format Paperback
Page Count 312
Imprint Oxford University Press Inc
Publisher Oxford University Press Inc
Weight(grams) 431g
Dimensions(mm) 155mm * 234mm * 20mm