For a time, globalization was synonymous with utopia: the untrammeled flow of capital across borders, new markets waiting to be opened, the growth of developing nations flaunting their comparative advantage in manufacturing jobs. If you covered the chaotic end of Suharto’s rule in Indonesia, the ruble crisis in Russia, China’s integration into global markets, and the plight of abandoned American workers, however, you may be convinced globalization is the single-best explanation for the economic upheaval and political polarization of our current age.
This is where David J. Lynch, a longtime global economics reporter for The Washington Post, has landed. For years, he has covered every major trade agreement and its impact on workers around the world. In The World’s Worst Bet: How the Globalization Gamble Went Wrong (And What Would Make It Right), he delivers a new history of the euphoric rise and eventual backlash of this era of the connected world.
Living through the past decades, you may feel like you know the story all too well. But by focusing on the tension between capital and labor, he brings fresh insight to the weighty decisions and missteps that brought us from the heady days of neoliberalism to the full-on return of a nationalist world order.
Lynch structures the book as a narrative autopsy of each presidential administration’s respective failures to shield the American worker from globalization’s most backbreaking consequences. Anchored in exhaustive reporting and dozens of interviews with those who built or challenged the system, it is a Greek tragedy of messianic, world-shaking hubris, starring an elite class of politicians whose betrayal of working-class Americans helped trigger a populist surge that has engulfed the world.
IN THE 1990s, PRESIDENT BILL CLINTON viewed globalization as an unparalleled force for spurring prosperity at home and spreading political liberalization abroad. He lifted barriers to trade, signing the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and bringing China into the World Trade Organization (WTO), which was founded in 1995 to establish the rules of global commerce.