6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
Right on the money, 2003-08-02
The author predicts certain economic conditions when the book was published in 1999. A stock market pullback has since happened. Rents in the Boston Market have declined for the last two years. Deflation pricing on goods that can be manufactured in the 3rd world. Quite remarkable.He's wrong on some of the trigger mechanisms and admits that he may be. (Who could have predicted 9/11, or when the fed would raise rates..., or the bond rally causing a current real-estate bubble.)
Other authors try to scare you with hype or wave theory garbage. This book backs things up with hard data and graphs from different economic periods that run similarities. Then he explains the mechanisms at work that will drive the deflationary process. Also explains how much of it is beyond the control of the feds short term rate mechanisms.... Could be why the fed isn't jawing about it, just hoping it won't happen.
Five stars, read it. If it happens, you'll be prepared. If it doesn't happen, you'll be better educated anyways.
14 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
Out of date, 2003-07-07
This is a good book, but it is in need of a serious rewrite. Originally published in 1999, it misses the following events:
* Stock market calamity in 3/2000 and subsequent decline
* 9/11
* corporate accounting scandals
* The multitude of interest rate cuts
* Real Estate bubble
* War on Iraq
As a result, a lot of the information in this book has to be interpreted with these events in mind. For instance, a whole chapter is devoted to "The Strengthening Dollar" - which may have happened had the landscape not changed so drastically. Another example is a mention of Enron as an example of a company that might be a winner in the electric utility industry as utilities are being deregulated.
The above is not intended to be a slight on the author or the book. Who could've foreseen the events above? The point is that the landscape has changed a lot since this book was originally written.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
Prescient., 2003-05-29
I read this book years ago just when it came out (mid 90s). I did not pay that much attention afterwards. I thought at the time, it was mildly interesting. Man was I wrong. This book was right on the money half a decade ahead of time. In his book, he depicted perfectly well all the trends that would lead to a rather formidable deflation factor. At the time he wrote the book, Japan was probably close to entering its deflationary phase. But, no other country was. The rest of the World's central bankers were still busy fighting inflation.
Now, the picture has changed radically, and Gary Shilling anticipated current economic times perfectly
17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
Very Timely Investment Book for EVERYONE!, 2002-07-12
Having left Wall Street over a year ago I am amazed at how little attention the media, Wall Street & the Fed have given to Deflation. In my opinion the probability of a deflationary scenario is higher than ever. This book helps you prepare for such tumultuous economic times. I rank it a 5 star book, an increasingly rare rating for me. I gave this book five stars due to the excellent analysis and insightful commentary about what occurs in deflation and, more importantly, the graphical depictions the book has throughout it. It would be ignorant to mention that Mr. Shilling has been talking about deflation non-stop since the late 80's - especially after the '87 stock market crash. Can anyone remember the story about the boy who cried "WOLF!" too many times?
Talking finance without graphs is tough for the reader so I give kudos to Mr. Shilling in this regard.
As I like to say (and Mr. Shilling points this out), the 1980's was the age of government spending. The 1990's was the age of the consumer buying binge as individual debt levels have soared. The average person has $8500 in credit card debt vs. 2500 in 1990 to put it into perspective.
Moving forward, what will drive top-line growth in worldwide sales? - Did you know that the G-8 countries account for roughly 80% of total purchases worldwide and, as a result, weakness in those countries dramatically affects the world economy?
Will we end up with too much capacity due to stagnant growth or a retraction in corporate spending?
What will be the catalyst to drive economic growth? - The government has over $5 trillion in debt, corporations and individuals are tapped out and factories are running at about 76% of their utilization right now.
Buy the book........Read the book........Anyone can learn from this........By the way, bond prices have already soared so the easy money in bonds has been made.........
...If you are interested in economic history book I would encourage everyone to read The Worldly Philosophers by Robert Heilbroner since it is more international in scope and deals with the lives and times of the most famous economists in history. If you are interested in economic development I would encourage you to read Hernando DeSoto's Mystery of Capital but note his lack of focus on corruption in certain countries. A great general business book is by the management guru Peter Drucker entitled "The Essential Drucker."
2 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
Deflation: Strategies for Building Wealth in the Coming Wav, 2001-09-11
I had hoped for more specifics.