Finding a lasting solution to recession, that persistent bane of the US and world economy, is proving to be persistently elusive even in the hands of the most "knowledgeable" of financial and economic handlers.
The great recession of 2007-2009, the mind-boggling $15 trillion or so of US government debts accumulated through Republican and Democratic stewardship, confounded by massive corporate bailouts, staggering unemployment, economic contraction, and the shameful act of borrowing from China, a Communist powerhouse, suggest that Keynesian macroeconomics and its doctrine of fiscal expansionism and focus on monetary policies have run aground, even afoul, as sensible, effective weapons to contain this unwieldy monster.
Using deep, common sense insights into years of indifference from policymakers and people at the top of power ladder, Jagjit Singh Buttar in Capitalism without Recessions puts forward alternative policy and action courses that address what has been escaping the "great" minds of a few generations.