Sweet Spot e-bog
79,32 DKK
(inkl. moms 99,15 DKK)
New updated editionThis book will change the way you think about your country...Australians now officially have the best living conditions in the world. Our country is both fair and free - and the only developed nation to have avoided a recession in the past twenty years. So how did it happen and why don't we care?In The Sweet Spot Peter Hartcher takes readers on a vastly entertaining and thoug...
E-bog
79,32 DKK
Forlag
Black Inc.
Udgivet
31 december 2013
Længde
304 sider
Genrer
1MBF
Sprog
English
Format
epub
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9781922231338
New updated editionThis book will change the way you think about your country...Australians now officially have the best living conditions in the world. Our country is both fair and free - and the only developed nation to have avoided a recession in the past twenty years. So how did it happen and why don't we care?In The Sweet Spot Peter Hartcher takes readers on a vastly entertaining and thought-provoking tour through Australian politics and history. He shows how a convict colony could have become a banana republic but didn't, how Australia came through the global financial crisis - it wasn't just the mining boom - and how we could now throw our success away if we don't recognise our strengths and demand true leadership of our politicians. Hartcher argues that Australia's prosperity was not built on dumb luck. In a time when the authoritarian success story of China is strong, Australia offers a better model: a democratic success story. Is it perfect? Of course not. But on some of the most important and apparently intractable problems of the modern world, Australia, believe it or not, is as good as it gets. And the beaches aren't bad either. Winner of the 2012 Ashurst Business Literature Prize.Longlisted for the 2012 Walkley Book Award.'A compelling and tantalising read. Australians as shrinking violets who can't embrace their own cleverness, and risk blowing the chance of a golden future.' -Kerry O'Brien'A 21st-century reply to Donald Horne's classic The Lucky Country.' -Bookseller+Publisher'A thoughtful analysis of Australia's success.' -Herald Sun'A book to promote thought and argument.' -The Age