Why Wall Street matters
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From the Book - First edition.
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Published Reviews
Choice Review
Those most likely to benefit from this brief, well-written, and thoughtful defense of Wall Street by the author of some outstanding works on major investment banks (House of Cards, 2009) are also the least likely to read this book. They should. For as unsavory as the rescue of Wall Street during 2008 may have been and as much as the vociferous voices to "Save Main Street, Not Wall Street" may have struck a fairness chord, in truth, had Wall Street not been rescued, another 1930s-like Great Depression would have engulfed Main Street. Cohan touches the highlights; Tim Geithner's Stress Test (Crown, 2014) fills out the contours. Both authors reflect the consensus that in a downward-spiraling financial and economic system one first needs to extinguish the fire before it spreads. One can quibble with Cohan's objections to the Dodd-Frank Act, Congress's response to the crisis. Agreed, it was far from perfect, but it was the best that could be achieved as a political compromise. It's also questionable whether Cohan's own suggestion of reforming Wall Street's compensation arrangement would be better received. Summing Up: Recommended. General readers; lower-division undergraduates through faculty. --Jonas Prager, New York University
Library Journal Reviews
Lots of people want to take a sledge hammer to the big banks, but contrarian Cohan raises his hands in protest. A financial journalist and former banker, with three New York Times best sellers (e.g., House of Cards) and a progressive political stance to his name, Cohan acknowledges the excesses but argues that Wall Street is society's bulwark when it is working right.. Copyright 2016 Library Journal.