Fraud cover art

Fraud

An American History from Barnum to Madoff

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Fraud

By: Edward J. Balleisen
Narrated by: Tom Perkins
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About this listen

The United States has always proved an inviting home for boosters, sharp dealers, and outright swindlers. Worship of entrepreneurial freedom has complicated the task of distinguishing aggressive salesmanship from unacceptable deceit, especially on the frontiers of innovation. At the same time, competitive pressures have often nudged respectable firms to embrace deception. As a result, fraud has been a key feature of American business since its beginnings.

In this sweeping narrative, Edward Balleisen traces the history of fraud in America - and the evolving efforts to combat it - from the age of PT Barnum through the eras of Charles Ponzi and Bernie Madoff. Starting with an early 19th-century American legal world of "buyer beware", this unprecedented account describes the slow, piecemeal construction of modern regulatory institutions to protect consumers and investors, from the Gilded Age through the New Deal and the Great Society. It concludes with the more recent era of deregulation, which has brought with it a spate of costly frauds. By tracing how Americans have struggled to foster a vibrant economy without enabling a corrosive level of fraud, this book reminds us that American capitalism rests on an uneasy foundation of social trust.

©2017 Princeton University Press (P)2017 HighBridge, a division of Recorded Books
Americas Business Development & Entrepreneurship Business Ethics Entrepreneurship United States Workplace & Organisational Behavior Business Gilded Age Law Capitalism Crime Innovation Banking Taxation American History Socialism

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All stars
Most relevant  
Given the title and description I expected a historical overview of frauds, cons and dishonest marketing. The book does contain that, but baked into a long-winded exploration of consumer/commerce law in the United States.

There is a brief part about behavioural economics in the consumer fraud space, and some interesting stories and anecdotes about known and obscure fraud cases, but you have to listen to long discussions of legislation, government regulation, and court cases surrounding them.

All in all, this is a book I would have liked to like, and I find parts genuinely fascinating - but I was bored by too many passages. Ultimately it is a book on the history and sociology of law.

Mainly a book about law

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