0: Introduction 1: Where Our Path Has Led 2: The Lost Lessons of the Second World War 3: The Anti-Monopoly Tradition 4: Peak Anti-Monopoly 5: The Tech Explosion of the 1980s and 1990s 6: Neoliberalism's Triumph 7: The Problem of Global Monopoly 8: The Rise of the Tech Giants 9: Conclusion: Breaking Up Global Economic Power
Tim Wu is Professor of Law, Science and Technology at Columbia Law School and a contributing writer for the New York Times. He previously worked for Barack Obama and is the author of The Master Switch and The Attention Merchants.
Short and sharp... an excellent primer for anyone who wants to
understand why corporate wealth and power have grown so
concentrated... and why that might be a problem for democracy.
*Financial Times*
Admirably concise and punchy.
*The Times*
Mr. Wu writes with elegance, conviction, knowledge - and
certitude.
*Wall Street Journal*
Timely and important... Wu makes an urgent and persuasive case.
*Joseph E. Stiglitz*
With The Curse of Bigness Tim Wu helps shape an urgent new global
conversation on market democracy, reviving the critical role of
governments in curbing corporate power.
*Shoshana Zuboff, author of The Age of Surveillance Capitalism*
Original, provocative and stimulating.
*Timothy Garton Ash*
As Tim Wu argues in The Curse of Bigness, global economic
concentration is now at levels unseen in more than a century -
since the early days of industrial capitalism... Wu manages to make
this brisk and impressively readable overview of the subject vivid
and compelling.
*Washington Post*
It's a big idea for a little book, but Wu knows how to keep
everything concise and contained. The Curse of Bigness moves nimbly
through the thicket, embracing the boons of being small.
*New York Times*
Tim Wu has pulled off an incredible feat - he's written a short,
compelling book on antitrust... Persuasive and brilliantly written,
the book is especially timely given the rise of trillion-dollar
tech companies.
*Publishers Weekly*
Sweeping in scope, The Curse of Bigness is probably the best
popular account of the history of American antitrust law and
policy. It captures the stakes in the battle for antitrust - and it
cuts to the heart of one of the central questions of our time: can
democracy survive?
*New Republic*
Tim Wu writes books that make a big impact.
*Guardian*
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