Nat Dyer is a writer and researcher specialising in global political economy. He is a Fellow of the Schumacher Institute and the Royal Society of Arts. He has worked for Global Witness and for Promoting Economic Pluralism and his stories have been reported on by the BBC, the New York Times and Bloomberg. Find out more at @natjdyer and www.natdyer.com.
“Systematically examines and excavates the flimsy foundations of today's economic orthodoxy. ....essential reading for the curious and a vital antidote for all students of economics."" Ann Pettifor, Policy Research in Macroeconomics “A fascinating investigation into the development of economic thought from David Ricardo’s era to the present day – and its impact on real lives and livelihoods. Wide-ranging and carefully researched, this book shows the temptations and dangers of assuming away too much of reality in the pursuit of elegant economic models. A heartfelt and reasoned call for a more human economics.” Erica Thompson, author of Escape from Model Land “Brilliant and erudite... This pioneering deep dive into Ricardo’s intellectual and social universe is a revelation for those interested in history, economics, science and their rich interaction at the dawn of the modern world.” Jacob Soll, University of Southern California, author of Free Market: The History of an Idea “A wonderful achievement bursting with humanity. As important for how we study international economic affairs today as it is in reappraising nineteenth-century imperial trade."" Matthew Watson, University of Warwick “Dyer skilfully shows how Ricardo’s simple, incredibly influential models hid a history of conquest and exploitation spanning four continents — and how a commitment to models over evidence can hide similar misdeeds even today.” Elizabeth Popp Berman, University of Michigan, author of Thinking Like an Economist “Excellently researched and beautifully written, Ricardo’s Dream transformed my understanding of Isaac Newton’s engagement in global trade and British imperialism by highlighting the importance of Brazilian gold.” Patricia Fara, University of Cambridge, author of Life After Gravity “This important and lucid book skewers – in delightful detail – the false gods of the profession that has wreaked so much modern havoc, around the globe.” Nicholas Shaxson, author of Treasure Islands “Nat Dyer's gripping, page-turning exposé of the Neverland of economic models, thriving at the crippling expense of the real world, is simply brilliant.” Patrick Alley, co-founder Global Witness and author of Very Bad People and Terrible Humans “Economics should be about the wellbeing of people and the integrity of the planet Earth. This brilliant book gets us closer to this end goal.” Satish Kumar, author of Soil, Soul, Society “An engaging critique of economics, which takes Ricardo’s personality and his abstract theories of trade and rent as founding models for the discipline. Lively and compelling, it calls for more grounded and inclusive approaches.” Avner Offer, University of Oxford ""A truly fascinating work."" Alternatives Économique ""Highly enlightening and highly recommended"" Morning Star ""I loved this book. Gobbled it up. If you want a sense of where economics might have gone wrong, and how it could right itself – this is an excellent primer."" Ed Conway, author of Material World Ricardo’s Dream is a fascinating – and surprisingly gripping – exploration of how mainstream economists came to inhabit a world of models and formulae increasingly untethered from the real economy. Dyer shows that, in attempting to create clean and elegant mathematical models stripped of the messiness of politics, economists have helped to conceal how the economy really works – to the benefit of those at the top.” Grace Blakeley, author of Vulture Capitalism