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Hardcover The Prosperity Agenda: What the World Wants from America--And What We Need in Return Book

ISBN: 0470105291

ISBN13: 9780470105290

The Prosperity Agenda: What the World Wants from America--And What We Need in Return

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Book Overview

Following the devastating 2005 earthquake in Pakistan, the Bush administration pledged more than $500 million for earthquake relief and sent American helicopters and soldiers to help. Immediately afterward, polls showed that the number of Pakistanis with a favorable opinion of the United States had doubled to more than 46 percent. The Prosperity Agenda argues that this may be the best foreign policy moment of the entire Bush administration--at the cost of what we spend in Iraq every day--and should become a model for future action. In this provocative, ingenious book, Soderberg and Katulis make one of the most controversial arguments that foreign policy circles have seen in years: no more putting all our eggs in the basket of promoting democracy or market reforms, or even diplomacy, sanctions, or cash handouts to faltering governments. Instead, they argue, we should go right to the citizens of troubled nations and give them what they need most. People in the Congo, Iraq, Pakistan, and North Korea all have the same concerns, and the right to vote is far from the top of the list. They need freedom from war, good food and shelter, basic health care, and the reasonable hope that tomorrow will be better. It's not only the right thing to do; it's likely to do more for American interests than the policies we've been relying on for years. Why have seven years of President Bush's "freedom agenda" failed to achieve freedom or democracy in Iraq, Afghanistan, or anywhere else? When democracy starts to sound like a code word for advancing U.S. interests, it backfires. Latin America provides an excellent example of why freedom's march has stalled, in large part due to quality-of-life issues. A 2004 survey showed that a majority of people in Latin America would rather have a government that provided economic gains than a democracy.

The Prosperity Agenda embraces a new and compelling strategy for overcoming that problem and dealing with the world. Giving money, weapons, and loans with lots of strings attached doesn't do it. But handing out vaccines, disaster relief, and $100 laptops does. Working to improve the basic lives of people will, in the end, help defeat terrorism, increase America's leverage against its enemies, weaken dictatorships, and, most importantly, save the lives of millions.

Customer Reviews

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How To Be a Democratic Candidate for Office

"The Prosperity Agenda" is a catchy name for the book, but a more accurate name would be "The Year In 2007 New York Times Op-Ed Pieces." Basically, this is a classic center-left collection of talking points, replete with sympathetic anecdotal examples, a convenient cocktail-party smorgasbord of interesting statistics, etc. etc. Salient points include: - Promoting prosperity abroad and building democratic institutions over the long term makes a heck of a lot more sense than overthrowing badly run regimes, occupying them, and hoping for the best. - Yes, we need to hunt down bin Laden, but if we can find it in our hearts to give more aid to the Muslim world than Hezbollah does, that will go much further towards stopping the threat of terrorism. - We should spend money fighting preventable diseases. - Free trade benefits the US, but it has to be smart and we have to have programs to help lower-income workers, because they're the ones who get screwed by free trade. - We should work to get rid of nuclear weapons, because the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty is on the verge of complete collapse. - Nativist know-nothing militant Minutemen are idiots. "The Prosperity Agenda" is a worthy read, particularly if you feel underinformed on any of the issues the book covers. It's also a quick read. It's very broad in its scope, though it doesn't have time to be very deep. By far the most controversial idea here is that democracy without basic economic prosperity doesn't mean beans, because people without resources will care about that rather than about electing the best or wisest leader. (An aside: the very fact this idea is even controversial displays the depths to which our foreign policy thinking and our conception of democracy promotion has sunk in the Bush years.) But the scope here is too broad to go into comprehensive analysis of, say, why Latin American countries keep voting populist ideologues in. The answer is pretty obvious: the previous guys weren't giving them running water, electricity and a living wage. In our current political climate, I guess it's audacious of the authors to say so (rather than simply waving garlic at Hugo Chavez and hoping it'll drive him away). Anyway, it's a good book and if you're a Democratic candidate running for major office, you should read it because it's a blueprint of how to make good, smart policy SOUND good. Hint hint: Barack Obama should probably peruse this before the Presidential debates, if he hasn't already. (I know John Kerry's read it, 'cos he recommended it.) Nice book. I just found I'd read much of it already.
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