As seen on BBC Newsnight.
Economics is broken, and the planet is paying the price.
Unforeseen financial crises. Extreme wealth inequality. Relentless pressure on the environment. Can we go on like this? Is there an alternative?
In Doughnut Economics, Oxford academic Kate Raworth lays out the seven deadly mistakes of economics and offers a radical re-envisioning of the system that has brought us to the point of ruin. Moving beyond the myths of ‘rational economic man’ and unlimited growth, Doughnut Economics zeroes in on the sweet spot- a system that meets all our needs without exhausting the planet.
The demands of the 21st century require a new shape of economics. This might just be it.
The Sunday Times Bestseller
AÂ Financial Times and Forbes Book of the Year
Winner of the Transmission Prize 2018
Longlisted for the FT/McKinsey Business Book of the Year
Award 2017
‘The John Maynard Keynes of the 21st century.’ George Monbiot, Guardian
‘This is sharp, significant scholarship . . . Thrilling.’ Times Higher Education
‘Raworth's magnum opus . . . A fascinating reminder to business leaders and economists alike to stand back at a distance to examine our modern economics.’ Books of the Year, Forbes
‘There are some really important economic and political thinkers around at the moment – such as Kate Raworth's Doughnut Economics.’ Andrew Marr, Guardian
‘An admirable attempt to broaden the horizons of economic thinking.’ Martin Wolf, Books of the Year, Financial Times
‘A compelling and timely intervention.’ Caroline Lucas MP, Books of the
Year, The Ecologist
Author Biography
Kate Raworth is an economist whose research focuses on the unique social and
ecological challenges of the 21st century. She is a Senior Visiting Research
Associate teaching at Oxford University's EnÂvironmental Change Institute, and
a Senior Associate of the Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership.
Over the last two decades Kate has worked as Senior Researcher at Oxfam, as a co-author of the UN's Human Development Report at the United Nations Development Programme, and as a Fellow of the Overseas Development Institute in the villages of Zanzibar.
She has been named by the Guardian as one of the top ten tweeters on economic transformation.