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Every Nation for Itself: Winners and Losers in a G-Zero World [Hardcover]

Ian Bremmer

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Book Description

May 1 2012
G-Zero — \JEE-ZEER-oh\ —n
A world order in which no single country or durable alliance of countries can meet the challenges of global leadership. What happens when the G20 doesn’t work and the G7 is history.
 
If the worst threatened—a rogue nuclear state with a horrible surprise, a global health crisis, the collapse of financial institutions from New York to Shang­hai and Mumbai—where would the world look for leadership? The United States, with its paralyzed politics and battered balance sheet? A European Union reeling from self-inflicted wounds? China’s “people’s democracy”? Perhaps Brazil, Turkey, or India, the geopolitical Rookies of the Year? Or some grand coalition of survivors, the last nations stand­ing after half a decade of recession-induced turmoil?
 
How about none of the above?
 
For the first time in seven decades, there is no single power or alliance of powers ready to take on the challenges of global leadership. A generation ago, the United States, Europe, and Japan were the world’s powerhouses, the free-market democracies that propelled the global economy forward. Today, they struggle just to find their footing.
 
Acclaimed geopolitical analyst Ian Bremmer argues that the world is facing a leadership vacuum. The diverse political and economic values of the G20 have produced global gridlock. Now that so many challenges transcend borders—from the stability of the global economy and climate change to cyber-attacks, terrorism, and the security of food and water—the need for international cooperation has never been greater. A lack of global leadership will provoke uncertainty, volatility, competition, and, in some cases, open conflict. Bremmer explains the risk that the world will become a series of gated commu­nities as power is regionalized instead of globalized. In the generation to come, negotiations on economic and trade issues are likely to be just as fraught as recent debates over nuclear nonproliferation and climate change.
 
Disaster, thankfully, is never assured, and Brem­mer details where the levers of power can still be found and how to exercise them for the common good. That’s important, because the one certainty of weakened nations and enfeebled institutions is that someone will try to take advantage of them.
 
Every Nation for Itself offers essential insights for anyone attempting to navigate the new global play­ing field.

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Review

“Ian Bremmer combines shrewd analysis with colorful storytelling to reveal the risks and opportunities in a world without leadership. This is a fascinating and important book.”
(-FAREED ZAKARIA, author of The Post-American World )

“An insightful look at the relative decline of postwar international institutions, the must-evolve nature of American leadership, and the growing need for long-term, multifaceted cooperation between the United States and China. Required reading for anyone interested in the current state and near-term future of global affairs.”
(-MUHTAR KENT, CEO, The Coca-Cola Company )

“We have entered a new era where challenges are increasingly stretching across geographical borders. Every Nation for Itself is a must-read for any global executive who aspires to accurately assess the risks and exploit the opportunities created by this new environment.”
(-DUNCAN NIEDERAUER, CEO, NYSE Euronext )

Every Nation for Itself is a provocative and important book about what comes next. Ian Bremmer has again turned conventional wisdom on its head.”
(-NOURIEL ROUBINI, chairman, Roubini Global Economics )

“Bremmer’s astute assessment of how the shifting geopolitical landscape will impact political and economic alliances provides essential insights for anyone conducting business at the global level.”
(-DOMINIC BARTON, global managing director, McKinsey & Company )

“Bremmer has written an essential navigational guide for all national and corporate leaders in the new leaderless world.”
(-SIR MARTIN SORRELL, CEO, WPP )

“Global political economy has no sharper or more prescient analyst than Ian Bremmer. Everyone who cares about our collective future will need to carefully consider this book’s impressive arguments.”

(-LAWRENCE SUMMERS, former U.S. Treasury Secretary )

About the Author

IAN BREMMER is the president of Eurasia Group, the world’s leading global political risk research and consulting firm. He has written for The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Newsweek, Foreign Affairs, and other publi­cations. His eight books include the international bestseller The End of the Free Market and The J Curve. He lives in New York City and Washington, DC.
 
Visit www.ianbremmer.com

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Amazon.com: 4.2 out of 5 stars  30 reviews
34 of 37 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Mainstream View May 1 2012
By Shlok Vaidya - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Ian Bremmer's Every Nation for Itself: Winners and Losers in a G-Zero World is an eminently readable, current, mainstream take on the geopolitical environment. It's a step above Friedman and Zakaria, because he's writing for an informed audience.

Every Nation is a 20,000 ft view of what happens to world as the massive debt bubble pops. Chapter One is a fantastic discussion of why nothing is going to get done re: climate change, oil, terror. Simply: when 'they' launched globalization, they forgot about control systems. It's a chapter that should be taught in all schools.

The rest reads like someone narrating a game of pool just after the break: China's going one direction, the 8-ball another, and in the corner, Turkey's slamming into Greece. The ricochets of globalization. And as far as what that means to nation-states and Fortune 500 companies, this is a good read. These are, after all, Bremmer's bread and butter clients.

But he doesn't do the drivers, the forces justice. Things like peak oil and systems disruption and deviant globalization. Even when he tries to include cybersecurity, it reads like one of his marketing aides told him to add a buzzword. It's un-nuanced at best (he only covers it as a tool of states and kingmakers). So it's not for anyone concerned with unpredictable events or disruptive innovation.

All in all, the book is a good way to stay on top of what's probably best of breed mainstream thinking - which, appropriately, is all it claims to be.
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Insight political read! May 2 2012
By Maria K - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I'm no expert in global politics, but I've always had an enthusiasm for the subject. To anyone with a genuine curiosity for international relations- and for how politics and economics intersect globally- Every Nation For Itself is a very good read: I ended up reading it in one night and one afternoon. It touches on such a broad range of subjects. Bremmer summarizes how the world order of today spawned from WWII. He outlines all of the biggest global challenges and supplies some unconventional insights--discussion of how the Arctic is primed to become a battleground for resources in the coming decades was an interesting angle I hadn't encountered before. He must mention over 100 countries, naming dozens of winners and losers in the "G-Zero" world that he very convincingly portrays as our reality today. If you have more than a passing interest in world affairs, international relations, or geopolitics--or general current events globally-- definitely worth the time and money. A quick read too.
10 of 12 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Non-Fiction Read in Quite Some Time May 1 2012
By Betty White - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
After reading Ian Bremmer's last book, `The End of the Free Market: Who Wins the War Between States and Corporations?' (May 2010), I knew he had a knack for taking complex global phenomena and making them relevant, fascinating, and much easier to understand. Every Nation for Itself was that and more. Bremmer takes on the challenge of defining the current world order by boiling down a whole spectrum of currents events--everything from Europe's sovereign debt crisis, squabbles between developed and developing countries on climate change, the Arab Spring, conflict in the Asia Pacific, America's overgrown debt and unemployment figures, oil price shocks... the list goes on. In the G-Zero in which we live today- a world where America and its allies will no longer lead, but other countries like China are unwilling to pick up the slack-- things are far more uncertain. The economic outlook is more bleak. But what I loved is that this environment is still packed with opportunities, many of which are counter-intuitive, and Bremmer goes through with specific examples of companies and countries that are primed for success (or failure!). Chapter 4 read like a cheat sheet for success in more volatile, leaderless times. Bremmer makes these insightful predictions on who will win, who will lose, and then on what comes next. The whole book was very digestible and a quick read--and it felt like a crash course in global affairs, leaving me with a better understanding and more informed opinion on current events, foreign policy, and the world's shifting balance of power. I highly recommend Every Nation for Itself: my best non-fiction read in quite some time.

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