Books, I recommend






* Akerlof, George A. and Robert J. Shiller (2009): Animal spirits - How human psychology drives the economy, and why it matters for global capitalism, Princeton (NJ): Princeton University Press. Link.
* Andrews, Edward L. (2009): Busted - Life inside the great mortgage meltdown, New York: W. W. Norton and Company. Link.
* Atwood, Margaret (2008): Payback - Debt and the shadow side of wealth, London: Bloomsbury. Link.
* Authers, John (2010): The fearful rise of markets - Global bubbles, synchronized meltdowns, and how to prevent them in the future, Upper Saddle River, NJ: FT Press. Link.
* Ayache, Elie (2010): The blank swan - The end of probability, New York: John Wiley and Sons.
* Badiou, Alain et Slavoj Žižek, éd. (2010): L'idée du communisme, Paris: Nouvelles éditions lignes.
* Ballard, J.G. (2003): Millenium People, London: Flamingo.
* Beattie, Alan (2009): False economy - A surprising economic history of the World, New York: Riverhead Books.
* Boeckh, Anthony (2010): The great reflation - How the investors can profit from the new world of money, New York: John Wiley and Sons. Link.
* Boogle, John C. (2009): Enough. - True measures of money, business and life, New York: John Wiley and Sons. Link.
* Bremmer, Ian (2010): The end of the free market - Who wins the war between states and cooperations?, New York: Portfolio. Link.
* Bruner, Robert F. and Sean D. Carr (2007): The panic of 1907 - Lessons learned from the market's perfect storm, Hoboken (NJ): John Wiley and Sons. Link.
* Buchanan, Mark (2000): Ubiquity - Why catastrophes happen, New York: Random House. Link.
* Cassidy, John (2009): How markets fail - The logic of economic calamities, London: Penguin. Link.
* Chang, Ha-Joon (2010): 23 things they don't tell you about capitalism, Lodon: Allen Lane.
* Cohen, Daniel (2009): La prospérité du vice - Une introduction (inquiète) à l'économie, Paris: Albin Michel. Link.
* Collin, Denis (2009): Le cauchemar de Marx - Le capitalisme est-il une histoire sans fin ?, Paris: Max Milo éditions.
* Comité invisible (2007): L'insurrection qui vient, Paris: La fabrique éditions.
* DeLong, J. Bradford and Stephen S. Cohen (2010): The end of influence: What happens when other countries have the money, New York: Basic Books. Link.
* Derrida, Jacques (1993): Spectres de Marx - L'Etat de la dette, le travail du deuil et la nouvelle Internationale, Paris: Galilée. Link.
* Dostaler, Gilles (2009): Keynes et ses combats, Paris: Albin Michel. Link.
* Down, Kevin and Martin Hutchinson (2010): Alchemist of loss - How modern finance and government intervention crashed the financial system, Chichester: John Wiley and Sons.
* Ehrenreich, Barbara (2009): Bright-sided - How the relentless promotion of positive thinking has undermined America, New York: Metropolitan Books. Link.
* Fox, Justin (2009): The myth of the rational market - A history of risk, reward, and delusion on Wall Street, New York: HarperCollins. Link.
* French, Kenneth R. et al. (2010): The Squam Lake report - Fixing the financial system, Princeton (NJ): Princeton University Press.
* Généreux, Jacques (2001): Les vraies lois de l'économie, 2 volumes, Paris: Seuil.
* Grant, James (2008): Mr. Market miscalculates - The bubble years and beyond, Mount Jackson (Va.): Axios Press. Link.
* Gray, John (1998): False dawn - The delusions of global capitalism, London: Grantan Publications. Link.
* Harvey, David (1982/2006): The limits to capital, London: Verso.
* Harvey, David (2010): The enigma of capital - and the crisis of capitalism, London: Profile Books.
* Hazlitt, Henry (1946/1979): Economics in one lesson, New York: Three Rivers Press. Link.
* Hilferding, Rudolf (1909, 1947): Das Finanzkapital - Eine Studie über die jüngste Entwicklung des Kapitalismus, Berlin: Dietz. Link.
* James, Harold (2009): The creation and destruction of value - The globalization cycle, Cambridge (Mass.): Harvard University Press. Link.
* Kaletsky, Anatole (2010): Capitalism 4.0 - The birth of a new economy in the aftermath of the financial crisis, New York: PublicAffairs.
* Katsenelson, Vitaly N. (2011): The little book of sideways markets, New York: John Wiley.
* Keucheyan, Razmig (2010): Hémisphère gauche : Une cartographie des nouvelles pensées critiques, Paris: Zones.
* Keynes, John Maynard (1936/2007): The general theory of employment, interest and money, New York: Palgrave/Macmillan. Link.
* Kindleberger, Charles P. (1978, 2000): Panics, manias and crashes - A history of financial crisis, 4th edition, New York: John Wiley and Sons. Link.
* Koo, Richard C. (2008): The Holy Grail of macroeconomics - Lessons from Japan's great recession, Singapore: John Wiley and Sons (Asia). Link.
* Lanchester, John (2010): Whoops! Why everyone owes everyone and no one can pay, London: Allen Lane. Link.
* Lewis, Hunter (2009): Where Keynes went wrong - And why world governments keep creating inflation, bubbles, and busts, Mount Jackson (Va.): Axios Press. Link.
* Liaquat, Ahamed (2008): Lords of finance: The bankers who broke the world, London: Penguin. Link.
* Mandelbrot, Benoit and Richard Hudson (2004): The (mis)behavior of markets - A fractal view of financial turbulence, New York: Basic Books.
* McLean, Bethany and Joe Nocera (2010): All the devils are here - The hidden history of the financial crisis, New York: Portfolio Penguin.
* Minsky, Hyman P. (1975/2008): John Maynard Keynes, New York: McGraw Hill. Link.
* Minsky, Hyman P. (1986/2008): Stabilizing an unstable economy, New York: McGraw Hill. Link.
* Montier, James (2009): Value Investing: Tools and Techniques for Intelligent Investment, New York: John Wiley & Sons.
* Montier, James (2010): The little book of behavioral investing, New York: John Wiley and Sons. Link.
* Passet, René (2010): Les grandes représentations du monde et de l'économie à travers l'histoire, Paris: Les liens qui libèrent.
* Posner, Richard A. (2009): A failure of capitalism - The crisis of '08 and the decent into depression, Cambridge (Mass.): Harvard University Press. Link.
* Posner, Richard A. (2010): The crisis of capitalist democracy, Cambridge (Mass.): Harvard University Press.
* Quiggin, John (2010): Zombie economics - How dead ideas still walk among us, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
* Rajan, Raghuram G. (2010): Fault lines - How hidden fractures still threaten the world economy, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Link
* Reinhart, Carmen and Kenneth Rogoff (2009): This time is different - Eight centuries of financial folly, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Link.
* Roubini, Nouriel and Stephen Mihm (2010): Crisis economics - A crash course in the future of finance, London: The Penguin Press. Link.
* Shermer, Michael (2007): The mind of the market, New York: Henry Holt & Company. Link.
* Shilling, Gary (2010): The Age of Deleveraging: Investment Strategies for a Decade of Slow Growth and Deflation, New York: John Wiley & Sons.
* Shiller, Robert J. (2000): Irrational exuberance, Princeton (NJ): Princeton University Press. Link.
* Smith, Yves (2010): Econned - How unenlightened self interest undermined democracy and corrupted capitalism, New York: Palgrave Macmillan. Link.
* Smithers, Andrew (2009): Wall Street revalued - Imperfect markets and inept central bankers, New York: Norton. Link.
* Sorkin, Andrew Ross (2009): Too big to fail - The inside story of how Wall Street and Washington fought to save the financial system, and themselves, New York: Viking Press. Link.
* Stiglitz, Joseph E. (2010): Freefall - America, free markets, and the sinking of the world economy, New York: W. W. Norton. Link.
* Sweezy, Paul M. (1942, 1970): The theory of capitalist development, New York: Monthly Review Press. Link.
* Taleb, Nassim N. (2007): The black swan - The impact of the highly improbable, New York: Random House. Link.
* Triana, Pablo (2009): Lecturing birds on flying - Can mathematical theories destroy the financial markets?, New York: John Wiley and Sons. Link.
* Zakaria, Fareed (2008): The post-American world, New York: Norton. Link.
Žižek, Slavoj (2009): First as tragedy, then as farce, London: Verso. Link.
Žižek, Slavoj (2010): Living in the end times, London: Verso.