In this extended essay, John Kenneth Galbraith illuminates examples of “innocent fraud” or the gulf between perception and reality in the modern American economic system–a system he had a hand in creating during his tenure in FDR’s administration. Though tackling serious subjects, the book sparkles with wit and sly understatement. “A marked enjoyment can be found in identifying self-serving belief and contrived nonsense,” he writes, clearly enjoying himself. The dominant role of the corporation in modern society is one such form of innocent fraud, and he explains how managers hold the real power in our system, not consumers or shareholders as the image would suggest. Despite the “appearance of relevance for owners,” capitalism has given way to corporate bureaucracy–”a bureaucracy in control of its task and its compensation. Rewards that verge on larceny.”
He also explains how the public realm is effectively controlled by the private sector. The arms industry is but one example of this: “While the Pentagon is still billed as being of the public sector, few doubt the influence of corporate power in its decisions.” He also looks at the financial world which “sustains a large, active, well-rewarded community based on compelled but seemingly sophisticated ignorance,” and in particular the Federal Reserve System, “our most prestigious form of fraud, our most elegant escape from reality.”

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