A powerful tale that will strike a chord with many women—but really ought to be read by men. It seeks to understand what drives the accumulation and distribution of capital, the history of inequality, how wealth is concentrated, and prospects for economic growth. For delivery to anywhere in the rest of the world, please visit our ROW store at ukshop.economist.com The World in 2020 will build on more than three decades of publishing success: this will be the 34th edition. Trade Wars Are Class Wars: How Rising Inequality Distorts the Global Economy and Threatens International … By Johan Norberg. There is little score-settling and much introspection in this account of the author’s rise to the White House and his first few years in it. Bodley Head; £25. By Wolfram Eilenberger. She was actually born in what today is Poland, fleeing from the pogroms to France. Translated by Orr Scharf. Most writers lose their energy and inventiveness as they grow old. The author, a composer himself, peppers his narrative with penetrating insights into the music. Random House Business; £20. has remained one of the most influential personal finance and investing books since it was first published over 20 years ago. A Promised Land. A timely, forceful rehearsal of the painful consequences that might follow independence for Scotland, and of the virtues of union with England. Only the decent, liberal Ernst Cassirer, “thinker of the possible”, entirely kept his head. 2020 … By Nicholas Christakis. Canongate; £16.99. The author uses the latest physics to explore the possibilities for doomsday. Viking; £35. No Rules Rules. A punchy reminder of the success of India’s birth as a democratic republic. Recipient of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. Its ultimate theme—the intersection of politics and personal enrichment—is one of the most important stories of the age. 150 Glimpses of the Beatles. Penguin; 432 pages; $30. Deaths of Despair and the Future of Capitalism (Princeton University Press, 2020) Matthew C. Klein and Michael Pettis. Allen Lane; £25. By Zachary Carter. Greed is Dead: Politics after Individualism, by Paul Collier and John Kay, Allen Lane, RRP£16.99, 208 pages. In this telling Mozart was a fundamentally happy man, a genius with an enduringly childish sense of humour. Atlantic Books; 448 pages; $24.95 and £20. The Man Who Knew. The 100 Most Influential Economists Online (2020) #1. 100 … Your browser does not support the