Skip to content
DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.
DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.

The Price of Time

Edward Chancellor

The Real Story of Interest

Barcode 9781802060157
Paperback

Original price £11.07 - Original price £11.07
Original price
£11.07
£11.07 - £11.07
Current price £11.07

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
in stock
FREE shipping

Release Date: 07/09/2023

Genre: Non-Fiction
Sub-Genre: Business & Finance
Narrator: Luis Soto
Label: Penguin
Language: English
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd

The Real Story of Interest

The first book of the next crisis. A history of interest rates by a leading financial commentator, updated with a new postscript.

*Winner of the 2023 Hayek Book Prize*
*Longlisted for the 2022 Financial Times Business Book of the Year Award*


All economic and financial activities take place across time. Interest coordinates these activities. The story of capitalism is thus the story of interest: the price that individuals, companies and nations pay to borrow money.

In The Price of Time, Edward Chancellor traces the history of interest from its origins in ancient Mesopotamia, through debates about usury in Restoration Britain and John Law ' s ill-fated Mississippi scheme, to the global credit booms of the twenty-first century. We generally assume that high interest rates are harmful, but Chancellor argues that, whenever money is too easy, financial markets become unstable. He takes the story to the present day, when interest rates have sunk lower than at any time in the five millennia since they were first recorded - including the extraordinary appearance of negative rates in Europe and Japan - and highlights how this has contributed to profound economic insecurity and financial fragility.

Chancellor reveals how extremely low interest rates not only create asset price inflation but are also largely responsible for weak economic growth, rising inequality, zombie companies, elevated debt levels and the pensions crises that have afflicted the West in recent years - conditions under which economies cannot possibly thrive. At the same time, easy money in China has inflated an epic real estate bubble, accompanied by the greatest credit and investment boom in history. As the global financial system edges closer to yet another crisis, Chancellor shows that only by understanding interest can we hope to face the challenges ahead.