Davies has been very
successful in bringing a wide range of related ideas together in
an engaging and persuasive way. In addition his Part 7,
Malign Money, provides a lucid explanation - which I have not
seen elsewhere - of how the form of money supply chosen
influences economic behaviour and social development - and of the
damage caused by the neo-classical choice of monetary mechanisms.
- Change Management
Monitor. Full
review here; commentary comparing and contrasting Economia
with Fritjof Capra's The Hidden Connections download
(pdf, 88 kb).
.
. .
wonderfully readable and easily the most inspiring critique I
have seen of the legalised robbery which passes for economic
productivity these days.
- Brian
Jenkins, Citizen's
Voice, June
2004. Full review.
.
. . one of the best analyses of
the sustainability problem that I have so far encountered. . .
The reader is taken on a journey of discovery that revolves around an
excellent critique of economics, counterpoised against truly
amazing insights into how all of life has self-organised from the
simple origins of life through to the current complexity of the
biosphere. . . . its lucid analysis from a systems perspective
provides an excellent insight to . . .the often overlooked systemic
role of the current financial system in driving unsustainability.
- Richard
Sanders, CSIRO Sustainability
Network Update 41E (pdf download, 464 kb). Full
review.
For all its apparent logic and
orderliness neoliberal economics is also deeply irrational, as Geoff
Davies lucidly illustrates in his immensely readable Economia (ABC
Books, 2004). . . . Davies, like many others is turning to an
ecological model to explain our economic behaviour and its impact on
the quality of our lives and on the planet.
- Keith Gallasch, RealTime
magazine, June/July 2004: The arts, ecologically. Full article.