Plunder
Private Equity's Plan to Pillage America
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Narrated by:
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Kevin Kenerly
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By:
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Brendan Ballou
About this listen
The authoritative exposé of private equity: what it is, how it kills businesses and jobs, how the government helps, and how we stop it
Private equity surrounds us. Firms like Blackstone, Carlyle, and KKR are among the largest employers in America and hold assets that rival those of small countries. Yet few understand what these firms are or how they work.
In Plunder, Brendan Ballou explains how private equity has reshaped American business by raising prices, reducing quality, cutting jobs, and shifting resources from productive to unproductive parts of the economy. Ballou vividly illustrates how many private equity firms buy up retailers, medical practices, prison services, nursing-home chains, and mobile-home parks, among other businesses, using little of their own money to do it and avoiding debt and liability for their actions. Forced to take on huge debts and pay extractive fees, companies purchased by private equity firms are often left bankrupt, or shells of their former selves, with consequences to communities that long depended on them.
Perhaps most startling is Ballou’s insight into how this is happening with the active support of various arms of the government. But, as Ballou reveals in an agenda for reigning in the industry, private equity can be stopped from wreaking further havoc.
©2023 Brendan Ballou (P)2023 PublicAffairsCritic reviews
—Jesse Eisinger, ProPublica, author of The Chickenshit Club: Why the Justice Department Fails to Prosecute Executives
What listeners say about Plunder
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- Anonymous User
- 27-11-23
Eye opening, but so repetitive
It's a good book, and was worth the credit. However, it is extremely repetitive of the few fundamentals points that the author is making. I just skipped the middle section of the book, and listened to the conclusions not getting the sense that I had missed anything. Making the same point using the same frame and examples over and over doesn't make it better. Could have been half as long.
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