“Increasingly, race and economic opportunity are at the center of our national economic conversation. In the important book, Jeff Fuhrer takes on dogmas he believes have stalled progress and points the way towards new transformative policies. Agree or disagree, Fuhrer's arguments deserve close attention.”
Larry Summers, University Professor and President Emeritus at Harvard University; former Secretary of the Treasury for President Clinton; Director of the National Economic Council for President Obama
“After a stellar career in central banking, Jeffrey Fuhrer has now taken an anguished but insightful look at an even more fundamental set of problems confronting our economy and our society. His new book is an urgent call to action for America. Even those who disagree with his proposals will respect the hard force of Fuhrer's analysis and admire the moral commitment that stands behind it.”
Benjamin M. Friedman, Professor, Harvard University; author of The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth and Religion and the Rise of Capitalism
“The Myth That Made Us compels us to recognize that wealth and affluence are built upon compounded advantages provided to the successful by others—not simply one's own hard work and talent. Opening with a surprising reinterpretation of the Horatio Alger stories, this is a rigorous, profound, and entertaining study in truth-telling about social disparity in America.”
William Darity Jr., Samuel DuBois Cook Professor of Public Policy, African and African American Studies, Economics, and Business, Duke University
"A thoughtful call for equality of economic opportunity, both provocative and, in the end, eminently practical."
Kirkus Reviews
“Economist Fuhrer carefully deconstructs this myth and discusses discriminatory policies designed to disadvantage people of color, such as the exclusion of domestic and agricultural workers, who were disproportionately likely to be people of color, from New Deal minimum wage and overtime pay requirements…The troubling interviews and statistics underscore the difficulty of “making it” in America, and the proposed solutions are pragmatic and well considered. Readers will be outraged by this scathing indictment of America's failure to live up to its meritocratic ideals.”
Publishers Weekly