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Blink 3 of 8 - The 5 AM Club
by Robin Sharma
How the Globalization Gamble Went Wrong (and What Would Make It Right)
The World's Worst Bet examines the financial and social chaos following risky investments in the global casino of capital markets. David J. Lynch unveils the devastating impacts, exposing the critical lessons for future economic stability.
In the summer of 1997, American optimism was surging. President Bill Clinton, riding high on a booming economy, hosted the G7 summit in Denver, where for the first time Russia’s Boris Yeltsin joined the world’s leading democracies at the table. The symbolism was unmistakable: the Cold War was over, the global market was expanding, and a “new world order” rooted in free trade and democratic capitalism appeared within reach.
Even China, still authoritarian but increasingly capitalistic, was signaling its intent to join the global club, with its leader Jiang Zemin ringing the opening bell on Wall Street. The mood was triumphant. It felt like the world was knitting itself together under the banner of economic liberalization.
Washington’s guiding assumption was that commerce could do what diplomacy could not – reshape political systems from within. After the events of Tiananmen Square, US leaders from George H. W. Bush to Bill Clinton insisted that trade would gradually lead China toward democracy.
For Clinton, NAFTA, or the North American Free Trade Agreement, was his grand effort in promoting this new global order – a partnership that would knit the US, Canada, and Mexico into one dynamic trade bloc. Clinton pitched it as a bridge to prosperity, promising that new jobs, retraining programs, and investments in innovation would cushion any shocks.
Yet the promised safety nets mostly evaporated. Over time and subsequent administrations, the billions in aid that could have helped displaced workers shrank to a token training fund. As a result, for many in manufacturing towns, globalization felt less like opportunity and more like abandonment.
The big problem was, that while the economy as a whole thrived, the benefits weren’t shared evenly. Labor unions were opposed to NAFTA from the start because minimum labor standards weren’t baked into the agreements. So there was nothing to stop manufacturers from moving jobs to Mexico where the labor was cheaper.
So, yes, trade agreements like NAFTA lifted national wealth. It brought cheaper goods and rising stock markets, but it also brought layoffs, factory closures, and vanishing futures.
And as we’ll see in the sections ahead, this eventually led workers, who once formed the backbone of the Democratic Party, to drift toward candidates who promised protection and control.
The World’s Worst Bet (2025) tells the gripping story of how America’s faith in free trade and open markets reshaped the world – and backfired at home. From factory towns hollowed out by the China shock to fragile supply chains exposed by the pandemic, it traces the human and political fallout of an era once sold as inevitable progress.
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Try Blinkist to get the key ideas from 7,500+ bestselling nonfiction titles and podcasts. Listen or read in just 15 minutes.
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Blink 3 of 8 - The 5 AM Club
by Robin Sharma