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The Economics of Nuclear War: Cost, Recovery, and Global Markets MTA
Quantifying financial impacts, reconstruction pathways, and economic policy responses

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About this book:

The Economics of Nuclear War: Cost, Recovery, and Global Markets "The Economics of Nuclear War: Cost, Recovery, and Global Markets" provides a comprehensive framework for understanding and addressing the economic consequences of nuclear conflict, moving beyond the immediate human tragedy to analyze long-term financial, infrastructural, and social impacts. The book posits that economics is not just about measuring destruction, but about providing tools for survival, recovery, and stability in a post-catastrophe world. It dissects the economic shock into direct losses—destruction of capital, human life, and infrastructure—and indirect systemic effects, such as network failures, shifts in expectations, and financial contagion. The analysis emphasizes empirical, model-based approaches to quantify these impacts, offering transparent methods for policymakers to adapt to diverse scenarios.

The book delves into critical economic sectors and policy responses. It explores how national accounts, including GDP and inflation, must be reinterpreted in extreme conditions, and how public finance must pivot to emergency budgeting, resource mobilization, and debt management amidst collapsing revenues and surging needs. Monetary policy's role at and beyond the zero lower bound is examined, focusing on unconventional tools to stabilize financial systems and anchor expectations when traditional mechanisms fail. Furthermore, the text addresses the vital but often overwhelmed sectors of banking, insurance, and reinsurance, outlining mechanisms to restore stability and facilitate reconstruction through innovative risk-sharing and recapitalization strategies.

A significant portion of the book is dedicated to the real economy of reconstruction. It details the challenges of labor markets fragmented by displacement and morbidity, the necessity of rebuilding critical infrastructure and energy systems with an emphasis on resilience, and the intricate process of rewiring shattered supply chains and trade networks. Special attention is given to commodity and food security, recognizing agriculture's vulnerability to contamination and input disruption, and the ensuing price volatility. The book also covers the geopolitical dimensions, including the impact of sanctions and trade restrictions on a fragmented global economy, and the crucial role of international economic cooperation, aid architecture, and conditionality in supporting recovery while mitigating financial spillovers and currency instability.

Finally, the book integrates these analyses into actionable policy playbooks, emphasizing scenario analysis and stress testing as essential tools for decision support. It stresses the importance of sequencing reforms—from immediate triage to long-term resilience-building—and highlights the need for transparent governance, inclusive growth strategies, and investments in human capital and environmental decontamination. By presenting a holistic and pragmatic approach, "The Economics of Nuclear War" aims to equip policymakers with a coherent framework for navigating the unprecedented economic challenges of nuclear conflict, ultimately striving not just for recovery, but for the creation of more resilient and equitable markets in its aftermath.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • The book quantifies both direct destruction (capital, labor, infrastructure) and indirect systemic effects (financial contagion, supply chain disruption, expectation-driven shocks) of nuclear conflict on national and global economies.
  • It provides frameworks for adapting economic measurement to catastrophe, including reconstructing national accounts, measuring GDP and inflation under disruption, and integrating welfare metrics that account for health, environmental, and time-use impacts.
  • The text analyzes financial stabilization mechanisms including emergency budgeting, taxation under revenue collapse, sovereign debt restructuring, monetary policy at the zero lower bound, and banking sector lender-of-last-resort functions in extreme events.
  • It examines reconstruction pathways covering labor market reallocation, human capital recovery, infrastructure prioritization, supply chain rewiring, and investment sequencing to restore productive capacity while addressing inequality and social protection needs.
  • The book addresses international dimensions including economic cooperation architectures, aid conditionality, sanctions impacts, global financial spillovers, and scenario analysis frameworks for stress testing recovery policies under uncertainty.
Who's It For:

The audience for this book includes policymakers, analysts, and researchers in economics and finance, as well as emergency managers and international organizations. It is intended as a practical reference, not a treatise on ethics or strategy. Readers will find frameworks that can be implemented with limited data, clear exposition of trade-offs, and examples calibrated to plausible scenarios.

Author:

Keith Jones

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

January 23, 2026

Word Count:

77,399 words

Reading Time:

5 hours 25 minutes

Sample:

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