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THE INVISIBLE LEDGER OF CREDIT AND CONSEQUENCES: HOW A CENTURY OF BOOMS, BUSTS AND BALANCE SHEETS DEFINED MODERN LIFE
Coles
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THE INVISIBLE LEDGER OF CREDIT AND CONSEQUENCES: HOW A CENTURY OF BOOMS, BUSTS AND BALANCE SHEETS DEFINED MODERN LIFE in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $4.42


By None
THE INVISIBLE LEDGER OF CREDIT AND CONSEQUENCES: HOW A CENTURY OF BOOMS, BUSTS AND BALANCE SHEETS DEFINED MODERN LIFE in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $4.42
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Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
We call it progress, but it’s mostly déjà vu.
In The Invisible Ledger, Abhishake Kumawat reveals how money, greed, and memory keep replaying the same game.
- Ankur Warikoo
What if every economic crisis we call “unprecedented” is really a sequel we’ve seen before? The Invisible Ledger traces the last hundred years of money, markets, and mistakes, from gold standards to crypto, recessions to recoveries, showing how economies were actually lived, not just recorded. Through pay cuts, job queues, bubbles, and quiet booms, it tells the human story behind the numbers.
Each chapter captures a decade as it was felt, revealing how ambition-built industries, ideology fuelled conflict, and confidence, more than capital, moved the world. You’ll encounter the thinkers who debated, the investors who gambled, and the ordinary people who bore the cost.
This isn’t nostalgia; it’s perspective. The next “new” idea in finance or technology is often an old pattern in disguise. By the final page, economics becomes history in motion, messy, human, and endlessly repeating. Because every boom and bust begins in the same place, the human mind.
We call it progress, but it’s mostly déjà vu.
In The Invisible Ledger, Abhishake Kumawat reveals how money, greed, and memory keep replaying the same game.
- Ankur Warikoo
What if every economic crisis we call “unprecedented” is really a sequel we’ve seen before? The Invisible Ledger traces the last hundred years of money, markets, and mistakes, from gold standards to crypto, recessions to recoveries, showing how economies were actually lived, not just recorded. Through pay cuts, job queues, bubbles, and quiet booms, it tells the human story behind the numbers.
Each chapter captures a decade as it was felt, revealing how ambition-built industries, ideology fuelled conflict, and confidence, more than capital, moved the world. You’ll encounter the thinkers who debated, the investors who gambled, and the ordinary people who bore the cost.
This isn’t nostalgia; it’s perspective. The next “new” idea in finance or technology is often an old pattern in disguise. By the final page, economics becomes history in motion, messy, human, and endlessly repeating. Because every boom and bust begins in the same place, the human mind.

















