"An excellent book."鈥擭icholas Kristof, New York Times
"This book is of the highest importance."鈥擬artin Wolf, Financial Times
"Deaths of Despair is on a short list of the most important books of the 21st century for what is going on in our country."鈥擠avid Leonhardt, New York Times columnist
"We Americans are reluctant to acknowledge that our economy serves the educated classes and penalizes the rest. But that鈥檚 exactly the situation, and Deaths of Despair shows how the immiseration of the less educated has resulted in the loss of hundreds of thousands of lives, even as the economy has thrived and the stock market has soared."鈥擜tul Gawande, New Yorker
"A highly important book."鈥擜rlie Russell Hochschild, New York Times Book Review
"This highly important book examines the pain and despair among white blue-collar workers and suggests that the hopelessness they are experiencing may eventually extend to the entire American work force."鈥New York Times Editors鈥 Choice
"贰虫肠别濒濒别苍迟."鈥Joyce Carol Oates on Twitter
"Gripping. . . . [Case and Deaton] do not merely rehearse decades of mortality and wage statistics. Rather, they seek to catalogue how an entire way of life first frayed and then fell apart over the past half-century, and the cruelty of an American meritocracy that heaps lavish rewards on the winners while increasingly leaving others to rot."鈥擩oshua Chaffin, Financial Times
"A remarkable new book."鈥擩ohn Harris, The Guardian
"Disturbing. . . . . Case and Deaton do a great job making the case that something has gone grievously wrong."鈥擩im Zarroli, NPR
"I highly, highly recommend it."鈥擟ardiff Garcia, NPR Planet Money鈥檚 The Indicator
"[A] remarkable and poignant book."鈥擠ani Rodrik, Project Syndicate
"The system is broken and every bit of it needs fixing. This is a sobering 鈥 and essential 鈥 book."鈥擠iane Coyle, Enlightened Economist
"Why economics really matters is illustrated in Deaths of Despair and the Future of Capitalism. . . . The authors argue that the capitalism that lifted countless people out of poverty is now destroying blue-collar America. They have solutions to make it work for all. They had better be right."鈥New Scientist
"[Case and Deaton] dive into and weave the data through different demographic and clinical lenses 鈥 race, gender, age, social connectedness, work history, and the most important through-line: education. Thus Case and Deaton connect the dots, literally, in the many charts that explain what factors are driving the Deaths of Despair."鈥擩ane Sarasohn-Kahn, Health Populi Blog
"The rise in premature deaths among working-class whites has become a national crisis, and the authors tie the problem to the weakening position of labor, the growing power of corporations, and to a health-care sector that redistributes working-class wages to the wealthy."鈥Publishers Weekly
"Although the authors completed this book before the onset of the coronavirus pandemic 鈥 it was published four days after President Trump declared a national emergency 鈥 their diagnosis is still painfully relevant."鈥擟arlos Lozada, Washington Post
"Timely and important."鈥擡d Balls, Financial Times
"Refreshing . . . a careful, deep, and troubling look at the America that lies beyond the Ivy League."鈥擩ames K. Galbraith, Project Syndicate
"Case and Deaton explain how every detail of this crisis unfolded, examining recent historical events and rightly placing much of the blame on the United States鈥 distinctive strain of capitalism, designed to protect and grow the assets of the wealthy few."鈥擪eri Leigh Merrit, Common Dreams
"Anne Case and Angus Deaton are senior economists at Princeton with expertise in public health and poverty, respectively. The combination, plus clear writing and ample doses of caution and open-mindedness, makes Deaths of Despair a compelling book."鈥擡dward Hadas, Reuters BreakingViews
"The policies that the authors advocate not only would address deaths of despair, they would improve the health and welfare of the American people more generally."鈥擠avid Canning, Science
"[a] hard-hitting study of US capitalism."鈥擜ndrew Robinson, Nature
"The authors add an important dimension to the growing body of research on the suffering of African Americans in the US; but their main argument is that it is the uneducated white working class that is now in 鈥渓ong-term and slowly unfolding鈥 freefall."鈥擜nne Nelson, Times Literary Supplement
"Complementing their candid prose with enlightening charts and graphs, Case and Deaton make the scale and immediacy of the problem crystal clear. This is an essential portrait of America in crisis."鈥Publishers Weekly
"Deaths of Despair is designed to shine a light on a generational catastrophe that could鈥攑erhaps will鈥攂ecome a multigenerational disaster. It does this with chilling precision."鈥擬ike Jakeman, Strategy+Business
"Through simple figures and clear prose, it presents a huge bodyof evidence from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention鈥檚 WONDER database and other sources that the arc of the white working class鈥檚 fate over the last two decades is long, but it bends toward nihilism and an early grave."鈥擥abriel Rossman, Washington Examiner
"Elaborately explained and well-presented. . . . Case and Deaton鈥檚 well-written and gloomy book was meant as a warning. Relentlessly fighting an infectious disease, the U.S. government seems to have treated it as a handbook."鈥擩oakim Book, American Institute for Economic Research
"Well-researched, compassionate."鈥擲usan Babbitt, New York Journal of Books
"Simply put, this is a terrific book. I suspect it will be on many people鈥檚 top 10 book lists of 2020. Although written before COVID-19, the book鈥檚 critique of the US approach to health care and inequality is remarkably prescient. In many ways, the opioid crisis Case and Deaton analyze is a microcosm of the anguish the world is experiencing today, and we would be remiss not to pay attention to their insights."鈥擪enneth Rogoff, Finance & Development
"A must-read for anyone attempting to objectively understand our collective American pain as well as those gaining from it."鈥擱ahul Gupta, Democracy
"Important."鈥擬ichael Tomasky, Democracy
"The best account of [the] White collapse."鈥擠avid Ignatius, Washington Post
"Well researched and incisive. . . . This is a tragic, but important book, and hopefully it helps to nudge the needle towards where badly needed social reforms need to go."鈥擲imon Cocking, Irish Tech News
"Building on Case and Deaton鈥檚 extraordinarily influential research on the mortality resulting from the tragic opioid epidemic in the United States, this book examines three causes of death 鈥 drug overdose, suicide, and alcohol-related liver disease 鈥 that have risen rapidly since the mid-1990s. It is extraordinarily well written 鈥 sweeping yet succinct. And though it was published before the COVID-19 crisis, its critique of the US approach to health care and inequality is remarkably prescient."鈥擪en Rogoff, Project Syndicate
"I鈥檒l offer my own endorsement from the [New York Times Notable] 100: Deaths of Despair and the Future of Capitalism, by Anne Case and Angus Deaton. It covers arguably the single most alarming development in American life, one that helps explain the frustration pulsing through the country: In many communities, people are not living as long as their parents did."鈥擠avid Leonhardt, New York Times
"[A] well-argued, important book."鈥擱osamund Urwin, Sunday Times
"Case and Deaton鈥檚 extraordinary research in this book is an important warning of the consequences this might have for people鈥檚 health and wellbeing and family and community life."鈥擡conomic Annals, Jelena 沤arkovi膰
"This book will be an instant classic, applying high quality social science to an urgent national matter of life and death. In exploring the recent epidemic of 'deaths of despair,' the distinguished authors uncover an absorbing historical story that raises basic questions about the future of capitalism. It is hard to imagine a timelier鈥攐r in the end, more hopeful鈥攂ook in this season of our national despair."鈥擱obert D. Putnam, author of Bowling Alone and Our Kids
"In the face of a government that failed to protect ordinary working-class Americans from the greed-fueled opioid epidemic and a media that was slow to notice the problem, Anne Case and Angus Deaton are true sentinels. Deaths of Despair and the Future of Capitalism is an urgent and clarion call to rethink pain, inequality, justice, and the business of being human in America. This book explains America to itself. I underlined damn near every sentence."鈥擝eth Macy, author of Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company That Addicted America
"In this superb book, Case and Deaton connect the dots to explain the dramatic rise of deaths of despair among working-class white Americans. Totally unexpectedly, they trace the root cause to an exorbitantly expensive health-care system that sucks鈥攁nd wastes鈥攂illions of dollars and so much human talent away from improving lives."鈥擡zekiel J. Emanuel, University of Pennsylvania
"With stunning data analysis, close observation, and smoldering urgency, Case and Deaton show why mounting deaths of despair are not only a public health disaster but also an indictment of the metastasizing stratification that is undermining working-class America."鈥擠avid Autor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
"This book explains so many of today's headlines with clear writing, sharp storytelling, and an almost symphonic use of research in economics, public health, and history. What it summons is a powerful analysis of who we are as Americans and what we have become as a country."鈥擲am Quinones, author of Dreamland: The True Tale of America's Opiate Epidemic
"America is experiencing a catastrophe. Those without a college degree are not just being left behind; they are dying from deaths of despair. Case and Deaton brilliantly describe and dissect the causes and explain how we can return to a path of rising prosperity and health. All citizens鈥攙oters as well as politicians aspiring to office鈥攕hould read and discuss this book."鈥擬ervyn King, former governor of the Bank of England
"Deaths of despair among US whites with low education cannot be attributed to lack of access to health care or ignorance of healthy lifestyles. When two leading economists turn their attention to the social determinants of this modern epidemic, the result is brilliant."鈥擲ir Michael G. Marmot, author of The Health Gap