Carlos Slim: The Power, Money, and Morality of One of the World's Richest Men

Carlos Slim: The Power, Money, and Morality of One of the World's Richest Men

Carlos Slim: The Power, Money, and Morality of One of the World's Richest Men

Carlos Slim: The Power, Money, and Morality of One of the World's Richest Men

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Overview

Can one of the richest men in the world be a good person?

The rich are not like us. Great wealth brings both power and immunity, a pairing that opens a yawning moral abyss at the feet of the world’s billionaires.

Carlos Slim is one of eight people whose combined wealth equals that of the 3.6 billion people who make up the poorest half of humanity. A businessman who dominates telecoms and global real estate, and a major shareholder of the New York Times, Slim exerts a degree of power in Mexico unmatched by any politician.

The biography of Carlos Slim, one of the richest people of all time, is a case study in the ethical and psychological effects of extraordinary wealth. Not just the tale of the first man from a developing country ever to reach the top of the Forbes list of billionaires, it presents a living embodiment of the financial mentality of our time, a man who mistrusts politicians and believes the market to be the answer to everything—even corruption. In short, Slim’s story is that of Latin America’s last half century and indeed the wider world.

After years of thorough investigation, Diego Osorno has produced an extraordinary portrait detailing the effects of great wealth. His time with Slim forces Osorno to pose an age-old question: What does it profit a man if he gains the world and loses his own soul?

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781786634368
Publisher: Verso Books
Publication date: 09/24/2019
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 336
File size: 678 KB

About the Author

Diego Osorno was born in Monterrey, Mexico, in 1980. He has written five books on drug trafficking and social movements in Mexico. He has received several awards, including the Latin American Prize for Journalism on Drugs 2011 and the International Prize for Journalism Process 2011.

Table of Contents

Foreword Jon Lee Anderson ix

Preface xiii

I

1 Negotiating 3

2 Forbes 10

3 Success 14

4 Khan 17

5 Money 20

II

6 Telmex 35

7 Privatization 43

8 Monopoly 51

9 PRI 56

III

10 Heart 63

11 Soumaya 68

12 Gemayel 71

13 Exodus 76

IV

14 Don Julián 83

15 Al Kataeb 94

16 Racism 99

V

17 Childhood 107

18 Youth 113

VI

19 Julián 129

20 Security 147

21 Close 155

22 Heirs 163

VII

23 Philanthropy 175

24 Press 182

25 Telecommunications 196

26 Sharks 208

VIII

27 The Left 225

28 Kafka 238

29 Virreyes 248

IX

30 1 Percent 261

31 Favela 274

32 Libre Empresa 280

X

33 Retirement 289

34 Sophia 296

35 Failure 304

Acknowledgements 309

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