Default in 100 Days: The Ultimate Debt-Crisis Scenario in Fiction
What would happen if the United States were given a fixed deadline to avoid default?
What would happen if the United States were given a fixed deadline to avoid default?
There is a fundamental difference between how Wall Street and Washington view financial risk.
At its core, Good Country, Bad Balance Sheet is not just a story about debt or financial engineering.
Rules are designed to create order, enforce accountability, and maintain trust. In financial systems,
Financial crises are often described in numbers—interest rates, bond yields, deficits, and debt ratios.
At first glance, the idea sounds almost contradictory. How can a nation be powerful, innovative,
What if the United States were not a country, but a company? More specifically, what if it were a highly
The idea sounds almost unthinkable at first. Restructuring is a term typically reserved for distressed
At the center of Good Country, Bad Balance Sheet lies a bold, cinematic idea: Patriot Bonds—long-dated,
At what point does a nation stop controlling its finances and start being controlled by them?
Some novels entertain. Others provoke. And then there are rare stories that do both—while leaving
What happens when the most important financial decisions in the world are made outside the public eye?