Radical Candor: Communication at Work

Revolt of the Rich S8 | E8

Apr 1, 2026
David Gibbs, professor of history at the University of Arizona and author of Revolt of the Rich, traces how 1970s decisions reshaped American inequality. He breaks down the oil shock, Nixon-era moves that boosted petrodollars, the rise of financialization and deindustrialization, and Carter-era deregulation. Short, sharp conversations about how those political choices reverberate today.
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INSIGHT

Nixon Deliberately Supported High Oil Prices

  • Richard Nixon actively encouraged higher oil prices to support the Shah of Iran and U.S. strategic interests in the Gulf.
  • Nixon and Kissinger privately told Iran it could raise prices, prioritizing weapons sales and geopolitical influence over U.S. consumer pain.
INSIGHT

Petrodollar Recycling Fueled Financialization

  • The petrodollar deal with Saudi Arabia recycled oil revenues into U.S. Treasury bonds, preserving dollar dominance and financing U.S. deficits.
  • That inflow supercharged finance, creating incentives for financialization and shifting capital away from manufacturing.
INSIGHT

Finance Outcompeted Industry and Caused Deindustrialization

  • Financialization became more profitable than industry, pulling investment out of manufacturing and enabling speculative bubbles backed by implicit bailouts.
  • The pattern rewarded bankers and led to deindustrialization as capital chased quick returns and government rescues.
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