
City Arts & Lectures Andrew Ross Sorkin
Nov 2, 2025
Andrew Ross Sorkin, a financial journalist and author, dives deep into the 1929 stock market crash, drawing parallels to today’s economic landscape. He shares insights from his new book, discussing the lessons gleaned from the past and the intricate research processes that unveiled hidden archives. Sorkin emphasizes the need for sound banking regulation and explores how speculative behavior in finance can fuel innovation. He also warns of the societal implications of tech booms, urging Silicon Valley to consider broader impacts.
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Crash Was A Chain, Not A Day
- The 1929 crash was not a single-day event but a chain of dominoes starting with a crash and amplified by policy choices.
- Being 'in the room' with decision-makers shows how incentives and politics shaped bad decisions.
Discovering Lamont's Treasure Trove
- Sorkin found Thomas Lamont's archives at Harvard which included secretarial transcripts and letters with presidents.
- Those materials became the backbone allowing him to 'be in the room' for key decisions in 1929.
Incentives Drove Policy Mistakes
- Policymakers acted within political incentives, not merely from ignorance; those incentives often produced harmful choices.
- Examples include the politicized Fed and Hoover pursuing Smoot-Hawley to keep campaign promises.











