His second book, In Praise of Hard Industries: Why Manufacturing, Not the Information Economy, Is the Key to Future Prosperity, published in 1999, took a contrarian stance on the New Economy.
In Praise of Hard Industries is a book about the economic impact of fewer manufacturing jobs in the United States written by Irish journalist and author Eamonn Fingleton.
Critics like Eamonn Fingleton argue, however, that he "regarded his principal function as doing public relations on behalf of the Japanese establishment," that he misled Western leaders and the Western public about the openness of Japanese markets, and that he kept his change of nationality secret.
Eamonn Andrews | Eamonn Walker | Jack Fingleton | Éamonn Scallan | Eamonn Melaugh | Eamonn Holmes | Eamonn Fingleton | Eamonn Darcy | Éamonn Taaffe | Éamonn Ryan | Eamonn O'Keefe | Eamonn O'Kane | Éamonn O'Donoghue | Éamonn Ó Ciardha | Eamonn McCann | Eamonn Mansfield | Éamonn Mac Thomáis | Éamonn Kelly | Eamonn Gregg | Eamonn Duggan | Éamonn Cregan | Eamonn Butler | Eamonn Andrews Studios |