Paul B. Farrell from the
Dow Jones Business News argued that
The Shock Doctrine "may be the most important book on economics in the 21st century." In
The Guardian,
John Gray hailed it as one of the "very few books that really help us understand the present", describing the work as "both timely and devastating". William S. Kowinski of the
San Francisco Chronicle praised Klein's prose and wrote that the author "may well have revealed the master narrative of our time." In
The Irish Times,
Tom Clonan reported that she "systematically and calmly demonstrates to the reader" the way in which
neoconservative figures were intimately linked to seismic events that "resulted in the loss of millions of lives." In the
Los Angeles Times, Richard Rayner opined, "Not everybody's going to agree with her, but this is reporting and history-writing in the tradition of
Izzy Stone and
Upton Sinclair. Klein upends assumptions and demands that we think – her book is thrilling, troubling and very dark."
Stephen Amidon of the
New York Observer affirmed the applicability of Klein's thesis to the
Iraq War and argued, "Seen through the lens of Naomi Klein's analysis, [it] makes horrifying sense, right down to Mr. Rumsfeld's decision to allow the looting of the nation's cultural identity." Shashi Tharoor noted the work's "meticulous endnotes" and stated, referring to
globalization, that Klein "has established herself as its principal naysayer." Katy Guest of
The Independent praised the book as "a compelling account of the way big business and politics use global disasters for their own ends."
Juan Santos, winner of the 2016 Nobel Peace Prize, called the book "as gripping as the best murder mystery, as well researched as the best investigative journalism – on a par with the work of a
Seymour Hersh."
The Shock Doctrine was named one of the best books of 2007 by the
Village Voice,
Publishers Weekly,
The Observer, and the
Seattle Times. In 2019,
The Guardian ranked it the 18th greatest book since 2000. The
Nobel Laureate and former
Chief Economist of the World Bank Joseph Stiglitz wrote a review of
The Shock Doctrine for
The New York Times calling the parallel between economic shock therapy and the psychological experiments conducted by Ewen Cameron "overdramatic and unconvincing" and claiming that "Klein is not an academic and cannot be judged as one. There are many places in her book where she oversimplifies." He also said, "the case against these policies is even stronger than the one Klein makes" and that the book contains "a rich description of the political machinations required to force unsavory economic policies on resisting countries."
Shashi Tharoor in
The Washington Post says that
The Shock Doctrine takes Klein's criticism of capitalism an important step further. He also said Klein "is too ready to see conspiracies where others might discern little more than the all-too-human pattern of chaos and confusion, good intentions and
greed." Sociologists as
Ulrich Beck envisioned the society of risk as a new cultural value which posed risk as a
commodity to be exchanged in globalized economies. As Klein observed, this suggested that disasters and
capitalist economy was inevitably entwined. Some voices have praised the contributions of Klein to the study of the "spectacle of disasters". In the
London Review of Books, Stephen Holmes criticizes
The Shock Doctrine as naïve, and opines that it conflates "'free market orthodoxy' with predatory corporate behaviour." John Willman of the
Financial Times describes it as "a deeply flawed work that blends together disparate phenomena to create a beguiling – but ultimately dishonest – argument." Tom Redburn in
The New York Times states that "what she is most blind to is the necessary role of
entrepreneurial capitalism in overcoming the inherent tendency of any established
social system to lapse into stagnation."
Jonathan Chait wrote in
The New Republic that Klein "pays shockingly (but, given her premises, unsurprisingly) little attention to
right-wing ideas. She recognizes that
neoconservatism sits at the heart of the
Iraq war project, but she does not seem to know what neoconservatism is; and she makes no effort to find out." Robert Cole from
The Times said, "Klein derides the 'disaster capitalism complex' and the profits and
privatisations that go with it but she does not supply a cogently argued critique of free market principles, and without this
The Shock Doctrine descends into a muddle of stories that are often worrying, sometimes interesting, and occasionally bizarre." Economist
Tyler Cowen, who called Klein's arguments "ridiculous" and the book a "true economics disaster", wrote on
The New York Sun that the book contains "a series of fabricated claims, such as the suggestion that
Margaret Thatcher created the
Falkland Islands crisis to crush the unions and foist unfettered capitalism upon an unwilling British public."
Johan Norberg of the libertarian
Cato Institute criticizes the book, saying that "Klein's analysis is hopelessly flawed at virtually every level." Norberg finds fault with specifics of the analysis, such as with the Chinese government crackdown on the
Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. He argues that, rather than crushing opposition to pro-market reforms (as Klein would have it), the crackdown itself caused liberalization to stall for years. Klein responded on her website to both Norberg and Chait, stating that both had misrepresented her positions. Klein wrote that Norberg had erected a
straw man by claiming that her book is about one man, Friedman, but that it is in fact about a "multifaceted ideological trend". Norberg again responded that Klein "actually defends only one of her central claims that I criticized. Instead, she gives the impression that I have just tried to find small mistakes here and there in her book." He went on to say that the numbers Klein supplied in her reply reveal the statistics in her central argument to be "rubbish". == Later comments ==