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Bad Company

Private Equity and the Death of the American Dream

ebook
0 of 5 copies available
Wait time: About 12 weeks
0 of 5 copies available
Wait time: About 12 weeks

*ONE OF AV CLUB'S BEST BOOKS OF 2025*

"[An] indictment of an industry that has cannily tilted the playing field in its favor. Bad Company details how clichéd abstractions like 'consolidation' and 'efficiency' have given cover to real betrayals." - The New York Times

A timely work of singular reportage and a damning indictment of the private equity industry told through the stories of four American workers whose lives and communities were upended by the ruinous effects of private equity takeovers.

Private equity runs our country, yet few Americans have any idea how ingrained it is in their lives. Private equity controls our hospitals, daycare centers, supermarket chains, voting machine manufacturers, local newspapers, nursing home operators, fertility clinics, and prisons. The industry even manages highways, municipal water systems, fire departments, emergency medical services, and owns a growing swath of commercial and residential real estate.

Private equity executives, meanwhile, are not only among the wealthiest people in American society, but have grown to become modern-day barons with outsized influence on our politics and legislation. CEOs of firms like Blackstone, Carlyle, KKR, and Apollo are rewarded with seats in the Senate and on the boards of the country's most august institutions; meanwhile, entire communities are hollowed out as a result of their buyouts. Workers lose their jobs. Communities lose their institutions. Only private equity wins.

Acclaimed journalist Megan Greenwell's Bad Company unearths the hidden story of private equity by examining the lives of four American workers that were devastated as private equity upended their employers and communities: a Toys R Us floor supervisor, a rural doctor, a local newspaper journalist, and an affordable housing organizer. Taken together, their individual experiences also pull back the curtain on a much larger project: how private equity reshaped the American economy to serve its own interests, creating a new class of billionaires while stripping ordinary people of their livelihoods, their health care, their homes, and their sense of security.

In the tradition of deeply human reportage like Matthew Desmond's Evicted, Megan Greenwell pulls back the curtain on shadowy multibillion dollar private equity firms, telling a larger story about how private equity is reshaping the economy, disrupting communities, and hollowing out the very idea of the American dream itself. Timely and masterfully told, Bad Company is a forceful rebuke of America's most consequential, yet least understood economic forces.

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  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from May 15, 2025
      Communities suffer when profiteers prevail. Greenwell's debut does important work, scrutinizing a poorly understood sector of the economy that makes life more precarious for many Americans. Private equity firms own hundreds of hospitals and newspapers, supermarket chains, countless smaller companies, and "the rights to Taylor Swift's first six albums." Yet the industry--as exemplified by Bain Capital, co-founded by Mitt Romney--has remained willfully "opaque," spending tens of millions of dollars to elect lawmakers who protect its bountiful tax breaks and enable its ruthless profit-making maneuvers. Greenwell began her research after private equity bought and enfeebled her then-employer, sports website Deadspin. Spotlighting four people whose lives were adversely affected by private equity--a doctor, a retail worker, a journalist, and an affordable housing advocate--she carefully demonstrates the human cost of an industry playbook that prizes cutting workers, slashing services, and raising prices. The financial risk is small for private equity firms, which rely on money from investors--frequently, municipal pension funds and university endowments--and loans that they're "not legally responsible for" because they've been taken out in the name of the company being purchased. As a result, vital hospitals and popular stores close or are driven into bankruptcy, and many people lose jobs. The retail worker Greenwell profiles was such a committed employee that she got a tattoo of the company's mascot, but when private equity cut her job along with many others, she had to fight for even a sliver of the pay she was owed. While showing how private equity has recently shifted its emphasis from retail to "recession-proof" industries like health care, Greenwell also finds reason for hope in her subjects' nascent activism. One of her subjects helped address a private equity-created health care shortage by helping found a new hospital. An effective, humane look at financial practices hobbling venerable institutions.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      May 14, 2025
      Journalist Greenwell wrote for the digital sports magazine Deadspin when Great Hill Partners, a private equity firm, took over. Private equity firms invest in companies that are not publicly traded, like hospitals and nursing homes, increase their value, and then sell them at a profit. In Greenwell's experience, the investors eliminated popular content and micromanaged employees instead of focusing on business operations. Within five years, Deadspin went from a popular site with a readership of 20 million to a rarely used pass-through website for gambling. Afterwards, Great Hill was lauded for their performance by investors, even though Deadspin was defunct. Greenwell's experience led her to dig into private equity and how it impacts American workers. She interviewed several people, among them a newspaper journalist and Toys R Us employee, both of whom lost their livelihoods and health insurance while equity firms made billions. Greenwell also exposes how these leaders hold Senate seats, influence legislation, and impact local economies. She helps readers understand this perplexing topic by sharing relatable stories. This book will appeal to those who are interested in business, economics and finance.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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