Moisés Naím is a writer, political analyst, and journalist. He was born in 1952 in Tripoli, in Libya, into a Jewish family that later moved to Venezuela. He grew up in Venezuela and is Venezuelan. He trained first as an economist, earning a doctorate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the United States. Naím has had several careers. In Venezuela, he taught at a business school and served in government. He was the country's Minister of Trade and Industry and a director of its central bank. He also worked as an executive director at the World Bank. He then became a journalist and editor. For fourteen years he was editor-in-chief of the magazine 'Foreign Policy', which he turned into a modern, award-winning publication. He is now a widely read newspaper columnist, with columns published across many countries. Naím is best known for his books about power and politics in the modern world. His most famous are 'Illicit', about global crime, 'The End of Power', and 'The Revenge of Power', about modern strongman leaders. It is important to be clear about what kind of thinker Naím is. He is not a university researcher writing for other scholars. He is a public analyst and journalist. He once said he is a columnist before an analyst.
Naím matters because he takes big, messy, global changes and explains them clearly to a wide public. He writes for ordinary readers, not only for experts, and he is very good at it.
His most discussed idea is 'the end of power'. In a 2013 book of that name, Naím argued that power is becoming easier to lose and harder to use. Big players, like governments, large companies, and traditional parties, can no longer simply get their way. Smaller groups can now block, disrupt, and challenge them. Power, he argued, is spreading out and decaying.
Later, in 'The Revenge of Power', he looked at the other side. He examined how some modern leaders are fighting back and concentrating power again, often by damaging democracy.
Naím also matters for helping the public see global crime as a serious force. In 'Illicit', he showed how smuggling and trafficking are not just a side problem, but a powerful part of the world economy.
It is honest to say Naím's work is public analysis, not academic research. His big ideas are debated, and some find them too broad. But he shapes how millions of people understand world events.
For a first introduction, Naím's newspaper columns and recorded interviews are an easy and accessible way to meet his thinking, since he writes and speaks clearly for a general audience. Short summaries of 'The End of Power' give a quick sense of his most famous idea. From the start, it helps to remember that he is a public analyst, so his work is a clear guide and a starting point for discussion.
For deeper reading, 'The End of Power' (2013) is his most influential book and lays out his central argument in full. 'The Revenge of Power' (2022) shows how his thinking developed as world politics changed. 'Illicit' (2006) is valuable for its picture of the global crime economy. Reading reviews and responses helps students see which of his ideas are widely accepted and which are contested.
Naím is mainly an academic economist, because he trained as one.
This is misleading. It is true that Naím earned a doctorate in economics. But his influential work is not academic economics. He is a political analyst, journalist, and public intellectual. He spent years editing a magazine and writing newspaper columns, and his famous books are broad works of public analysis about power and politics. His economics training is part of his background, but it does not describe the kind of thinker he became. He has even said he is a columnist before an analyst.
'The End of Power' means power is disappearing from the world.
That is not quite Naím's claim, and the title can mislead. Naím does not argue that power is vanishing. He argues that power is becoming harder to use and easier to lose. It is also spreading out, from big old players to many smaller ones. Power still exists and still matters. His point is about how it behaves: less stable, less concentrated, harder to hold. And critics argue even this may be better described as power 'moving' rather than 'ending'.
Because Naím's books are bestsellers, their big ideas must be proven facts.
Being popular and being proven are not the same thing. Naím's books are widely read and full of sharp observation, but they are public analysis, not tested academic research. His big ideas, like 'the end of power', are debated. Critics ask whether power is really ending or just changing shape. The honest position is that Naím's books are excellent for seeing the big picture and starting a discussion, while their sweeping claims remain open to question.
Naím's two books on power contradict each other and one must be wrong.
They do not really contradict each other. 'The End of Power' describes power spreading out and weakening. 'The Revenge of Power' describes some leaders fighting to grab power back, often by harming democracy. These are two sides of one larger story, not a mistake. Naím noticed a counter-trend and wrote about it. Far from being a flaw, this shows an analyst updating his picture of the world as events change, rather than clinging to one fixed idea.
For research-level engagement, students should read Naím's books as works of public analysis and place them next to academic scholarship on power, globalisation, and authoritarian politics. The criticism of 'The End of Power', especially the argument that power is shifting rather than ending, is important context. Naím is best understood as a leading public interpreter of global affairs, whose broad, accessible ideas open debates that narrower scholarship then tests.
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