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Keen Cambridge Lecture 2011 plus questions

Summary:
This longer video includes the same topics as my other Cambridge lecture (description reproduced below) plus the Q&A session with the audience. The lecture covers the failure of neoclassical macroeconomics to foresee the crisis (and the attempt by neoclassicals to avoid the consequences of this failure), the key reason why they are wrong about its ...

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Steve Keen considers the following as important:

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This longer video includes the same topics as my other Cambridge lecture (description reproduced below) plus the Q&A session with the audience. The lecture covers the failure of neoclassical macroeconomics to foresee the crisis (and the attempt by neoclassicals to avoid the consequences of this failure), the key reason why they are wrong about its persistence (the endogeneity of money), Minsky’s “Financial Instability Hypothesis”, my initial models of that Hypothesis, the development of a method to produce strictly monetary models of capitalism, and an overview of my multi-sectoral monetary model of production.


Steve Keen
Steve Keen (born 28 March 1953) is an Australian-born, British-based economist and author. He considers himself a post-Keynesian, criticising neoclassical economics as inconsistent, unscientific and empirically unsupported. The major influences on Keen's thinking about economics include John Maynard Keynes, Karl Marx, Hyman Minsky, Piero Sraffa, Augusto Graziani, Joseph Alois Schumpeter, Thorstein Veblen, and François Quesnay.

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