Great Keynes quote that bears repeating until it is no longer necessary to do so. There are various ways to do this, and a job guarantee is an obvious one in a capitalistic system.Lars P. Syll’s BlogNonsense is nonsenseLars P. Syll | Professor, Malmo University
Read More »Michael Emmett Brady — J M Keynes on the Enemies of Capitalism: The Internal, Endogenous Threat to the Macro Economy from Wall Street Stock Market Speculators and Rentiers
Abstract J M Keynes carefully read Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations (1776) before he was 28. Of extreme importance to Keynes was Smith’s categorization of a group of upper income class citizens, whose speculative and financial interactions with the private banking industry created a very severe danger to the society as a whole, as being projectors, imprudent risk takers, and prodigals. Keynes’s description of Smith’s projectors, imprudent risk takers, and prodigals in the General Theory,...
Read More »Ramanan — The Burden Of Adjustment And Keynes’ Solution
Argentina had a balance-of-payments crisis recently and required help. The IMF has agreed for a stand-by arrangement of $50 billion on the condition in the IMF’s own words: “At the core of the government’s economic plan is a rebalancing of the fiscal position. We fully support this priority and welcome the authorities’ intention to accelerate the pace at which they reduce the federal government’s deficit, restoring the primary balance by 2020. This measure will ultimately lessen the...
Read More »Diane Coyle — Finance, the state and innovation
Yesterday brought the launch of a new and revised edition of Doing Capitalism in the Innovation Economy by William Janeway. Anybody who read the first (2012) edition will recall the theme of the ‘three player game’ – market innovators, speculators and the state – informed by Keynes and Minsky as well as Janeway’s own experience combining an economics PhD with his experience shaping the world of venture capital investment. The term refers to how the complicated interactions between...
Read More »Lars P. Syll — Oh dear, oh dear, Krugman gets it so wrong, so wrong
Krugman again. Keynes quote, too. Lars P. Syll’s BlogOh dear, oh dear, Krugman gets it so wrong, so wrongLars P. Syll | Professor, Malmo University
Read More »Ramanan — Preface To The French Edition Of The General Theory
Keeper quotes.The Case for Concerted ActionPreface To The French Edition Of The General TheoryV. Ramanan
Read More »Ramanan — Joan Robinson And Nicholas Kaldor On Antagonism To Keynesian Ideas
Some good quotations. The Case for Concerted ActionJoan Robinson And Nicholas Kaldor On Antagonism To Keynesian IdeasV. Ramanan
Read More »Lars P. Syll — Sometimes we do not know because we cannot know
Knight’s uncertainty concept has an epistemological founding and Keynes’ definitely an ontological founding. Of course, this also has repercussions on the issue of ergodicity in a strict methodological and mathematical-statistical sense. I think Keynes’ view is the most warranted of the two. The most interesting and far-reaching difference between the epistemological and the ontological view is that if one subscribes to the former, Knightian view – as Taleb, Haldane & Nelson and “black...
Read More »Oleg Komlik — What is Economics? Read Keynes’ definition
Keeper Keynes' quotes.Economic Sociology and Political EconomyWhat is Economics? Read Keynes’ definitionOleg Komlik | founder and editor-in-chief of the ES/PE, Chairman of the Junior Sociologists Network at the International Sociological Association, a PhD Candidate in Economic Sociology in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Ben-Gurion University, and a Lecturer in the School of Behavioral Sciences at the College of Management Academic Studies
Read More »Dirk Ehnts — A Post-Keynesian comment on “Marx’s “Capital”‘ (6th ed.) [by (Ben Fine and Alfredo Saad-Filho]
This debunks the idea by the authors (Ben Fine and Alfredo Saad-Filho) that “underlying Keynesianism is the idea that there is a natural or equilibrium full-employment interest rate”. Keynes quotes proving the point.econoblog 101A Post-Keynesian comment on “Marx’s “Capital”‘ (6th ed.)Dirk Ehnts | Lecturer at Bard College Berlin
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