Friday , May 10 2024
Home / Video / Economic Growth | How & How NOT to Do Economics with Robert Skidelsky

Economic Growth | How & How NOT to Do Economics with Robert Skidelsky

Summary:
One of the central subjects of economics is wealth. But there is not just one narrative of economic growth, but a multitude. In this third lecture in the INET series “How and How Not to do Economics,” Robert Skidelsky looks at three stories of development: neoclassical, structuralist, and Marxist. INET sincerely thanks the Julis-Rabinowitz Family for their generous support, who named this series to honor the spirit of a great educator and economic thinker, Uwe Reinhardt. For nearly 50 years, the late Uwe Reinhardt was a beloved economist and professor at Princeton University. Known best for helping to shape critical discourse around healthcare markets, his biting wit and intellect challenged students, colleagues, and policymakers alike to follow the data and to check all assumptions

Topics:
Robert Skidelsky considers the following as important:

This could be interesting, too:

Robert Vienneau writes Alienation And Commodity Fetishism

Robert Skidelsky writes Letter: The reason Keynes argued for an active fiscal policy

Robert Skidelsky writes Interview with Martin Burckhardt

Stavros Mavroudeas writes Το ψηφοδέλτιο της ΑΝΤΑΡΣΥΑ-Ανατρεπτική Συνεργασία στις ευρωεκλογές

One of the central subjects of economics is wealth. But there is not just one narrative of economic growth, but a multitude. In this third lecture in the INET series “How and How Not to do Economics,” Robert Skidelsky looks at three stories of development: neoclassical, structuralist, and Marxist.



INET sincerely thanks the Julis-Rabinowitz Family for their generous support, who named this series to honor the spirit of a great educator and economic thinker, Uwe Reinhardt.



For nearly 50 years, the late Uwe Reinhardt was a beloved economist and professor at Princeton University. Known best for helping to shape critical discourse around healthcare markets, his biting wit and intellect challenged students, colleagues, and policymakers alike to follow the data and to check all assumptions at the door.
Robert Skidelsky
Keynesian economist, crossbench peer in the House of Lords, author of Keynes: the Return of the Master and co-author of How Much Is Enough?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *