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OverviewThis book presents an alternative theoretical approach built on the lessons of Marx, Keynes, Schumpeter, Kalecki, Kaldor and Minsky, which highlights the structural instability of a capitalist economy and the endogenous nature of the current crisis. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Giancarlo BertoccoPublisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Imprint: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.544kg ISBN: 9781785365348ISBN 10: 1785365347 Pages: 264 Publication Date: 31 March 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsContents: PART I THE CRISIS AND THE MAINSTREAM THEORY 1. A Brief Description of the Crisis 2. The Mainstream Economists and the Crisis 3. The Limits of the Mainstream Theory PART II AN ALTERNATIVE THEORETICAL APPROACH 4. Keynes and the Monetary Theory of Production 5. Finance and Risk 6. Savings Decisions, Wealth and Speculation 7. Money and Crisis PART III THE ENDOGENOUS NATURE OF THE CRISIS AND THE POLICIES FOR A GOOD LIFE 8. The Endogenous Nature of the Subprime Crisis 9. Overcoming the Crisis: Which Policies? IndexReviews'Mainstream economists could not see the Global Financial Crisis coming because their theories rule out the possibility of crisis. Their ex post apologies rely on stories of black swans with fat tails and compare the crisis to an unpredictable but inevitable earthquake. Professor Bertocco relies, instead, on the analyses of Schumpeter and Minsky to understand the forces that plunged the global economy into crisis almost a decade ago. The crisis was foreseeable, it could have been prevented, and policymakers could have mounted a more effective response-if they had adopted a Schumpeterian-Minskyan analysis.' -- L. Randall Wray, University of Missouri-Kansas City and Levy Economics Institute, US 'Giancarlo Bertocco's Crisis and the Failure of Economic Theory is an old-fashioned volume, and all the better for that. The author identifies a major historical episode of malfunctioning in the advanced capitalist world, asks what light mainstream economic theory throws on it, explains clearly its approach and structure, and why with these attributes failure was inevitable. He then sets about developing an alternative approach and structure that not only illuminates what happened but also suggests how it may be avoided in the future. He sets out honestly and clearly the limitations and imponderables in his contributions, acknowledges in a scholarly manner the many sources of his ideas, and discusses the likely political constraints within which more relevant and enlightened policies will have to be pursued. Painting on such a broad canvas in a deep manner calls to mind the great names of our discipline-Adam Smith, Karl Marx, Maynard Keynes. Readers may not agree with the details of Giancarlo Bertocco's book, but they will be challenged to absorb the ideas from his narrative and hopefully to build on them.' -- G.C. Harcourt, University of New South Wales, Australia 'Bertocco' s forceful and convincing narrative provides a solid basis for further research on an alternative theoretical framework, and on social and economic policies that dispense with and avoid the consequences of Keynes' s accountant' s nightmare . The book makes the reader wonder why mainstream economists continue to cling onto a useless theoretical framework that leads them to violate, in their practice, the most basic and fundamental axiom of their models: rational behavior.' -- Review of Keynesian Economics 'Mainstream economists could not see the Global Financial Crisis coming because their theories rule out the possibility of crisis. Their ex post apologies rely on stories of black swans with fat tails and compare the crisis to an unpredictable but inevitable earthquake. Professor Bertocco relies, instead, on the analyses of Schumpeter and Minsky to understand the forces that plunged the global economy into crisis almost a decade ago. The crisis was foreseeable, it could have been prevented, and policymakers could have mounted a more effective response - if they had adopted a Schumpeterian-Minskyan analysis.' -- L. Randall Wray, Bard College and Levy Economics Institute, US 'Giancarlo Bertocco's Crisis and the Failure of Economic Theory is an old-fashioned volume, and all the better for that. The author identifies a major historical episode of malfunctioning in the advanced capitalist world, asks what light mainstream economic theory throws on it, and explains clearly its approach and structure, and why with these attributes failure was inevitable. He then sets about developing an alternative approach and structure that not only illuminates what happened but also suggests how it may be avoided in the future. He sets out honestly and clearly the limitations and imponderables in his contributions, acknowledges in a scholarly manner the many sources of his ideas, and discusses the likely political constraints within which more relevant and enlightened policies will have to be pursued. Painting on such a broad canvas in a deep manner calls to mind the great names of our discipline-Adam Smith, Karl Marx, Maynard Keynes. Readers may not agree with the details of Giancarlo Bertocco's book, but they will be challenged to absorb the ideas from his narrative and hopefully to build on them.' -- G.C. Harcourt, University of New South Wales, Australia 'Mainstream economists could not see the Global Financial Crisis coming because their theories rule out the possibility of crisis. Their ex post apologies rely on stories of black swans with fat tails and compare the crisis to an unpredictable but inevitable earthquake. Professor Bertocco relies, instead, on the analyses of Schumpeter and Minsky to understand the forces that plunged the global economy into crisis almost a decade ago. The crisis was foreseeable, it could have been prevented, and policymakers could have mounted a more effective response-if they had adopted a Schumpeterian-Minskyan analysis.' -- L. Randall Wray, University of Missouri-Kansas City and Levy Economics Institute, US 'Giancarlo Bertocco's Crisis and the Failure of Economic Theory is an old-fashioned volume, and all the better for that. The author identifies a major historical episode of malfunctioning in the advanced capitalist world, asks what light mainstream economic theory throws on it, explains clearly its approach and structure, and why with these attributes failure was inevitable. He then sets about developing an alternative approach and structure that not only illuminates what happened but also suggests how it may be avoided in the future. He sets out honestly and clearly the limitations and imponderables in his contributions, acknowledges in a scholarly manner the many sources of his ideas, and discusses the likely political constraints within which more relevant and enlightened policies will have to be pursued. Painting on such a broad canvas in a deep manner calls to mind the great names of our discipline - Adam Smith, Karl Marx, Maynard Keynes. Readers may not agree with the details of Giancarlo Bertocco's book, but they will be challenged to absorb the ideas from his narrative and hopefully to build on them.' -- G.C. Harcourt, University of New South Wales, Australia `Bertocco' s forceful and convincing narrative provides a solid basis for further research on an alternative theoretical framework, and on social and economic policies that dispense with and avoid the consequences of Keynes' s accountant' s nightmare . The book makes the reader wonder why mainstream economists continue to cling onto a useless theoretical framework that leads them to violate, in their practice, the most basic and fundamental axiom of their models: rational behavior.' -- Review of Keynesian Economics `Mainstream economists could not see the Global Financial Crisis coming because their theories rule out the possibility of crisis. Their ex post apologies rely on stories of black swans with fat tails and compare the crisis to an unpredictable but inevitable earthquake. Professor Bertocco relies, instead, on the analyses of Schumpeter and Minsky to understand the forces that plunged the global economy into crisis almost a decade ago. The crisis was foreseeable, it could have been prevented, and policymakers could have mounted a more effective response - if they had adopted a Schumpeterian-Minskyan analysis.' -- L. Randall Wray, Bard College and Levy Economics Institute, US `Giancarlo Bertocco's Crisis and the Failure of Economic Theory is an old-fashioned volume, and all the better for that. The author identifies a major historical episode of malfunctioning in the advanced capitalist world, asks what light mainstream economic theory throws on it, and explains clearly its approach and structure, and why with these attributes failure was inevitable. He then sets about developing an alternative approach and structure that not only illuminates what happened but also suggests how it may be avoided in the future. He sets out honestly and clearly the limitations and imponderables in his contributions, acknowledges in a scholarly manner the many sources of his ideas, and discusses the likely political constraints within which more relevant and enlightened policies will have to be pursued. Painting on such a broad canvas in a deep manner calls to mind the great names of our discipline-Adam Smith, Karl Marx, Maynard Keynes. Readers may not agree with the details of Giancarlo Bertocco's book, but they will be challenged to absorb the ideas from his narrative and hopefully to build on them.' -- G.C. Harcourt, University of New South Wales, Australia Author InformationGiancarlo Bertocco, University of Insubria, Italy Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |