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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: James Crotty (University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9781138612839ISBN 10: 1138612839 Pages: 398 Publication Date: 14 May 2019 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education , Undergraduate Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents"1. Introduction: was Keynes Trying to Save Capitalism or Create ""Liberal Socialism""?. Part I: From The Economic Consequences of the Peace to The General Theory. 2. The Economic Consequences of the Peace: 1919. 3. Making Sense of Chaos: 1919–1923. 4. Public Investment and State Planning in 1924: The Real Keynesian Revolution Begins. 5. The Return to Gold in 1925: Deflation, Social Justice, and Class Struggle. 6. Three Important ""Essays in Persuasion"" on the Proper Economic Role of the State: 1925–1926. 7. Destructive Competition, Corporatism, Industrial Policy, and the New Economic Role of the State: 1927–1928. 8. Britain’s Industrial Future and the Board of National Investment: A Detailed Analysis of the Institutions to Be Used by the State to Regulate Capital Accumulation in Pursuit of Full Employment under Liberal Socialism. 9. On the Edge of the Great Depression: Keynes Continues His Efforts to Gain Political Support for the Radical Policies in Britain’s Industrial Future. 10. Keynes on ""Insane"" Financial Markets and the Emergence of Stagnation in the USA in the Early 1930s. 11. National Self-Sufficiency: 1933. Part II: The General Theory: The Ultimate Defense in Theory of Keynes’s Radical Policy Agenda. 12. Methodology and Ideology: Keynes Versus the Classicists. 13. The Priority of High-Unemployment Long-Run Equilibrium or ""Secular Stagnation"" in The General Theory. 14. Upon Further Reflection: Keynes on Secular Stagnation in 1937. 15. Keynes Versus the Classicists on the Effects of Wage and Price Deflation. 16. Keynes Versus the Classicists on Disequilibrium Processes in the Bond Market. 17. Chapter 12 of The General Theory: The ""Insane"" Stock Market, Capital Investment, and Instability. 18. The Theory of the Business Cycle in Chapter 22: Integrating the Profit Rate and the Bond and Stock Markets in a Theory of Financial and Economic Instability. 19. Are the ""Models"" Keynes Created in The General Theory Compatible with the IS/LM Interpretation of the Book: A Digression. 20. Keynes’s Radical Policy Views in The General Theory. Part III: State Planning, Public Investment, and Liberal Socialism After The General Theory. 21. From The General Theory Until Britain Entered WWII: 1936–1939. 22. Keynes and Government Postwar Economic Planning for ""Liberal Socialism"" During the War: 1939–1945. 23. Thoughts on the Relevance of Keynes’s Work to Solving Today’s Economic Problems: The Society–Economy Nexus, Methodology, Theory, and Policy. References. Index"ReviewsA huge value of the book is that it differentiates the messages of Keynes's original work from modern-day Keynesians. Crotty shows that the IS-LM incarnation of Keynes captured very little of Keynes's beliefs and left out the most important parts of his thought...There is hope that the macroeconomics discipline might finally be catching on to Keynes's relentless insistence that the assumptions of any model must be applicable to the real-world. Amanda Page-Hoongrajok, Phenomenal World blog This book is a marvel of economic narrative, with Crotty's clarity and Keynes's elegance in stunning counterpoint, from Versailles through the Depression to the war and Bretton Woods, all bringing forth the great, neglected fact that Keynes's Liberal Socialism was far more radical than modern memory would have us think. , James K. Galbraith, Lloyd M. Bentsen, Jr. Chair in Government/Business Relations, University of Texas at Austin James Crotty's writings have always been marked by deep thought and analysis, independence of mind, a judicious amalgamation of theory and empirical evidence and humane and realistic policies. The present volume is characterised by all these traits, it is vintage Crotty. The author makes a convincing case that Keynes since The Economic Consequences of Peace (1919) has been developing his ideas on liberal socialism that highlight the centrality of planning and public investment in sustaining full employment, ideas that came to full maturity in The General Theory and Keynes's writings and activities after its publication, in World War II and up to his death in April 1946. Crotty's arguments undermine the conventional wisdom of Keynesians and non-Keynesians alike that Keynes's aim was to save capitalism from itself and should be required reading for professional economists of all persuasions, policy makers, and concerned citizens appalled by the economic and political malaise we currently find ourselves in. , Geoffrey Harcourt, Emeritus Reader in The History of Economic Theory, Cambridge, Honorary Professor UNSW, Sydney This bold and brilliant work revolutionizes our understanding of Keynes' economics. Instead of reopening the often-debated topic of the essential characteristics of 'Keynesian economics,' James Crotty puts Keynes' lectures and writings into the context of both the economists and politicians with whom he interacted and of his political and policy engagements. Focusing on the moving pulse of Keynes' ideas from 1919 through his death in 1946, the author traces the evolution of his profound and extensive vision: achieving a sustainable future for capitalism cannot be left to market forces, but must be managed through public investment and of socialist planning and coordination. This book's provocative approach is perfectly timed for broad rethinking of macroeconomics that is now underway. In the density and originality of its themes, and in the integrity and depth of its scholarship, the reader is left in little doubt that this is the work of a master. , Gary A. Dymski, Professor of Applied Economics, Leeds University Business School, University of Leeds Regardless of whether you share Crotty's revisionist framing of Keynes' overarching vision, this smart, erudite and illuminating book is steeped in the enduring wisdom of its subject, and shines a powerful light on the fundamental differences between the economics of Keynes and practice of postwar Keynesianism - a distinction of pressing relevance for today's economic challenges. , Jonathan David Kirshner, Stephen and Barbara Friedman Professor of International Political Economy, Department of Government, Cornell University James Crotty has written an outstanding description of the evolution of Keynes's thought on the role of State involvement in a capitalism that promotes full employment and fairness. Characterisations of Keynesian economics by policy-makers and academics runs far afield from the clarity of purpose that Keynes held when describing the working of a capitalist economy. Crotty, in this clear and well written book, has surely set the record straight. , Professor Roy Rotheim, Skidmore College, USA This book is a marvel of economic narrative, with Crotty's clarity and Keynes's elegance in stunning counterpoint, from Versailles through the Depression to the war and Bretton Woods, all bringing forth the great, neglected fact that Keynes's Liberal Socialism was far more radical than modern memory would have us think. , James K. Galbraith, Lloyd M. Bentsen, Jr. Chair in Government/Business Relations, University of Texas at Austin James Crotty's writings have always been marked by deep thought and analysis, independence of mind, a judicious amalgamation of theory and empirical evidence and humane and realistic policies. The present volume is characterised by all these traits, it is vintage Crotty. The author makes a convincing case that Keynes since The Economic Consequences of Peace (1919) has been developing his ideas on liberal socialism that highlight the centrality of planning and public investment in sustaining full employment, ideas that came to full maturity in The General Theory and Keynes's writings and activities after its publication, in World War II and up to his death in April 1946. Crotty's arguments undermine the conventional wisdom of Keynesians and non-Keynesians alike that Keynes's aim was to save capitalism from itself and should be required reading for professional economists of all persuasions, policy makers, and concerned citizens appalled by the economic and political malaise we currently find ourselves in. , Geoffrey Harcourt, Emeritus Reader in The History of Economic Theory, Cambridge, Honorary Professor UNSW, Sydney This bold and brilliant work revolutionizes our understanding of Keynes' economics. Instead of reopening the often-debated topic of the essential characteristics of 'Keynesian economics,' James Crotty puts Keynes' lectures and writings into the context of both the economists and politicians with whom he interacted and of his political and policy engagements. Focusing on the moving pulse of Keynes' ideas from 1919 through his death in 1946, the author traces the evolution of his profound and extensive vision: achieving a sustainable future for capitalism cannot be left to market forces, but must be managed through public investment and of socialist planning and coordination. This book's provocative approach is perfectly timed for broad rethinking of macroeconomics that is now underway. In the density and originality of its themes, and in the integrity and depth of its scholarship, the reader is left in little doubt that this is the work of a master. , Gary A. Dymski, Professor of Applied Economics, Leeds University Business School, University of Leeds Regardless of whether you share Crotty's revisionist framing of Keynes' overarching vision, this smart, erudite and illuminating book is steeped in the enduring wisdom of its subject, and shines a powerful light on the fundamental differences between the economics of Keynes and practice of postwar Keynesianism -a distinction of pressing relevance for today's economic challenges. , Jonathan David Kirshner, Stephen and Barbara Friedman Professor of International Political Economy, Department of Government, Cornell University James Crotty has written an outstanding description of the evolution of Keynes's thought on the role of State involvement in a capitalism that promotes full employment and fairness. Characterisations of Keynesian economics by policy-makers and academics runs far afield from the clarity of purpose that Keynes held when describing the working of a capitalist economy. Crotty, in this clear and well written book, has surely set the record straight. , Professor Roy Rotheim, Skidmore College, USA """A huge value of the book is that it differentiates the messages of Keynes’s original work from modern-day “Keynesians.” Crotty shows that the IS-LM incarnation of Keynes captured very little of Keynes’s beliefs and left out the most important parts of his thought...There is hope that the macroeconomics discipline might finally be catching on to Keynes’s relentless insistence that the assumptions of any model must be applicable to the real-world."" Amanda Page-Hoongrajok, Phenomenal World blog ""This book is a marvel of economic narrative, with Crotty's clarity and Keynes's elegance in stunning counterpoint, from Versailles through the Depression to the war and Bretton Woods, all bringing forth the great, neglected fact that Keynes's Liberal Socialism was far more radical than modern memory would have us think."", James K. Galbraith, Lloyd M. Bentsen, Jr. Chair in Government/Business Relations, University of Texas at Austin ""James Crotty’s writings have always been marked by deep thought and analysis, independence of mind, a judicious amalgamation of theory and empirical evidence and humane and realistic policies. The present volume is characterised by all these traits, it is vintage Crotty. The author makes a convincing case that Keynes since The Economic Consequences of Peace (1919) has been developing his ideas on liberal socialism that highlight the centrality of planning and public investment in sustaining full employment, ideas that came to full maturity in The General Theory and Keynes’s writings and activities after its publication, in World War II and up to his death in April 1946. Crotty’s arguments undermine the conventional wisdom of Keynesians and non-Keynesians alike that Keynes’s aim was to save capitalism from itself and should be required reading for professional economists of all persuasions, policy makers, and concerned citizens appalled by the economic and political malaise we currently find ourselves in."", Geoffrey Harcourt, Emeritus Reader in The History of Economic Theory, Cambridge, Honorary Professor UNSW, Sydney ""This bold and brilliant work revolutionizes our understanding of Keynes’ economics. Instead of reopening the often-debated topic of the essential characteristics of ‘Keynesian economics,’ James Crotty puts Keynes’ lectures and writings into the context of both the economists and politicians with whom he interacted and of his political and policy engagements. Focusing on the moving pulse of Keynes’ ideas from 1919 through his death in 1946, the author traces the evolution of his profound and extensive vision: achieving a sustainable future for capitalism cannot be left to market forces, but must be managed through public investment and of socialist planning and coordination. This book’s provocative approach is perfectly timed for broad rethinking of macroeconomics that is now underway. In the density and originality of its themes, and in the integrity and depth of its scholarship, the reader is left in little doubt that this is the work of a master."", Gary A. Dymski, Professor of Applied Economics, Leeds University Business School, University of Leeds ""Regardless of whether you share Crotty’s revisionist framing of Keynes’ overarching vision, this smart, erudite and illuminating book is steeped in the enduring wisdom of its subject, and shines a powerful light on the fundamental differences between the economics of Keynes and practice of postwar ""Keynesianism"" – a distinction of pressing relevance for today’s economic challenges."", Jonathan David Kirshner, Stephen and Barbara Friedman Professor of International Political Economy, Department of Government, Cornell University ""James Crotty has written an outstanding description of the evolution of Keynes’s thought on the role of State involvement in a capitalism that promotes full employment and fairness. Characterisations of Keynesian economics by policy-makers and academics runs far afield from the clarity of purpose that Keynes held when describing the working of a capitalist economy. Crotty, in this clear and well written book, has surely set the record straight."", Professor Roy Rotheim, Skidmore College, USA ""This book is a marvel of economic narrative, with Crotty's clarity and Keynes's elegance in stunning counterpoint, from Versailles through the Depression to the war and Bretton Woods, all bringing forth the great, neglected fact that Keynes's Liberal Socialism was far more radical than modern memory would have us think."", James K. Galbraith, Lloyd M. Bentsen, Jr. Chair in Government/Business Relations, University of Texas at Austin ""James Crotty’s writings have always been marked by deep thought and analysis, independence of mind, a judicious amalgamation of theory and empirical evidence and humane and realistic policies. The present volume is characterised by all these traits, it is vintage Crotty. The author makes a convincing case that Keynes since The Economic Consequences of Peace (1919) has been developing his ideas on liberal socialism that highlight the centrality of planning and public investment in sustaining full employment, ideas that came to full maturity in The General Theory and Keynes’s writings and activities after its publication, in World War II and up to his death in April 1946. Crotty’s arguments undermine the conventional wisdom of Keynesians and non-Keynesians alike that Keynes’s aim was to save capitalism from itself and should be required reading for professional economists of all persuasions, policy makers, and concerned citizens appalled by the economic and political malaise we currently find ourselves in."", Geoffrey Harcourt, Emeritus Reader in The History of Economic Theory, Cambridge, Honorary Professor UNSW, Sydney ""This bold and brilliant work revolutionizes our understanding of Keynes’ economics. Instead of reopening the often-debated topic of the essential characteristics of ‘Keynesian economics,’ James Crotty puts Keynes’ lectures and writings into the context of both the economists and politicians with whom he interacted and of his political and policy engagements. Focusing on the moving pulse of Keynes’ ideas from 1919 through his death in 1946, the author traces the evolution of his profound and extensive vision: achieving a sustainable future for capitalism cannot be left to market forces, but must be managed through public investment and of socialist planning and coordination. This book’s provocative approach is perfectly timed for broad rethinking of macroeconomics that is now underway. In the density and originality of its themes, and in the integrity and depth of its scholarship, the reader is left in little doubt that this is the work of a master."", Gary A. Dymski, Professor of Applied Economics, Leeds University Business School, University of Leeds ""Regardless of whether you share Crotty’s revisionist framing of Keynes’ overarching vision, this smart, erudite and illuminating book is steeped in the enduring wisdom of its subject, and shines a powerful light on the fundamental differences between the economics of Keynes and practice of postwar ""Keynesianism""—a distinction of pressing relevance for today’s economic challenges."", Jonathan David Kirshner, Stephen and Barbara Friedman Professor of International Political Economy, Department of Government, Cornell University ""James Crotty has written an outstanding description of the evolution of Keynes’s thought on the role of State involvement in a capitalism that promotes full employment and fairness. Characterisations of Keynesian economics by policy-makers and academics runs far afield from the clarity of purpose that Keynes held when describing the working of a capitalist economy. Crotty, in this clear and well written book, has surely set the record straight."", Professor Roy Rotheim, Skidmore College, USA" This book is a marvel of economic narrative, with Crotty's clarity and Keynes's elegance in stunning counterpoint, from Versailles through the Depression to the war and Bretton Woods, all bringing forth the great, neglected fact that Keynes's Liberal Socialism was far more radical than modern memory would have us think. , James K. Galbraith, Lloyd M. Bentsen, Jr. Chair in Government/Business Relations, University of Texas at Austin James Crotty's writings have always been marked by deep thought and analysis, independence of mind, a judicious amalgamation of theory and empirical evidence and humane and realistic policies. The present volume is characterised by all these traits, it is vintage Crotty. The author makes a convincing case that Keynes since The Economic Consequences of Peace (1919) has been developing his ideas on liberal socialism that highlight the centrality of planning and public investment in sustaining full employment, ideas that came to full maturity in The General Theory and Keynes's writings and activities after its publication, in World War II and up to his death in April 1946. Crotty's arguments undermine the conventional wisdom of Keynesians and non-Keynesians alike that Keynes's aim was to save capitalism from itself and should be required reading for professional economists of all persuasions, policy makers, and concerned citizens appalled by the economic and political malaise we currently find ourselves in. , Geoffrey Harcourt, Emeritus Reader in The History of Economic Theory, Cambridge, Honorary Professor UNSW, Sydney This bold and brilliant work revolutionizes our understanding of Keynes' economics. Instead of reopening the often-debated topic of the essential characteristics of `Keynesian economics,' James Crotty puts Keynes' lectures and writings into the context of both the economists and politicians with whom he interacted and of his political and policy engagements. Focusing on the moving pulse of Keynes' ideas from 1919 through his death in 1946, the author traces the evolution of his profound and extensive vision: achieving a sustainable future for capitalism cannot be left to market forces, but must be managed through public investment and of socialist planning and coordination. This book's provocative approach is perfectly timed for broad rethinking of macroeconomics that is now underway. In the density and originality of its themes, and in the integrity and depth of its scholarship, the reader is left in little doubt that this is the work of a master. , Gary A. Dymski, Professor of Applied Economics, Leeds University Business School, University of Leeds Regardless of whether you share Crotty's revisionist framing of Keynes' overarching vision, this smart, erudite and illuminating book is steeped in the enduring wisdom of its subject, and shines a powerful light on the fundamental differences between the economics of Keynes and practice of postwar Keynesianism - a distinction of pressing relevance for today's economic challenges. , Jonathan David Kirshner, Stephen and Barbara Friedman Professor of International Political Economy, Department of Government, Cornell University James Crotty has written an outstanding description of the evolution of Keynes's thought on the role of State involvement in a capitalism that promotes full employment and fairness. Characterisations of Keynesian economics by policy-makers and academics runs far afield from the clarity of purpose that Keynes held when describing the working of a capitalist economy. Crotty, in this clear and well written book, has surely set the record straight. , Professor Roy Rotheim, Skidmore College, USA This book is a marvel of economic narrative, with Crotty's clarity and Keynes's elegance in stunning counterpoint, from Versailles through the Depression to the war and Bretton Woods, all bringing forth the great, neglected fact that Keynes's Liberal Socialism was far more radical than modern memory would have us think. , James K. Galbraith, Lloyd M. Bentsen, Jr. Chair in Government/Business Relations, University of Texas at Austin James Crotty's writings have always been marked by deep thought and analysis, independence of mind, a judicious amalgamation of theory and empirical evidence and humane and realistic policies. The present volume is characterised by all these traits, it is vintage Crotty. The author makes a convincing case that Keynes since The Economic Consequences of Peace (1919) has been developing his ideas on liberal socialism that highlight the centrality of planning and public investment in sustaining full employment, ideas that came to full maturity in The General Theory and Keynes's writings and activities after its publication, in World War II and up to his death in April 1946. Crotty's arguments undermine the conventional wisdom of Keynesians and non-Keynesians alike that Keynes's aim was to save capitalism from itself and should be required reading for professional economists of all persuasions, policy makers, and concerned citizens appalled by the economic and political malaise we currently find ourselves in. , Geoffrey Harcourt, Emeritus Reader in The History of Economic Theory, Cambridge, Honorary Professor UNSW, Sydney This bold and brilliant work revolutionizes our understanding of Keynes' economics. Instead of reopening the often-debated topic of the essential characteristics of `Keynesian economics,' James Crotty puts Keynes' lectures and writings into the context of both the economists and politicians with whom he interacted and of his political and policy engagements. Focusing on the moving pulse of Keynes' ideas from 1919 through his death in 1946, the author traces the evolution of his profound and extensive vision: achieving a sustainable future for capitalism cannot be left to market forces, but must be managed through public investment and of socialist planning and coordination. This book's provocative approach is perfectly timed for broad rethinking of macroeconomics that is now underway. In the density and originality of its themes, and in the integrity and depth of its scholarship, the reader is left in little doubt that this is the work of a master. , Gary A. Dymski, Professor of Applied Economics, Leeds University Business School, University of Leeds Regardless of whether you share Crotty's revisionist framing of Keynes' overarching vision, this smart, erudite and illuminating book is steeped in the enduring wisdom of its subject, and shines a powerful light on the fundamental differences between the economics of Keynes and practice of postwar Keynesianism -a distinction of pressing relevance for today's economic challenges. , Jonathan David Kirshner, Stephen and Barbara Friedman Professor of International Political Economy, Department of Government, Cornell University James Crotty has written an outstanding description of the evolution of Keynes's thought on the role of State involvement in a capitalism that promotes full employment and fairness. Characterisations of Keynesian economics by policy-makers and academics runs far afield from the clarity of purpose that Keynes held when describing the working of a capitalist economy. Crotty, in this clear and well written book, has surely set the record straight. , Professor Roy Rotheim, Skidmore College, USA Author InformationJames Crotty is Emeritus Professor of Economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and Senior Research Associate at the Political Economy Research Institute. His research in theory and policy attempts to integrate the complementary analytical strengths of the Marxian and Keynesian traditions. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |