Keynes and after / by Michael Stewart.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Harmondsworth ; Penguin, 1967.Description: 271 pages ; 19 cmSubject(s): DDC classification:
  • 330.15/6
LOC classification:
  • HB 99.7 .S7 1967
Contents:
Part one: Keynes. 1. Keynes the man -- 2. Economics before Keynes -- 3. Unemployment between the wars -- 4. The general theory -- 5. The issues between Keynes and the classics -- 6. The twenties and the thirties in the light of Keynes. --
Part two: After. -- 7. Unemployment since the war -- 8. Prices -- 9. Growth and the balance of payments in the post-war period -- 10. The problem of international liquidity -- 11. The United States : Unemployment and automation -- 12. Conclusion.
Summary: "Keyne's ideas have revolutionized our lives. Before the publication of the General Theory, economists were on the touchline, passively watching the economy perform; now they are on the field as players, manipulating the conditions of economic life. Yet Keynes was not merely a theoretical economist. During both wars he was probably the most important figure at the Treasury, and the modern International Monetary Fund is partly his creation. Since the 1930's millions of people who have never heard of Keyne's work have owed their livelihood to his ideas and policies. But if we are all Keynesians now, are our problems the by-products of the Keynesian system? Can his ideas, which have banished the spectre of international recession, cope with the difficulties of an inflationary world? Is full employment threatened by a shortage of international liquidity, and is persistent unemployment in the U.S. an indication that Keynesian theory cannot answer the problems of automation? Are rising prices inevitable, and why is Britain constantly running into balance of payment crises? These questions are posed and answered in this new Pelican by Michael Stewart, whose clear and straightforward account of Keyne's life and ideas and of their status in the modern world should be a boon to intelligent people of any age and educational level." -- back cover.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
BOOKS BOOKS Niebyl-Proctor Marxist Library General Stacks HB 99.7 .S7 1967 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available NPML19110006

Includes bibliographical references (pages 263 - 266.) and index.

Part one: Keynes. 1. Keynes the man -- 2. Economics before Keynes -- 3. Unemployment between the wars -- 4. The general theory -- 5. The issues between Keynes and the classics -- 6. The twenties and the thirties in the light of Keynes. --

Part two: After. -- 7. Unemployment since the war -- 8. Prices -- 9. Growth and the balance of payments in the post-war period -- 10. The problem of international liquidity -- 11. The United States : Unemployment and automation -- 12. Conclusion.

"Keyne's ideas have revolutionized our lives. Before the publication of the General Theory, economists were on the touchline, passively watching the economy perform; now they are on the field as players, manipulating the conditions of economic life. Yet Keynes was not merely a theoretical economist. During both wars he was probably the most important figure at the Treasury, and the modern International Monetary Fund is partly his creation. Since the 1930's millions of people who have never heard of Keyne's work have owed their livelihood to his ideas and policies. But if we are all Keynesians now, are our problems the by-products of the Keynesian system? Can his ideas, which have banished the spectre of international recession, cope with the difficulties of an inflationary world? Is full employment threatened by a shortage of international liquidity, and is persistent unemployment in the U.S. an indication that Keynesian theory cannot answer the problems of automation? Are rising prices inevitable, and why is Britain constantly running into balance of payment crises? These questions are posed and answered in this new Pelican by Michael Stewart, whose clear and straightforward account of Keyne's life and ideas and of their status in the modern world should be a boon to intelligent people of any age and educational level." -- back cover.

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