The first volume of this trilogy examined the Keynesian Tradition; this second volume examines aspects of the Anti Keynesian Tradition. All the chapters are designed, in part, to justify the assertion that economists neglect at their peril the subterranean world in which our subject is constructed. Archival evidence provides numerous unique insights but can also resolve disputes that may otherwise meander along, endlessly. Equally, archival evidence can expose as hollow some of the creation myths that pervade the account of intellectual revolutions. ISBN: 978140394959
In the twentieth century, the United States replaced the United Kingdom as the centre of both the ou...
The Keynes Before Keynes Milton Friedman (chapter 2 [1956], 3-4) asserted that “Chicago was one of t...
In this article, we will cover the main anti-Keynesianviews and macroeconomic systems that arose in ...
These chapters highlight an important but neglected point: economics often provides profound insight...
During the middle third of the twentieth century, the ideas of John Maynard Keynes and those who des...
What was the Keynesian revolution in economics? Why did it not succeed to the extent that Keynes and...
[About the book] The first volume in this series - The Keynesian Tradition - explored aspects of ...
This chapter offers a fresh perspective on the much publicised dispute between those followers of Ke...
Of the main controversies in 20th century political economy, none were more heated than the debate o...
In the midst of the current financial crisis the economics profession has seen a monumental resurrec...
According to the conventional account, economists have relied on three types of expectations: static...
This is a pre-edited version of a forthcoming entry for the Encyclopedia of Political Science, Washi...
When the Nobel prize-winning economist Joe Stiglitz visited Australia in 2010 he commended the Rudd ...
In this Chapter, we will first review the historical developments leading to the birth of Post-Keyne...
John Maynard Keynes, Baron of Tilton, has been one of the most controversial figures in twentieth ce...
In the twentieth century, the United States replaced the United Kingdom as the centre of both the ou...
The Keynes Before Keynes Milton Friedman (chapter 2 [1956], 3-4) asserted that “Chicago was one of t...
In this article, we will cover the main anti-Keynesianviews and macroeconomic systems that arose in ...
These chapters highlight an important but neglected point: economics often provides profound insight...
During the middle third of the twentieth century, the ideas of John Maynard Keynes and those who des...
What was the Keynesian revolution in economics? Why did it not succeed to the extent that Keynes and...
[About the book] The first volume in this series - The Keynesian Tradition - explored aspects of ...
This chapter offers a fresh perspective on the much publicised dispute between those followers of Ke...
Of the main controversies in 20th century political economy, none were more heated than the debate o...
In the midst of the current financial crisis the economics profession has seen a monumental resurrec...
According to the conventional account, economists have relied on three types of expectations: static...
This is a pre-edited version of a forthcoming entry for the Encyclopedia of Political Science, Washi...
When the Nobel prize-winning economist Joe Stiglitz visited Australia in 2010 he commended the Rudd ...
In this Chapter, we will first review the historical developments leading to the birth of Post-Keyne...
John Maynard Keynes, Baron of Tilton, has been one of the most controversial figures in twentieth ce...
In the twentieth century, the United States replaced the United Kingdom as the centre of both the ou...
The Keynes Before Keynes Milton Friedman (chapter 2 [1956], 3-4) asserted that “Chicago was one of t...
In this article, we will cover the main anti-Keynesianviews and macroeconomic systems that arose in ...