Keynes had a political objective. Unless governments took steps to stabilize market economies at full employment, much of the undoubted benefit of ma… - Robert Skidelsky

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Keynes had a political objective. Unless governments took steps to stabilize market economies at full employment, much of the undoubted benefit of markets would be lost and political space would be opened up for extremists who would offer to solve the economic problem by abolishing markets, peace and liberty. This in a nutshell was the Keynesian 'political economy'. Keynes offers an immensely fruitful way of making sense of the slump now in progress, for suggesting policies to get us out of the slump, for ensuring, as far as is humanly possible, that we don't continue to fall into pits like the present one, and for understanding the human condition. These are the things which make Keynes fresh today.

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About Robert Skidelsky

Robert Jacob Alexander, Baron Skidelsky, FBA (born 25 April 1939), is a British economic historian.

Also Known As

Alternative Names: Robert Jacob Alexander Skidelsky Professor Robert Jacob Alexander Skidelsky, Baron Skidelsky Baron Skidelsky
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Additional quotes by Robert Skidelsky

The reason why economics has given such a poor account of the origins of the crisis is that there is something essentially incompatible between the economist's view of individual rationality and systemic collapse. Without adding qualifications which strain their logic, economists cannot readily get from their picture of the the individual maximizing his utilities to booms and slumps and the persistence of depressions.

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