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Keynes: The Return of the Master Hardcover – 3 Sep 2009

4.4 out of 5 stars 34 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Allen Lane; 1st Edition edition (3 Sept. 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 184614258X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1846142581
  • Product Dimensions: 14.4 x 2.5 x 22.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (34 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 630,519 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

Review

"Foreign Affairs"
"The book offers clear and cogent critiques of modern macroeconomic thought, along with a brief but useful summary of what went wrong in 2007-9."
"Financial Times", October 18, 2010"Skidelsky's succinct, lively, unashamed paean analyses Keynes's core values and offers a persuasive pitch for the contemporary relevance (and necessity) of his ideas."



"Foreign Affairs"
The book offers clear and cogent critiques of modern macroeconomic thought, along with a brief but useful summary of what went wrong in 2007-9.
"Financial Times," October 18, 2010 Skidelsky s succinct, lively, unashamed paean analyses Keynes s core values and offers a persuasive pitch for the contemporary relevance (and necessity) of his ideas.

" --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

About the Author

Robert Skidelsky is Emeritus Professor of Political Economy at the University of Warwick. His three volume biography of the economist John Maynard Keynes (1983, 1992, 2000) received numerous prizes, including the Lionel Gelber Prize for International Relations and the Council on Foreign Relations Prize for International Relations. ('This three-volume life of the British economist should be given a Nobel Prize for History if there was such a thing' - Norman Stone.) He is the author of the The World After Communism (1995). He was made a life peer in 1991, and was elected Fellow of the British Academy in 1994.


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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
Robert Skidelsky is right : we need to restore Keynesian economics to the current debate. Lord Skidelsky has contributed immensely with his monumental three volume biography of Keynes (`Hopes Betrayed', `The Economist as Saviour', and `Fighting for Freedom'). In this shorter book he summarises aspects of Keynes' economic theory. He attacks neo-classical economic theory's assumptions of rational expectations, real business cycle theory, and efficient market theory. He highlights inescapable, irreducible uncertainty as the key Keynesian diagnostic of economic behaviour, leading to Keynes' theory of `Liquidity Preference' whereby actors hold money to allay uncertainty, and thus reduce effective demand, leading to macroeconomic recession. He correctly points out that philosophically this diagnostic of irreducible uncertainty challenges the established Newtonian paradigm.

But more importantly he argues the practical superiority of Keynes over monetarist economics. As an economic historian, Skidelsky does this in his core chapter 5 by seeking to demonstrate that the global economy performed better under the Keynesian Bretton Woods period of 1951 to 1973, than under the monetarist free market `Washington Consensus' which replaced it. At this point Skidelsky's admitted lack of economic training and of the mathematical skills he too easily derides weakens his point. He interprets the graph on page 117 of world real GDP growth as two points of high average growth under Bretton Woods and low average growth under the Washington Consensus. A visual and econometric best line fit of this data would show a growth line declining from 1960 to 1985 and then rising, which would undermine this particular aspect of Skidelsky's argument.
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By os TOP 500 REVIEWER on 4 Oct. 2011
Format: Paperback
Think of the current recession as the mother of all hangovers. The World economy has been partying insanely for the best part of a decade - busily borrowing, spending, investing and speculating without real regard to what economists like to call 'the fundamentals'. In other words by failing to address the risk attached to a given activity in relation to a possible return; institutions and individuals have spent money to no good purpose whilst at the same time racking up huge debts. Hence the big headache the morning after the debauchery the night before.

So, governments, businesses and me if not you, have been binging on cheap credit. Eventually, the party has to stop when the money runs out. The waiter of doom presents his bill. Governments who have run big budget deficits have racked up massive interest charges on loans face huge problems as do the citizens in their care. Governments like Greece are faced with debt default, firing civil servants, begging from the European Central Bank or World Bank, cutting back on services and raising taxes. Their citizens are faced with higher unemployment, wage cuts, inflation and failing public services. Businesses find profit margins squeezed reduced sales revenues and rising input costs. It's a big mess and possibly it's going to get messier before much longer. But what to do about it?

After a period of heavy indulgence its fairly normal for the patient to go on a diet - lose a bit of weight and generally reform previous bad behaviour, at least for a while, until normal vigour is restored. 'Keynes -Return of the Master' is a detailed analysis of why the market cannot be left to itself to clear the debris up the morning after the economics party is over.
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By Antenna TOP 500 REVIEWER on 14 April 2010
Format: Hardcover
This provides some thought-provoking perspectives on, for instance, the collapsed credibility of the discipline of economics which failed to foresee the recent financial crisis- Skidelsky attributes this to a narrow focus on mathematics rather than the broader ethical, philosophical, historical context within which Keynes operated. This led Keynes to change his mind on the benefits of free trade after experiencing the trauma of the Great Depression. Perhaps wishing to have it all ways, he favoured an international approach to the world of arts which he loved, but came to advocate a measure of protection to encourage countries to manufacture their own goods, even if others could do it more efficiently.

Although this book inspired me to resolve to read a longer and more detailed work on Keynes, it left me feeling a little disappointed. The structure seemed disjointed, as the text switched back and forth in time, with sections written under subheadings in the manner of a text book, but without the systematic approach this normally entails. I was uncertain as to the intended audience. Surely a lay reader with no prior knowledge of Keynes would be confused by the half-explained theory, such as the role of interest rates in equating savings and investment, but not necessarily at the full employment level?

I would have preferred the key points of this book to be presented in a meaty essay, rather than have to tease them out of a somewhat unfocused book.
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Format: Hardcover
If anyone ever 'got' economics it was certainly Keynes, and if anyone 'gets' Keynes it is Skidelsky. Description of The Global Economic Crisis is a bit old-hat by now, so the start of the book drags very, very slightly, but as the critique develops and moves into proper exploration of 'The Master's' ideas in the post-crisis arena - with a good bit of banker-bashing too boot - the book comes into its own.

Not too technical, as has been suggested elsewhere. Indeed, Skidelsky is no mathematician, which is to the great benefit of the readability of his latest work.
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