Starting up
Peter Clarke, 6 November 1986
The German Slump: Politics and Economics 1924-1936
by Harold James.
Oxford, 469 pp., £30, March 1986,0 19 821972 5 Show More
by Harold James.
Oxford, 469 pp., £30, March 1986,
The Making of Keynes’s General Theory
by Richard Kahn.
Cambridge, 327 pp., £20, May 1984,9780521253734 Show More
by Richard Kahn.
Cambridge, 327 pp., £20, May 1984,
Towards the Managed Economy: Keynes, the Treasury and the Fiscal Policy Debate of the 1930s
by Roger Middleton.
Methuen, 244 pp., £25, September 1985,0 416 35830 6 Show More
by Roger Middleton.
Methuen, 244 pp., £25, September 1985,
Keynes and his Contemporaries
edited by G.C. Harcourt.
Macmillan, 195 pp., £22.50, October 1985,0 333 34687 4 Show More
edited by G.C. Harcourt.
Macmillan, 195 pp., £22.50, October 1985,
The Policy Consequences of John Maynard Keynes
edited by Harold Wattel.
Macmillan, 157 pp., £29.50, April 1986,0 333 41340 7 Show More
edited by Harold Wattel.
Macmillan, 157 pp., £29.50, April 1986,
“... Ramsay MacDonald christened it an ‘economic blizzard’, suggesting that the world slump of 1929-32 was an Act of God which his hapless Labour Government could not be expected to have foreseen or averted, much less mastered. John Maynard Keynes, by contrast, reached for a mechanical metaphor appropriate to the current state of the art. ‘We have magneto trouble,’ he wrote in December 1930 ... ”