The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money

work by Keynes

Learn about this topic in these articles:

Assorted References

influence on

    theory of

      • capitalism
        • Great Depression: breadline
          In economic system: The unreliability of growth

          …set forth in his influential The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money (1936). Keynes believed that the basic problem of capitalism is not so much its vulnerability to periodic saturations of investment as its likely failure to recover from them. He raised the possibility that a capitalist system could…

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      • economic consumption
        • In consumption: The rational optimization framework

          …importance of the MPC in The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money (1936), believed that up to 90 percent of any increase in current income would translate into an immediate increase in consumption expenditure (an MPC of 90 percent). However, evidence has shown that Friedman’s permanent income hypothesis is…

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      • wages
        • Adam Smith
          In wage and salary: Purchasing-power theory

          In General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money (1936), English economist John Maynard Keynes argued that (1) depressional unemployment could not be explained by frictions in the labour market that interrupted the economy’s movement toward full-employment equilibrium and (2) the assumption that “all other things remained…

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