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The ideas of John Maynard Keynes inspired the New Deal and helped rebuild world economies after World War II —and were later dismissed as “depression economics.” Then came the great meltdown of 2008. Market forces that the world relied on suddenly failed to self-correct—and Keynes’s doctrine of corrective action in an imperfect world became more relevant than ever. Keynes was not a traditional economist: He was a polemicist, iconoclastic public intellectual, peer of the realm, and political operative, as well as an openly homosexual Bohemian who befriended Virginia Woolf and E. M. Forster. In Keynes, noted historian Peter Clarke provides a timely and masterful accounting of Keynes’s life and work, bringing his genius and skepticism alive for an era fraught with economic difficulties that he surely would have relished solving.
Clarke lays out the development of Keynes's economics from the mid-1920s to his "General Theory," and it's a gripping journeyt…One comes away from this account impressed by the continual interplay between theory and economic reality in Keynes's work. He thought theoryincluding conventional economic theorywas important and useful. But he was willing to go straight back to the drawing board when it didn't provide satisfactory answers to his questions. The contrast with modern academic economists and their attachment to elegant mathematical models is instructive.
More Reviews and RecommendationsPeter Clarke was formerly a professor of modern history and Master of Trinity Hall at Cambridge. His many books include The Last Thousand Days of the British Empire, The Keynesian Revolution in the Making, 1924–1936, and the acclaimed final volume of the Penguin History of Britain, Hope and Glory, Britain 1900–2000. He lives in Suffolk, England, and Pender Island, British Columbia.