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From Forbes, with love

An interesting article about economists at the Forbes website (yes), from John T. Harvey, which shows that ‘real world economics’, including this blog, is gaining ground. A quote:

“A lot of blame has been spread around regarding the financial collapse and the onset of the Great Recession. Greedy speculators, big banks, Wall Street executives, and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have all taken turns as whipping boys. But one group has largely avoided their fair share of attention: economists. They were the ones who provided the intellectual justification for the transformation of our economy over the past thirty years. They stood idly by as jobs went overseas, demand was sapped by increasingly uneven distributions of income, competition was destroyed by lax attitudes towards antitrust laws, and safeguards were discarded in the financial sector. More than that, many actually praised these events. This is not insignificant. Much of the financialization of the U.S. economy (the shift from producing goods and services to managing financial wealth that played such a central role in our collapse) could not have occurred without economists offering their tacit and open approval. Opposition would have slowed, if not stopped, these trends.”

Click on the link above for more.

 

 

  1. February 6, 2012 at 3:19 pm

    I am proud to indicated that John Harvey is a graduater student of mine and, hopefully, learned in my class this respect for real world economic organization rather than just mathematizing things to make tractable solutions. Note the 1995 Steve Keen article mentioned by John Harvey was published in the JOURNAL OF POST KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS — a journal founded by myelf and Sidney Weintraub more than three decades ago — with much moral and even some financial support from John Kenneth Galbraith (a good friend).

    I wonder how many of the readers of this blog –ever read this journal – a journal which also published John Hick’s renouncing of his ISLM theory as foolish and not a good representation of Keynes (published in 1983).

    Paul Davidson
    Editor, Journal of Post Keynesian Economics

  2. carminegorga
    February 6, 2012 at 3:47 pm

    How can I enthusiastically commend the content of this article and discreetly suggest that the author and his readers give a look at my blog: http://me-a-new-economic-atlas-and-you.blogspot.com/

  3. February 6, 2012 at 6:24 pm

    Regardless of how well known Keen’s work (which Harvey cites in his column) was or wasn’t amongst economists, a simple reading of commonly issued government info could have told the same story: According to the Census Bureau, household incomes for the lower 80 percentile largely stagnated from 1989 to 2004 (and have declined since), while the Federal Reserve reported that household debt loads for the lower 80 percentile rose by triple-digit percentages from 1989 to 2004.

    It doesn’t take long to come to the conclusion this was unsustainable.

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