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020 _a9780521872270
082 _a330.156 PAS
100 _a"Pasinetti, Luigi L."
245 0 _aKeynes and the Cambridge Keynesians
260 _aCambridge
260 _bCambridge University Press
260 _c2007
300 _a384p.-
365 _dPND
520 _aWhat was the Keynesian revolution in economics? Why did it not succeed to the extent that Keynes and his close pupils had hoped for? Keynes and the Cambridge Keynesians addresses these and other questions by tracing the historical development of Keynesian economics. The book is split into three parts. Part I contains the author's Caffè Lectures on Keynes's 'unaccomplished revolution'. Part II is a series of biographical essays where the author, himself a witness and participant of the group on which he writes, presents the successful and unsuccessful endeavours of Keynes's most important pupils: Richard Kahn, Joan Robinson, Nicholas Kaldor, Pierro Sraffa and Richard Goodwin. Part III of the book looks to the future by developing a conceptual analytical framework that makes sense of Keynes's 'revolution in economics', discussing the many ways in which the Keynesian way of doing economics is incompatible with the neoclassical tradition.
650 _aEconomic theory - Keynes
942 _cB
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