Glasner is right in noting that _History of Economic Analysis_ is written with a generosity of spirit toward the discipline and its members that... one would not have expected had one, say, just been 1/
One feels like one has been slapped in the face with a wet fish when one reaches S's accusation that Keynes was a rootless cosmopolite willfully refusing to look beyond the moment: "[Keynes was] the English 2/
intellectual, a little _deraciné_ and beholding a most uncomfortable situation. He was childless and his philosophy of life was essentially a short-run philosophy..."
And then one comes at the end of the obituary to the fangs-bared attack on the younger generation of now- 3/
Keynesian economists: "Most orthodox Keynesians are "radicals" in one sense or another. The man who wrote the essay on the Villiers Connection was not a radical in any ordinary sense of the word. What is there in his book to please them?... Disciples do not look at... 4/
Schumpeter (cont.): ...4/ qualifications. They see one thing only-an indictment of private thrift and the implications this indictment carries with respect to the managed economy and inequality of incomes.... As a result of a long doctrinal development, saving had come... 5/
Schumpeter (cont.): ...to be regarded as the last pillar of the bourgeois argument.... Adam Smith... [in] the ideological aspects... his system... amounts to all-around vituperation directed against "slothful" landlords and grasping merchants or "masters".... Marshall and... 6/
Schumpeter (cont.): ...Pigou were in this boat. They, especially the latter, took it for granted that inequality, or the existing degree of inequality, was "undesirable." But they stopped short of attack upon the pillar. Many of the men who entered the field of teaching or... 7/
Schumpeter (cont.): ...research in the twenties and thirties had renounced allegiance to the bourgeois scheme of life, the bourgeois scheme of values. Many of them sneered at the profit motive and at the element of personal performance in the capitalist process. But so far... 8/
Schumpeter (cont.): ...as they did not embrace straight socialism, they still had to pay respect to saving-under penalty of losing caste in their own eyes and ranging themselves with what Keynes so tellingly called the economist's "underworld." But Keynes broke their... 9/
Schumpeter (cont.): ...fetters: here, at last, was theoretical doctrine that not only obliterated the personal element and was, if not mechanistic itself, at least mechanizable, but also smashed the pillar into dust; a doctrine that may not actually say but can easily be... 10/
Schumpeter (cont.): ...made to say both that "who tries to save destroys real capital" and that, via saving, "the unequal distribution of income is the ultimate cause of unemployment." This is what the Keynesian Revolution amounts to. Thus defined, the phrase is not... 11/
Schumpeter (cont.): ...inappropriate. And this, and only this, explains and, to some extent, justifies Keynes's change of attitude toward Marshall which is neither understandable nor justifiable upon any scientific ground."
He started the passage firmly holding to the plan 12/
of attacking the recently-dead Keynes's _disciples_, but by the end of the passage he has forgotten that plan, and it is Keynes himself who has become the enemy of all that is good, bourgeois, and Holy—in which, by the end, Keynes is joined by practically all of English 13/
economics—Pigou, Marshall, and Smith—with their desire for a middle-class society and their sneering at slothful landlords and greedy monopoly-seeking bosses. 14/END
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@terry_renaud@DylanRileyNLR Speaking as a slightly repentant left-neoliberal, much of the Marxist cultural turn was an attempt to build an orrery to explain why Engels's predictions about how the steampower mode of production would educate humanity for socialism went wrong. But, in my view, much of... 1/
@terry_renaud@DylanRileyNLR ...the orrery was unnecessary. The bifurcated world of mass steampower factories growing larger and larger as the ruling and middle classes grew smaller and smaller would have brought Engels's hopes of revolution rich countries much closer. (Whether those revolutions would... 2/
@terry_renaud@DylanRileyNLR ...have had the desired beneficial consequences is a deep issue.) But technology advanced, the mode of production moved on. The Second-Industrial-Revolution mode of production was not the Steampower one. Fordism was not Second-Industrial-Revolution. Global Value-Chain was... 3/
@postdiscipline Yes, the changing technology-driven forces-of-production hardware of society greatly constrain and shape the relations-of-production and superstructural econo-politico-socio-cultural software of society that puts the forces-of-production to work and does the distribution... 1/
@postdiscipline ...and utilization of our common and collective wealth.
Yes, feudal-era forces- and relations-of-production teach people that society is static, hierarchical, with who you are chosen for you by the role ascribed to you; that production is small-scale, handicraft, and... 2/
@postdiscipline ...individually autonomous; and that those who work owe rent to those who protect them and tithes to those who guide them to salvation. Hence the feudal mode-of-production requires that we write feudal-society software to run on top of it.
Brad DeLong's Grasping Reality: It Is Harmful to My Psychological Health for Me to Read David Brooks, & BRIEFLY NOTED for 2023-01-13 Fr braddelong.substack.com/p/it-is-harmfu…
...Do you think that maybe doing your job required telling your readers back at the time, in the early 2000s, that neoliberal supply-side conservatism was played out? Do you think that maybe doing your job required telling your readers back at the time, in the early 2000s... 2/
...that “compassionate conservatism” was very weak and unsatisfactory tea? What conception of “doing your job” do you have that does not include doing those two things in the early 2000s?
Do you think that maybe doing your job required telling your readers back at the... 3/
I think the easiest way to conceptualize what I think of as the major point is to set up a model in which… 1/
…1. The central bank has a target rate of inflation.
2. The rate of inflation is a constant markdown applied to the rate of nominal wage increase.
3. The rate of increase of nominal wages that workers are able to demand, and enforce, is a declining function of the… 2/
...unemployment rate and of the real wage.
In this model, there is a warranted rate of nominal wage increase: the central bank’s inflation target, plus the wedge between price inflation and nominal wage increase. In this model, the natural rate of unemployment is the… 3/
Brad DeLong's Grasping Reality: In Which Long-Time Netizen & Programmer-at-Arms Dave Winer Records a Podcast for Me, Personally braddelong.substack.com/p/in-which-lon…
...“The Fall of the Blogosphere”, by Stable Diffusion, via NightCafe
But since I have a Gutenberg-Galaxy brain, I feed it to text-recognition software <otter.ai>, and then edit the transcript.
But let me first link to a subsequent piece in which Dave muses… 2/
The way I thought of this ten years ago, during the decline and fall, was that it all should work in the way that network communication worked in Vernor Vinge’s amazing mindbending science-fiction space-opera… 3/
I volunteered to write an introduction to the reissue of three of my favorite alternate-history novels: Jo Walton’s “Small Change” series <amazon.com/dp/B08L9GHPDC>
* "Farthing": Publishers Weekly: Starred: “World Fantasy Award–winner Walton (Tooth and Claw) crosses genres… 2/
...without missing a beat with this stunningly powerful alternative history set in 1949…
* Ha’Penny: Publishers Weekly: “This provocative sequel to acclaimed alternate history Farthing (2006) delves deeper into the intrigue and paranoia of 1940s fascist Great Britain… 3/