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Introduction

Stephen Rousseas

Chapter Chapter 1 in Post Keynesian Monetary Economics, 1986, pp 3-14 from Palgrave Macmillan

Abstract: Abstract Revolutions have a nasty way of devouring their progenitors and replacing them by a lesser and more arrogant breed who, in the name of the revolution, seek to consolidate its gains only to betray it in the process. The Keynesian revolution, in the realm of ideas, is a case in point, though in this instance the creator of the revolution was not quite the revolutionary others had made him out to be. Keynes himself, according to Joan Robinson, did not grasp the full import of his General Theory, and shortly after its publication in 1936 there were many heated discussions between him and his followers over what the General Theory “really” meant. The fact is that Keynes had never fully broken with his neoclassical upbringing at Cambridge under the tutelage of Alfred Marshall. His neoclassical heritage showed clearly in the opening pages of his General Theory. Though he rejected “Postulate II” of neoclassical theory, namely, that the supply of labor depends positively on the real wage, he did not openly reject “Postulate I,” that the demand for labor is inversely related to the level of real wages. This half-way break with neoclassicism was to generate a great deal of mischief.1 Still, his rejection of the neoclassical view that all unemployment was voluntary was, itself, a major breakthrough. Indeed, the notion of involuntary unemployment was the foundation of his revolution.

Keywords: Central Bank; Fiscal Policy; Real Wage; Capital Accumulation; Full Employment (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1986
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DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-18229-9_1

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