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Essays in Persuasión

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4 Reviews
W W Norton & Company Incorporated, 1963 - Business & Economics - 376 pages
In the light of subsequent history, "Essays of Persuasion" is a remarkably prophetic volume covering a wide range of issues in political economy. In articles on the Versailles Treaty, John Maynard Keynes foresaw all too clearly that excessive Allied demands for reparations and indemnities would lead to the economic collapse of Germany. In Keynes' essays on inflation and deflation, the reader can find ideas that were to become the foundations of his most renowned treatise, "The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money" (1936). With startling accuracy Keynes forecast the economic fluctuations that were to beset the economies of Europe and the United States and even proposed measures which, if heeded at the time, might have warded off an era of world-wide depression. His views on Soviet Russia, on the decline of laissez-faire, and the possibilities of economic growth are as relevant today as when Keynes originally set them forth.

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Review: Essays in Persuasion

User Review  - Hadrian - Goodreads

A series of thirty-odd essays on economics. Topics range from the gold standard to how bad the Versailles treaty was to the first cogent explanations of deficit spending and the multiplier effect ... Read full review

Review: Essays in Persuasion

User Review  - Sakshi Hazuria - Goodreads

Easily my favourite work by Keyenes. Read full review

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References from web pages

Essays in Persuasion by John Maynard Keynes at Questia Online Library
Book details. Essays in Persuasion. Essays in Persuasion ... Read the complete book Essays in Persuasion by becoming a questia.com member. ...
www.questia.com/ library/ book/ essays-in-persuasion-by-john-maynard-keynes.jsp

JSTOR: Essays in Persuasion.
Essays in Persuasion. By jm KEYNES. (Macmillan. Pp. 376. 10s. 6d.) I DO not think that anybody can read Mr. Keynes" essays without asking' How can it be ...
links.jstor.org/ sici?sici=0013-0133(193206)42%3A166%3C258%3AEIP%3E2.0.CO%3B2-R

IFM: Extract from Essays in Persuasion by John Maynard Keynes
Extract from ‘Essays in Persuasion’ by John Maynard Keynes (Norton and Co Edition, New York, 1963) Pages 371-372: from the last essay ‘The Future’ ...
www.interestfreemoney.org/ papers/ extract-keynes-essays.htm

Economics 49.01S
There are additional readings from Keynes’s book Essays in Persuasion (paperback), which is also available at the Duke bookstore. ...
www.econ.duke.edu/ ~erw/ 49S/ econ49syl.html

Reflections on the Pure Theory of Money of Mr. jm Keynes ...
Reflections on the Pure Theory of Money of Mr. JM Keynes
www.mises.org/ story/ 2474

A MOTHER IN MANNVILLE ESSAYS term papers, research papers on A ...
"Essays in Persuasion", 2004. Discusses how John Maynard Keynes saw the role of the ... Specifically, in Essays in Persuasion, Keynes is remarkable in his ...
www.termpapers.essayexpress.com/ lib/ essay?A=type1& KEYW=a+mother+in+mannville+essays

John Maynard Keynes - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Keynes wrote Essays in Biography and Essays in Persuasion, the former giving portraits of economists and notables, whilst the latter presents some of ...
en.wikipedia.org/ wiki/ John_Maynard_Keynes

recommended reading list on the abelard site
(pbk, 1994, Penguin Books, 0140179682) £7.19 [amazon.co.uk]. Keynes, John Maynard Essays in Persuasion (pbk, 1991, ww Norton & Co, 0393001903) ...
www.abelard.org/ reading/ rec-hi.htm

John Maynard Keynes - Wikiquote
"The Future", Essays in Persuasion (1931) Ch. 5, JMK, CW, IX, pp.329 - 331, Economic Possibilities for our Grandchildren (1930); as quoted in "Keynes and ...
en.wikiquote.org/ wiki/ John_Maynard_Keynes

32512. Keynes, John Maynard. The Columbia World of Quotations. 1996
Essays in Persuasion, ch. 5, “The Future,” (1931). Keynes argued that the “detestable ... love of money” and other vices of greed must continue until the ...
www.bartleby.com/ 66/ 12/ 32512.html

About the author (1963)

John Maynard Keynes, an English economist, is regarded as the most important and influential economist of the twentieth century, if not of all time. A brilliant child, he wrestled with the economic meaning of interest before he was 5 years old. He excelled both as a student and as a member of the debating team at Eton. His reputation at King's College at Cambridge University was such that he was invited to weekly breakfasts with economist A. C. Pigou, and even Alfred Marshall begged him to become a professional economist. He was elected president of the Union, the most important nongovernmental debating society in the world, and his close friends included the intellectual members of the Bloomsbury group. Keynes was described as a phenomenon---and all of this took place before he graduated from Cambridge. After graduating in 1905, Keynes took a civil service post in India. Bored with his job, he resigned and returned to Cambridge to teach. In 1912 he assumed the editorship of the Economic Journal, the leading journal in Britain at the time, continuing in the post for 33 years. His first major book, Indian Currency and Finance (1913), was an immediate success. He took part in the Paris Peace Conference as a representative of the Treasury. Later he held several other government advisory posts, served as a director of the Bank of England, and was president of an insurance company. In addition, Keynes was a noted patron of the arts and married the most beautiful and popular ballerina of his era. As if this weren't enough, he managed to amass a small fortune by investing in stocks and foreign currencies in his spare time. At the Paris Peace Conference, Keynes became so dismayed by the harsh terms imposed on Germany in the Treaty of Versailles that he resigned in anger several days before the treaty was signed. He then wrote The Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919), which outlined the folly of the treaty. Being a man of many interests, Keynes next took a brief break from economics to publish A Treatise on Probability (1921), which Bertrand Russell (see Vols. 4 and 5) described as "impossible to praise too highly." Keynes's A Tract on Monetary Reform (1923) was a rather technical book that questioned the value of the gold standard over a managed paper currency. A Treatise on Money (1930), which explored the business cycle, was followed by Essays in Persuasion (1931) and Essays in Biography (1933). The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, published in 1936, was Keynes's crowning achievement, and it took the world by storm. According to Keynes, the economy could be thought of as being divided into consumer, investment (or business), government, and foreign sectors. This was hardly a novel idea, but Keynes went on to postulate the exact nature of expenditures in each sector, especially the spending patterns of the consumer sector, which he portrayed by using a graph he called a "consumption function." He reasoned that fluctuations in total economic activity could be traced to instability in the business sector, which had a multiplier effect on the rest of the economy. The relationship specified in The General Theory were tantalizing to economists, because they could be tested and empirically verified. Subsequent research largely confirmed Keynes's propositions. Soon governments, including that of the United States, began to develop a set of national income accounts to provide estimates of gross national product and national income. The General Theory was also popular because it offered policy prescriptions to help deal with the problems of depression, recession, and unemployment. Today the term "Keynesian" is used to describe individuals or policies that use taxation and government spending to affect aggregate economic performance.

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