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As the United States continues its slow recovery from the global financial crisis of 2008, politicians, policymakers and academics are increasingly turning to the lessons of history to gain insight into how we might address both current and future economic challenges. This volume offers contributions by eminent economists and historians, each commenting on the theories of a particular 20th century economist and the ways in which those theories apply to modern economic thought.Presented in rough chronological order of the lives of the featured economists, these chapters tackle a number of major economic issues, including the role of central banks, monetary and fiscal policy, government spending, entrepreneurship and financial innovation. The contributors apply the theories of Walter Bagehot, Thorstein Veblen, John Maynard Keynes, Joseph Schumpeter and Friedrich Hayek to these and other crucial topics, offering both comprehensive historical analysis and vital insights into the modern US and world economies. Two additional chapters on the Great Depression and US monetary and fiscal history round out this critical collection.Students and professors of all economic disciplines will find much to admire in this fascinating volume, as will anyone with an interest in economics both past and present.Contributors: B. Bateman, B. Caldwell, R.N. Langlois, P. Mehrling, R. Prasch, T.J. Sargent, P. Temin, G.P. West III, R.M. Whaples
Edited by G. Page West III, Professor of Strategy and Entrepreneurship and Robert M. Whaples, Professor of Economics, Wake Forest University, US
Contents:1. Insights for Today’s Trying Economic TimesRobert M. Whaples and G. Page West III2. Insights from Walter BagehotPerry Mehrling3. Insights from Thorstein VeblenRobert Prasch4. Insights from John Maynard KeynesBradley Bateman5. Insights from the Great DepressionPeter Temin6. Insights from Joseph SchumpeterRichard N. Langlois7. Insights from Friedrich HayekBruce Caldwell8. Drawing Lines in US Monetary and Fiscal HistoryThomas J. SargentIndex
’This readable, well-written volume is an excellent resource for both undergraduate and graduate students interested in the history of economic ideas and the history of economic thought. Policy makers and politicians would also benefit tremendously from reading this work. . . Highly recommended.’