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Blissex's avatar

«economic activity for Keynes, whether free trade, directed trade, government-controlled or whatever, was not a value in itself»

Some time ago on a blog I found this quite illustrative quote:

https://jmaynardkeynes.ucc.ie/national-self-sufficiency.html

John Maynard Keynes "National Self-Sufficiency" The Yale Review (1933-06)

«The nineteenth century carried to extravagant lengths the criterion of what one can call for short "the financial results," as a test of the advisability of any course of action sponsored by private or by collective action. The whole conduct of life was made into a sort of parody of an accountant's night-mare. Instead of using their vastly increased material and technical resources to build a wonder city, the men of the nineteenth century built slums; and they thought it right and advisable to build slums because slums, on the test of private enterprise, “paid”, whereas the wonder city would, they thought, have been an act of foolish extravagance, which would, in the imbecile idiom of the financial fashion, have “mortgaged the future” – though how the construction to-day of great and glorious works can impoverish the future, no man can see until his mind is beset by false analogies from an irrelevant accountancy.»

Which also illustrates how "innocent" he was or pretended to be about distributional issues: those who invested in slums and for which those slums "paid" were not the same people who had to live in them and would benefit from a “wonder city” they could not individually afford.

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eg's avatar

Give me Keynes over the joyless Austrian idiots any day and twice on Sundays ...

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