John Maynard Keynes

From Citizendium
Revision as of 11:59, 8 April 2007 by imported>João Prado Ribeiro Campos (→‎Major works published:)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
<This article is under construction>
For more information, see: Economics.

John Maynard Keynes, 1st Baron of Tilton (Cambridge, England, June 5, 1883 - London, England, April 21, 1946) [1] was the son of John Neville Keynes, registrar of the University of Cambridge and eminent logician and economist, and Florence Ada Brown, advocate for the poor, first female Councillor of Cambridge Borough Council, and later mayor of Cambridge. He was educated at Eton and King's College, Cambridge, and began a short career in the civil service, where he was assigned to the India Office from 1906 to 1909. There he acquired an intimate knowledge of the government service. A reorganization of the Economics Department at Cambridge opened up an opportunity for Keynes, who had earlier come under the influence of its head, Alfred Marshall. Resigning from the civil service in 1909 Keynes was elected fellow of King's College and returned to Cambridge. In 1911 he was chosen as editor of the Economic Journal, the publication of the Royal Economic Society and one of the leading professional journals.

Keynes was greatly influenced by Alfred Marshall (1842–1924) who, besides being a brilliant and original theorist, also passionately believed that economics should contribute to human well-being and that economics students should know as much about the economic and social facts of the real world as the theoretical approaches through which they could be organised and understood. Interested in literature and philosophy, Keynes was invited to join the "Apostles" (The Cambridge Conversazione Society) [2], a secret society of dons and undergraduates who met to discuss ethical and political issues. The group included Lytton Strachey, Leonard Woolf, E. M. Forster and Bertrand Russell. Woolf and Russell brought him into contact with leaders of the Fabian Society [3], including Sidney Webb, Beatrice Webb and George Bernard Shaw.

Keynes became one the most important figures in the entire history of economics. He revolutionized economics with his classic book, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money [4] (1936). This is probably the most influential social science treatise of the XXth Century. It changed the way the world looked at the economy and the role of government in society.

Major works published:

In 1913, shortly after he was appointed to the Royal Commission on Indian Currency and Finance, Keynes published his first book Indian Currency and Finance [5] . This book has been referred to as the best in the English language on the gold exchange standard. By 1919 Keynes was the senior Treasury official sent as part of the British delegation to the Versailles Peace Conference. Keynes disagreed with the harsh terms negotiated at Versailles and, after resigning, returned to England and wrote The Economic Consequences of the Peace [6] (1919), a controversial book which argued that the war reparations imposed on Germany could not be paid and turned Keynes a worldwide famous economist. The controversy over the Treaty of Versailles, signed in Paris in 1919, soon subsided because Keynes' predictions almost immediately started to materialize. On 1930 Keynes published his his first major work on economics A Treatise on Money [7] which set out his Wicksellian Theory [8] of the credit cycle and ignited another controversy. In this two-volume, dense work, full of brilliant insights but incomprehensible as a whole for most students, Keynes attempted, with little success, to improve upon of the Cambridge version of the quantity theory of money, laying out the rudiments of a liquidity preference theory of interest. Keynes's new book came under immediate attack form Friedrich von Hayek [9], the laissez-faire advocate, who wrote a review of the Treatise [7] so harsh that Keynes decided to request Sraffa [10] to write a review Hayek's own competing work and condemn it, no less harshly. The Keynes-Hayek conflict initiated an endless battle in the Cambridge-L.S.E. [11] circuit, its reflexes extending to the present day.

References

Bibliography