• @Shrike502
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    41 year ago

    What does “Keynesian" even mean?

    • loathesome dongeater
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      101 year ago

      Keynesian relates to the work of John Keynes, a British economist. What it means exactly depends on the context.

      • @redtea
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        81 year ago

        I’ve been trying to think of a helpful answer all day. Yours is more helpful than anything I came up with.

        What would you say is the core aspect, common to Keynesianism whatever the context? Maybe ‘keeping the money flowing even if it means a policy of tax and spend’?

        I’ve recently had to read through some Hayek, a staunch critic of progressive taxes. Thatcher based her policies on Hayek, it’s said. In one respect, Hayek was the negation of Keynes. But most if not all the imperial core states will tax and spend to get out of crises and to funnel public money into private hands through ‘austerity’ periods.

        This suggests to me that Keynes, as others here have suggested, simply presented one way or saving capitalism from one type of crisis (one where the workers say, ‘Oi, mate, give us some welfare or we’ll do a Bolshevik’). In addition to the fact that Keynesian welfare states only work if said state is exploiting other states. So it can provide libraries and healthcare, but the users have got to close their ears and eyes to the suffering of the global south.

        • loathesome dongeater
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          51 year ago

          You are right. At the core Keynesianism is about spending to induce demand. This is the macroeconomic aspect but by context I meant there are specialised applications of the theory in areas like monetary and fiscal policies and employment.

    • @PolandIsAStateOfMind
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      81 year ago

      I guess “capitalist”. A lot of radlibs tend to be pretty much libertarian-leaning and they hate Keynes for his theory of saving capitalism with regulations.

      • @Shrike502
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        91 year ago

        Ah, so the good ol’ “regulated capitalism will stave off the known issues inherent in the system”?

        • @PolandIsAStateOfMind
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          1 year ago

          Yeah. Fun fact: After WW1 Lenin just casually dismissed Keynes theory as nonsense since he didn’t thought it warrant much attention. Little he did suspected that liberal brainwashing will get so far that century later it would be considered dangerously radical idea XD