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Chapter 25 - Neo-Classical Economics: A Trail of Economic Destruction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 April 2024

Erik Reinert
Affiliation:
Tallinna Tehnikaülikool, Estonia
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Summary

.. .soon or late, it is ideas, not vested interests, which are dangerous for good or evil.’

John Maynard Keynes, closing words of The General Theory (1936).

This chapter argues that the international financial crisis is just the last in a series of economic calamities produced by a type of theory that converted the economics profession from a study of real-world phenomena into what in the end became mathematized ideology. While the crises themselves started by halving real wages in many countries in the economic periphery, in Latin America in the late 1970s, their origins are found in economic theory in the 1950s when empirical reality became academically unfashionable. About half way in the destructive path of this theoretical tsunami – from its origins in the world periphery in the 1970s until today's financial meltdowns – we find the destruction of the productive capacity of the Second World, the former Soviet Union. Now the chickens are coming home to roost: wealth and welfare destruction is increasingly hitting the First World itself: Europe and the United States. This chapter argues that it is necessary to see these developments as one continuous process over more than three decades of applying neo-classical economics and neo-liberal economic policies that destroyed, rather than created, real wages and wealth. A reconstruction of widespread welfare will need to be based on the understanding that what unleashed the juggernaut of welfare destruction was not ‘market failure’; it was ‘theory failure’. Being a résumé of a larger research project, the chapter includes references to more detailed studies of these processes of ‘destructive destruction’.

Introduction

Two institutions established soon after World War II provided the conditions for a 30-year period of unprecedented increase in human welfare: The 1947 Marshall Plan, in the end re-industrializing not only Europe but creating a cordon sanitaire of wealthy nations around the communist bloc from Norway via Southern Europe to Japan, and the 1948 Havana Charter which established the rules of international trade that made this industrialization plan possible.

Both institutions were based on a key insight from Secretary of State George Marshall's 1947 Harvard Speech announcing his plan: that civilization had always been built on a particular type of economic structure.

Type
Chapter
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The Other Canon of Economics
Essays in the Theory and History of Uneven Economic Development
, pp. 719 - 736
Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2024

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