Monday, June 15, 2026

Joseph Stiglitz on how Keynes saved cap­it­al­ism from itself

 https://www.pressreader.com/canada/the-economist/20260418/281603837043499

~~ recommended by emil karpo ~~

Joseph Stiglitz

18 Apr 2026
 

How John Maynard Keynes saved cap­it­al­ism from itself

TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY years ago Amer­ica was largely an agrarian eco­nomy—affected, of course, by weather but without real busi­ness cycles. Those came with the devel­op­ment of cap­it­al­ism in the 19th cen­tury. And so began the deep fluc­tu­ations of the mod­ern era, the two worst being the Great Depres­sion of the 1930s and the Great Reces­sion that began in 2008. For­tu­nately, John Maynard Keynes, the great eco­nom­ist of the 20th cen­tury, showed us that we did not have to suf­fer these dys­func­tions of cap­it­al­ism. The gov­ern­ment could do something about them.

As the expres­sion goes, neces­sity is the mother of inven­tion. By the time Frank­lin Roosevelt took office in 1933, Amer­ica had already lost four valu­able years sink­ing deeper into depres­sion. Roosevelt couldn’t wait for Keynes to spell out what to do. He inter­vened decis­ively—one might say intu­it­ively. Some ele­ments of his agenda are still con­tro­ver­sial; des­pite the unem­ploy­ment rate peak­ing at close to 25% dur­ing the Depres­sion, most eco­nom­ists said: “Leave it to the mar­ket. It will cor­rect itself even­tu­ally.” But as Keynes quipped, in the long run we’re all dead.

Keynes’s 1936 book “The Gen­eral The­ory of Employ­ment, Interest and Money” con­sti­tuted an intel­lec­tual revolu­tion. Con­trary to the pre­vail­ing doc­trines of the day, he argued that mar­kets left alone could remain mired in long peri­ods of deep unem­ploy­ment. Even if there were self-cor­rect­ing “forces” return­ing the eco­nomy to full employ­ment, they worked too slowly on their own to pre­vent sig­ni­fic­ant eco­nomic hard­ship. He explained why mon­et­ary policy—favoured by many con­ser­vat­ive eco­nom­ists when inter­ven­tion was deemed neces­sary—would be inef­fect­ive in a deep down­turn. And he provided a solu­tion: gov­ern­ment spend­ing could stim­u­late demand and lift the eco­nomy out of the mire.

The good news was that the con­sti­tu­tion had suf­fi­cient flex­ib­il­ity to allow these new ideas to be tested and show their worth, even though the Found­ing Fath­ers could not have anti­cip­ated this vital role for gov­ern­ment. In those days the gov­ern­ment was far smal­ler. The cent­ral gov­ern­ment had neither the resources nor the tools to sta­bil­ise an inher­ently unstable cap­it­al­ist sys­tem.

Keynes was no left-wing rad­ical; he was not overly con­cerned with inequal­ity, he believed in the mar­ket eco­nomy and he believed that his pro­posed inter­ven­tion—not a revolu­tion, but a minor “fix”—would save the day.

 

Internet disagrees on whether Keynes really said this about capitalism, but  the message is worth debating. : r/economy

https://preview.redd.it/internet-disagrees-on-whether-keynes-really-said-this-about-v0-172ng8c9ddgf1.jpeg?width=640&crop=smart&auto=webp&s=f9a6110b2220351fe028d69bb69d5343fb0f38ab

Nev­er­the­less, many people were sus­pi­cious of Keynes because he provided a rationale for a lar­ger gov­ern­ment. Some ideo­logues on the right would have pre­ferred that the coun­try remain in a depres­sion than have the gov­ern­ment come to the res­cue. As they saw it, if the gov­ern­ment could do that, who knows what else it might do? It might guar­an­tee every­body a min­imum pen­sion, health care and an edu­ca­tion. And those things might require taxes bey­ond the miserly amounts Amer­ic­ans were pay­ing. This was espe­cially dan­ger­ous—to the fore­bears of today’s bil­lion­aire olig­archs—because some 20 years earlier the United States had adop­ted the 16th Amend­ment to the con­sti­tu­tion, allow­ing the levy­ing of a (pro­gress­ive) income tax.

In ret­ro­spect, Roosevelt’s prag­mat­ism and Keynes’s ideas saved cap­it­al­ism from the cap­it­al­ists. Had the lat­ter had their way, the fail­ures of unfettered cap­it­al­ism, an eco­nomy stifled in a seem­ingly never-end­ing depres­sion, would prob­ably have meant that it would not have sur­vived demo­cratic pres­sures. Instead, Pres­id­ent John F. Kennedy, under the influ­ence of strong Keyne­sian eco­nom­ists (includ­ing John Ken­neth Gal­braith, Robert Solow and Paul Samuel­son) adop­ted Keyne­sian policies as the corner­stone of his eco­nomic frame­work. Throughout the 1970s, with the coun­try facing infla­tion (then, as today, largely caused by sharp increases in oil prices), the right claimed Keynes was passé. While Keynes had emphas­ised the role of gov­ern­ment in sus­tain­ing total (or aggreg­ate) demand so the eco­nomy remained at full employ­ment, Pres­id­ent Ron­ald Reagan flipped the lan­guage around to emphas­ise sup­ply. Con­ser­vat­ives argued that if taxes were low and reg­u­la­tions light, the dynam­ics of the mar­ket would ensure growth along with full employ­ment. So optim­istic were they that they even claimed cuts in tax rates would spur so much growth that tax rev­en­ues would increase. Of course, that didn’t hap­pen.

In sub­sequent dec­ades Amer­ica repeatedly went into down­turns, some quite deep, demon­strat­ing force­fully that unfettered mar­kets were not good at self-reg­u­lat­ing. Dur­ing the Great Reces­sion and in the covid-19 pan­demic espe­cially, Keyne­sian inter­ven­tions—gov­ern­ment spend­ing—proved enorm­ously effect­ive.

And yet, in spite of all the evid­ence, the polit­ical battle con­tin­ues. In the early 1990s, there was an attempt to pass a bal­anced­budget amend­ment, which would have all but pre­ven­ted effect­ive Keyne­sian policies. For­tu­nately it was defeated. Dur­ing Pres­id­ent Don­ald Trump’s first term, there was a revival of “sup­ply-side policies”, with a major cut in taxes to cor­por­a­tions and the super-rich. The policies failed, as the earlier Reagan policies had: defi­cits increased and the boost to growth was min­imal, if any­thing.

If the con­sti­tu­tion were cre­ated today, know­ing that the gov­ern­ment has the cap­ab­il­ity to ensure that the eco­nomy oper­ates at full employ­ment, the framers would prob­ably have man­dated that it do so. The closest the coun­try came was the Employ­ment Act of 1946, which cre­ated the Coun­cil of Eco­nomic Advisers in the White House. It com­mit­ted Amer­ica “to foster…con­di­tions under which there will be afforded use­ful employ­ment for those able, will­ing, and seek­ing work”. In spite of hav­ing the tools to accom­plish this mis­sion, too often, for too many, we have failed.

 

Joseph Stiglitz is a Nobel-prizewin­ning eco­nom­ist and a pro­fessor at Columbia Uni­versity.

 


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