Keynes’s General Theory- really a monumental master
piece of 20th century completed its 75 years of existence last year
. This year(2012) happens to be the centenary celebration of Milton Friedman. Thanks to the financial benevolence
of Malcolm & Elizabeth Adisheshaiah Trust , under the guidance of Prof.N.Rama
gopal of Annamalai University , Dr.Ramasamy of A.V.C.College, Mayavaram
conducted both the functions in his
campus and I was one of the invited speakers .On both the occasions, I had the
opportunity to read prof.Paul Krugman’s scholarly writeup viz Introduction to Keynes’s
General Theory of Employment , Interest andMoney and ‘ Who was Milton Friedman?’
Ever since I returned from Gokhale Institute of
Politics and Economics, Pune in 1982 after the completion of my Ph.D I have
fallen in love with Paul Krugman’s writings. While writing a new introduction
to Keynes’s General Theory in 2005 , the 70th year of publication,
he made the following remark that he read that classic as a student but hardly
touched there after. Again in view of its continued relevance to interpret
contemporary developments in the world economy, he again read the book to write
a lengthy commentary, passing on the central message of Keynes –How did he do it?
What he missed it and so on. This write up , combined with his classic piece on
Miton Friedman do have an educative influence on lesser privileged people like
us who have a passionate interest in economics but clearly lacking scholarhsip
to understand the tricky aspect of the
subject .
Last year, Prof.Neelakantan, former Director of
MIDS, who must have crossed 75 was there at A.V.C to scintillate all of us by giving
the juice of Keynes’s General Theory. There were also many others to do justice
to task assigned to them. That occasion also helped me to re read Keynes and get
fresh insight as to how monetary policy was impotent and ineffective, and that
fiscal policy should play a dominant role. It was an altogether different
matter that the Keynesian medicine of deficit budget and public spending was
half heartedly applied and hence the Depression prolonged for more than a
decade and ironically the economic salvation came through Second World War.
This time the audience was large, the hall was very
big, stage setting was very nice and yet in terms of interpreting the substantial contribution of
Miton Friedman , there was some slack and nobody can be blamed for this .From my side,
given the constraint of time , following Paul Krugman fully and feverishly and
getting convinced that he was right , I made an attempt to expose the
intellectual fallacy and dishonesty on
the part of Friedman in interpreting the Great Depression of 1930s through the
monetary lens.By citing the statistics
that monetary base increased from
$6.05bn to $7.02bn and that the money supply declined from $26.6bn to
$19.9bn , I brought home the truth that
Federal Reserve Bank of U.S did not adapt any deflationary policy and
that, contraction of money suppply was the fall out of series of bank failures
ins 1930-31 , leading to excessive liquidity prefernce by the general public
and the bank as well .
Before I conclude this piece let me quote the attribute
of Economists as quoted by Theodre White in ‘Breach of Faith’ “Economists are very much like reporters
and necessary. The best of them can tell you exactly where you are. The
exceptional ones can tell you how you got there.But none can predict how you go
from where you are to where you want to get.”
Personally I feel that both Keynes and Krugman are exceptional
professional economists who could write more analytically on issues and tell
where we are and how we got here. We need the tribes of these economists to interpret
the complex events taking place around us.
If God wills and my physical stamina permits , I
will subject myself to the self imposed discipline of writing more on Keynes
and Smith, Ricardo and Friedman, Sameulson and Joan Robinson and so on and by reading and re reading Krugm,an’s scholarly
writings .
1 comment:
Thanks a lot Sir for your numerous class lectures on Milton Friedman and your uncounted mention of Paul Krugman that I finally read his "A new Introduction to the General Theory". Feels like a better and clearer picture of Keynesian and depression economics and why Keynes with his General Theory is said to be a danger. Thanks a lot for bringing me close to enlightenment of a subject which has produced great laurels and I'm trying to touch for the past three years.. Hope my journey with guidance of teachers like you has a tough sail.
Hersch Sahay
Dept. Of Economics
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