Book Review: Steve Keen (2021) The New Economics: A Manifesto

Book Review: Steve Keen (2021) The New Economics: A Manifesto
Bichler, Shimshon and Nitzan, Jonathan. (2022). Real-World Economics Review. No. 102. December. pp. 156-163. (Review; English).

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Alternative Locations

http://www.paecon.net/PAEReview/issue102/BichlerNitzan102.pdf, https://www.academia.edu/93292383/Book_Review_Steve_Keen_2021_The_New_Economics_A_Manifesto, https://capitalaspower.com/2022/12/bichler-nitzan-book-review-steve-keen-2021-the-new-economics-a-manifesto/, https://www.econstor.eu/handle/10419/267163

Abstract or Brief Description

Steve Keen’s book, The New Economics: A Manifesto (2021), offers a new path for economics, and for good reason. In his view, neoclassicism, the paradigm that rules modern-day economics, has become a serious menace: "I regard Neoclassical economics as not merely a bad methodology for economic analysis, but as an existential threat to the continued existence of capitalism – and human civilization in general. It has to go. (155). "

Strong words? Of course, but they are wholly warranted. Neoclassical economics is the official scientific underpinning of capitalism as well as its main ideological defence, and according to Keen, it fails in both tasks.2 Contrary to received opinion, neoclassicism cannot explain capitalism – either in detail or in the aggregate – and the policies it prescribes do not support but undermine the very system it defends. It must be scrapped, says Keen, and the purpose of his book is to explain why and outline what should come in its stead.

Half a century worth of research and writing on the subject has made Keen one of the world’s foremost critics of neoclassical economics. His previous bestseller, the rigorous-yet-accessible Debunking Economics (2011), dismantled neoclassical microeconomics. His new volume hammers its macro framework.

The book focuses on three key issues: (1) the bizarre neoclassical perspective that money, credit and debt do not matter for the macroeconomy; (2) the neoclassical insistence that the economy’s complex, nonlinear turbulences are best explained in linear, self-equilibrating terms; and (3) the fact that neoclassicists have hijacked the economics of climate change, using patently false assumptions to justify do-nothing policies with untold future consequences.

Language

English

Publication Type

Review

Keywords

banks climate complex systems credit debt Finance macroeconomics money neoclassical economics policy

Subject

BN Macro
BN Methodology
BN Money & Finance
BN Power
BN Policy
BN State & Government
BN Crisis
BN Distribution
BN Ecology & Environment
BN Growth
BN Ideology

Depositing User

Jonathan Nitzan

Date Deposited

19 Dec 2022 23:46

Last Modified

07 Jan 2023 19:25

URL:

https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/id/eprint/756

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