Debunking Economics: An Interview with Steve Keen – Part II
Interview conducted by Philip Pilkington, a journalist and writer based in Dublin, Ireland
Part I of the interview can be found here.
PP: Let’s move on to another interesting point about
neoclassical economic theory. It’s my understanding that the whole
system is assumed to be, at its very essence, one of ‘truck and barter’.
In that I mean that they tend to ignore the fact that capitalist
economies are, in reality, monetary economies and have nothing to do
with barter-based economies. Yet, am I correct in saying that the
neoclassicals abstract away from this in order to get away from all
sorts of things that make their type of analysis more difficult? I’m
thinking in particular of where profits come from and the role of credit
in the capitalist system of production. Could you talk about this a
little?
SK: That’s actually a strange point of the theory.
There was no need to assume the non-existence of money in building a
model of capitalism – fundamentally, it makes as much sense as assuming
the non-existence of wings when building a model of flight. But this was
an established aspect of pre-neoclassical economics long before Walras
came on the scene.
Friday, November 18, 2011
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