Steve Keen | Can Five Hundred Years of Economic Theory Help Us Predict the Next Financial Crisis?

Published: June 5, 2017, 8 a.m.

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In Episode\\xa012 of Hidden Forces,\\xa0host Demetri Kofinas speaks with economist Steve Keen. Steve is Professor of Economics at Kingston University in London and one of a handful of economists to correctly anticipate the Global Financial Crisis of 2008. Professor Keen is also the popular author of \\u201cDebunking Economics,\\u201d as well as the timely book, \\u201cCan We Avoid Another Financial Crisis?\\u201d\\xa0

In today\\u2019s conversation, we tear up the textbook of contemporary economics. We dispense with equilibrium. We embrace irrationality. We internalize economic externalities and drop assumptions about the world that do not comport with the reality of lived experience. We begin our history of economics with the physiocrats, enlightenment thinkers of the early 18th century who concerned themselves with the question: \\u201cwhere does stuff come from?\\u201d We move through the classical period of economics, exploring the philosophies of Adam Smith and David Ricardo. We stop to question the assumptions of the Newtonian minded neoclassicists of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, who saw fit to squeeze a complicated world into a set of simple models. Where did our ideas of rational preference, utility maximization, and market equilibrium come from? How have these ideas been debunked by the events, insights, and theories of the last 100 years? What was the role of John Maynard Keynes and his Keynesian revolution? Where did he and the Austrian Friedrich von Hayek meet? Where has the evolution of economics taken us since World War II? What is the role of banking in the economy? How is money created? How does it circulate? What is the role of credit? How might this almost Godly instrument of wealth creation have become a source of global instability and financial distress? Finally, Steve Keen and Demetri explore the landscape of the modern economy. They look at China, with its ghost cities and massive state-directed banking system. They explore Australia, Canada, and South Korea, as possible sources for the next financial crisis and consider possible solutions for society, as well as the individual.

Producer & Host:\\xa0Demetri Kofinas

Editor: Stylianos Nicolaou

Join the conversation on\\xa0Facebook,\\xa0Instagram, and\\xa0Twitter\\xa0at @hiddenforcespod

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