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Military Keynesianism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Military Keynesianism is a government economic policy in which the government devotes large amounts of spending to the military in an effort to increase economic growth. This is a specific variation ...
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Keynesian economics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Robert Lucas' attack on Keynesianism; An even bigger attack on Keynesianism came from Robert Lucas, the founder of a theory called rational expectations. Although one aspect of this theory won Lucas the Nobel Prize in 1995, history has not been kind to the rest of it.
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The decline of Keynesianism that began a quarter-century ago was an ambiguous event, since the Keynesians, helped along by the economic effects of the Vietnam War, had reduced unemployment to below 4% in 1969, at an inflation cost that was both predicted and quite moderate by later standards.
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Keynesianism is a term that identifies both a school of economic theory and a distinctive approach to public policy. ... In the period from World War II through the early 1970s, Keynesianism rose to ever greater influence as both a theory and a guide for public policy. The Keynesian analysis gained a prominent place...
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Investment Dictionary: Keynesian Economics ... Keynesian economics (also called Keynesianism (pronounced /ˈkeɪnziən/) and Keynesian Theory) is a macroeconomic theory based on the ideas of 20th-century British economist John Maynard Keynes. ... 4 Postwar Keynesianism...
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KEYNESIANISM AND BRETTON WOODS ... Keynesianism worked remarkably well in its time; and the deployment of the theories of demand management may well have led, in part at least, to the long-lived post-war boom. It is popularly believed that it was undermined by the advent of Monetarism.
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