Assailed by conservative critics in Congress, academia, and
television talk shows, liberal economics may be in a fight for its
political life. Conrad Waligorski contends, however, that rumors of
its death are premature and far from desirable. His close analysis
of the political theories of John Maynard Keynes, John Kenneth
Galbraith, Lester Thurow, and Robert Reich reveals why liberal
economics remains a vigorous force in the debates over our nation's
future.
Waligorski argues that, despite individual differences, these
economists are bound together by a common vision of the public
good. Collectively, these thinkers represent a strong counter
tradition to the laissez-faire, free-market philosophy of James
Buchanan, Milton Friedman, F. A. Hayek, Newt Gingrich, and other
proponents of minimalist government and "trickle-down
economics."
Contrary to such critics, liberal economists advocate government
regulation as a guard against the power of the marketplace to erode
our most cherished political values and social institutions. For
these economists, a completely free market is definitely not the
best market for democracy; an unrestrained market guarantees
neither fairness nor prosperity and in Keynes' time nearly
destroyed our nation.
Waligorski locates the roots of their tradition in the thought
exemplified by American Progressives John Dewey and Louis Brandeis
and British liberal L. T. Hobhouse. But he also shows that these
economists are no ivory tower theorists, that they are genuinely
engaged with real-world problems and politics. Indeed, all of these
theorists have written for a broad public in an effort to influence
public policy and all have been political activists and/or advisors
at various points in their careers.
A fitting sequel and companion to Waligorski's last book, The
Political Theory of Conservative Economists, this new work provides
a provocative challenge to the relentless conservative and
libertarian attacks on the regulatory welfare state. Certainly, few
debates will be more closely watched in this presidential election
year.
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