John Maynard Keynes, Volume 1The culmination of these efforts was his famous anti-inflationist tract, How to Pay for the War, whose logic, and supporting national income accounts, was accepted as the basis of Kingsley Wood's budget of 1941. For the rest of his life Keynes was involved in difficult financial negotiations with the United States, first to establish conditions of American help to Britain, then to devise a postwar financial system that satisfied American requirements without sacrificing Britain's interests, and finally, and most traumatically, to get Britain a loan to tide it over the first postwar years. When he died in 1946, Lionel Robbins wrote, "He gave his life for his country, as surely as if he had fallen on the field of battle." |
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Page 154
... politics , but in his papers there is a 99 - page undergraduate essay on ' The Political Doctrines of Edmund Burke'.42 This is his most extended treatment of the ' theory and methods of politics ' . It was submitted for the University ...
... politics , but in his papers there is a 99 - page undergraduate essay on ' The Political Doctrines of Edmund Burke'.42 This is his most extended treatment of the ' theory and methods of politics ' . It was submitted for the University ...
Page 155
... political theory : He did not much believe in political ends good intrinsically and in isolation . The happiness of the people was his goal , and the science of government worthless except in so far as it guided him to that end ...
... political theory : He did not much believe in political ends good intrinsically and in isolation . The happiness of the people was his goal , and the science of government worthless except in so far as it guided him to that end ...
Page 246
... political passivity . Political activity could certainly be justified on Moorite grounds if there was an immediate political threat to civilised values – for exam- ple , the threat of war . Whether a life wholly devoted to politics was ...
... political passivity . Political activity could certainly be justified on Moorite grounds if there was an immediate political threat to civilised values – for exam- ple , the threat of war . Whether a life wholly devoted to politics was ...
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Hopes betrayed, 1883-1920, Volume 2 Robert Skidelsky,Robert Jacob Alexander Skidelsky No preview available - 1992 |
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