The Affluent Society x{0026} Other Writings, 1952-1967

The Affluent Society x{0026} Other Writings, 1952-1967

Galbraith, John Kenneth

Editorial Library Of America
Fecha de edición septiembre 2010

Idioma inglés

EAN 9781598530773
1056 páginas
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Resumen del libro

Incisive and original, John Kenneth Galbraith wrote with an eloquence that burst the conventions of his discipline and won a readership none of his fellow economists could match. This Library of America volume, the first devoted to economics, gathers four of his key early works, the books that established him as one of the leading public intellectuals of the last century. In American Capitalism, Galbraith exposes with great panache the myth of American free-market competition. The idea that an impersonal market sets prices and wages, and maintains balance between supply and demand, remained so vital in American economic thought, Galbraith argued, because oligopolistic American businessmen never acknowledged their collective power. Also overlooked was the way that groups such as unions and regulatory agencies react to large oligopolies by exerting countervailing power a concept that was the book's lasting contribution.

The Great Crash, 1929 offers a gripping account of the most legendary (and thus misunderstood) financial collapse in American history, as well as an inquiry into why it led to sustained depression. Galbraith posits five reasons: unusually high income inequality; a bad, overleveraged corporate structure; an unsound banking system; unbalanced foreign trade; and, finally, the poor state of economic intelligence. His account is a trenchant analysis of the 1929 crisis and a cautionary tale of ignorance and hubris among stock-market players; not surprisingly, the book was again a bestseller in the wake of the 2008 economic collapse.

In The Affluent Society, the book that introduced the phrase the conventional wisdom into the American lexicon, Galbraith takes on a shibboleth of free-market conservatives and Keynesian liberals alike: the paramount importance of production. For Galbraith, the American mania for production continued even in an era of unprecedented affluence, when the basic needs of all but an impoverished minority had easily been met. Thus the creation of new and spurious needs through advertising leading to skyrocketing consumer debt, and eventually a private sector that is glutted at the expense of a starved public sector.

The New Industrial State stands as the most developed exposition of Galbraith's major themes. Examining the giant postwar corporations, Galbraith argued that the technostructure necessary for such vast organizations comprising specialists in operations, marketing, and Rx{0026}D is primarily concerned with reducing risk, not with maximizing profits; it perpetuates stability through the planning system. The book concludes with a prescient analysis of the educational and scientific estate, which prefigures the information economy that has emerged since the book was published.

Biografía del autor

Uno de los economistas más brillantes e influyentes del siglo XX, fue profesor de economía en las universidades de California, Princeton, Cambridge, Bristol y Harvard. Su mayor preocupación no era el análisis econométrico o la teoría económica sino analizar las consecuencias de la política económica en la sociedad, de forma accesible y eliminando gran parte del tecnicismo propio de los economistas. Desempeñó cargos públicos desde la época de la segunda guerra mundial, bajo el mandato de Franklin D. Roosevelt, y fue nombrado por John F. Kennedy embajador de los Estados Unidos en la India. Entre sus obras destacanLa sociedad opulenta,El crash de 1929,Historia de la economía,Breve historia de la euforia financierayLa cultura de la satisfacción, todos ellos publicados en Ariel.





Pasajes Libros SL ha recibido de la Comunidad de Madrid la ayuda destinada a prestar apoyo económico a las pequeñas y medianas empresas madrileñas afectadas por el COVID-19

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