Over the past century, the rise and fall of economic policy orders has been shaped by a paradox, as intellectual and institutional stability have repeatedly caused market instability and crisis. To highlight such dynamics, this volume offers a theory of economic ideas in political time. The author counters paradigmatic and institutionalist views of ideas as enabling self-reinforcing path dependencies, offering an alternative social psychological argument that ideas which initially reduce uncertainty can subsequently fuel misplaced certainty and crises. Historically, the book then traces the development and decline of the progressive, Keynesian, and neoliberal orders, arguing that each order's principled foundations were gradually displaced by macroeconomic models that obscured new causes of the Great Depression, Great Stagflation, and Global Financial Crisis. Finally, in policy terms, Widmaier stresses the costs of intellectual autonomy, as efforts to 'prevent the last crisis' have repeatedly obscured new causes of crises.
Author(s): Wesley W. Widmaier
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2016
Language: English
Commentary: From (1155067 bytes), with frontmatter and index
Pages: 275
Cover c
Copyright iv
Contents v
Preface vii
Acknowledgments xi
Part I: Theoretical and Historical Foundations
1. Economic Ideas in Political Time: Construction, Conversion, and Crisis 3
2. The Construction, Conversion, and Collapse of the Progressive Order 29
Part II: The Construction, Conversion, and Collapse of the Keynesian Order
3. Constructing the Keynesian Order: Breaking Finance and Boosting Labor 51
4. Converting the Keynesian Order: Toward the Neoclassical Synthesis 77
5. Constructing the Great Stagfl ation: From Accommodation to Transformation 109
Part III: The Construction, Conversion, and Crisis of the Neoliberal Order
6. Constructing the Neoliberal Order: Breaking Labor and Boosting Finance 135
7. Converting the Neoliberal Order: Toward the New Keynesianism 157
8. Constructing the Global Financial Crisis: From Accommodation to Iteration 179
Part IV: Conclusions
9. Theoretical, Historical, and Policy Implications 205
Bibliography
Index