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A Journey Through Economic Time: A Firsthand View
 
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A Journey Through Economic Time: A Firsthand View [Paperback]

John Kenneth Galbraith (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 15, 1995
Now in paperback, Galbraith's eyewitness account of the economic trends, watersheds, and foibles of our time is one of his most popular and accessible books yet, translated into a dozen languages. From World War I and the Russian Revolution to the implications of communism's fall, from the "superbly insane decade of the twenties" and the Great Depression to the Reagan era and beyond, the renowned economist here exhibits unmatched wisdom and scope. Whether he is analyzing Keynesian theory or the end of colonialism, the forging of Kennedy's New Frontier, or the "unintended history of the 1980s," this master narrator epitomizes the hindsight and the vision of one who actively influenced many of the events so colorfully chronicled here.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In an incisive informal history that often defies conventional wisdom, Galbraith surveys economic policy and its interaction with politics and society from WW I to the present. Characterizing U.S. economic policy after 1945 as a mix of compassion, idealism and paranoiac fear of communism, the renowned Harvard professor emeritus argues that the European powers and America shed their colonial possessions because colonies no longer conferred a major economic advantage. Galbraith draws lessons broadly applicable to the present, tapping his experience as New Deal reformer, price control manager of the wartime economy and adviser to JFK and Lyndon Johnson. Calling both capitalism and socialism "supremely irrelevant" to the early economic development in Third World countries, he advocates an end to the arms trade and a redirection of resources. On the domestic front, he suggests that concerted government action, job creation and public investment are necessary to end the "war between the comfortable and the underclass."
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal

Galbraith (emeritus professor of economics, Harvard), influential teacher, sometime player in Washington policy making, and author of many trenchant studies in political economy, here offers a penetrating analysis of the major worldwide economic and social currents since World War I and how they were shaped by wars and revolutions, ideologies and government policies. As Galbraith shows, capitalism, which came to dominate the world economic order, generated great material wealth but suffers from instability and uneven distribution of its benefits. The United States, Europe, and parts of Asia are the principal beneficiaries; the rest of the world is underdeveloped and poor. The world's future depends on whether and how this gap is to be closed. Gracefully and lucidly written, this is recommended for most libraries.
Harry Frumerman, formerly with Hunter Coll., CUNY
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 255 pages
  • Publisher: Mariner Books (September 15, 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0395741750
  • ISBN-13: 978-0395741757
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,159,211 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

John Kenneth Galbraith who was born in 1908, is the Paul M. Warburg Professor of Economics Emeritus at Harvard University and a past president of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He is the distinguished author of thirty-one books spanning three decades, including The Affluent Society, The Good Society, and The Great Crash. He has been awarded honorary degrees from Harvard, Oxford, the University of Paris, and Moscow University, and in 1997 he was inducted into the Order of Canada and received the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award for Lifetime Achievement. In 2000, at a White House ceremony, he was given the Presidential Medal of Freedom. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

 

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars As history, it makes sense. Mainly frightful!, January 9, 2005
By 
Bruce P. Barten (Saint Paul, MN United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I like the early parts of this book best. John Kenneth Galbraith has been an economist with first-hand experience in a lot of areas: Canadian Scotch farmers, the big stock market crash, wage and price controls, post-war economic assessment of strategic bombing, post-war aid, Keynesian stimulation of economic demand, the political views of businessmen, but people who read this book are most likely to notice how fond he is of economic programs which benefit the less fortunate at the expense of those who are most comfortable with things as they are. Though published in 1994, this book praises Social Security as a miraculously successful program passed in 1935, based initially on benefits "at distinctly modest, even primitive levels, old age pensions" (p. 93), though opponents might complain. "An Ohio Chamber of Commerce official of strong historical bent found that similar measures had brought the fall of Rome." (p. 94). Ohio??? The state and the United States are still evenly divided on which way to head politically when economic matters are paramount, but any benefit that does not increase to reflect increases in salary levels is likely to seem primitive in this century.

I once studied antitrust laws for a few years, with excellent instruction from some of the top professors, but it is not surprising that this knowledge rarely brings me riches or even meaningful employment since conflicts of interest can be a bar to active involvement. As a legal topic, it is like trying to apply philosophy to promote freedom. As Galbraith puts it,

"For liberals in this time the antitrust laws were a comprehensive economic therapy. Given any evident misuse of market power, more broadly any defective economic performance, the answer was clear: enforce the antitrust laws. This, then and later, became, on frequent occasion, the ready recourse of the devoid liberal mind." (p. 48).

"These were not repealed; they were simply not enforced. This was, save by the lawyers involved, one of the less noticed developments of the Reagan years." (p. 49).

Galbraith's memory of the Reagan years must have been fresh when he wrote of that triumph for the view that "The domestic threat was the federal government, and specifically its power of taxation as this might be used on behalf of those outside the favored community." (p. 211). The surprising thing about A JOURNEY THROUGH ECONOMIC TIME by John Kenneth Galbraith is how often he can identify policies which have changed drastically in the last century. (Surtax rates went up to 65 percent on incomes over $1,000,000 in 1918. (p. 26)). Some steps even thwarted the rich hoards of previously inflated currencies.

"The obvious solution was to diminish the regular currency outstanding by requiring the exchange of the existing notes for a smaller but functionally effective number. This, with characteristic pragmatism, the French did in the early months after the war. It had the further practical effect of denying to erstwhile black-market operators and those who had enjoyed special privileges under the collaborationist Vichy government any continuing advantage from their previous political reward; it was not wise to confess guilt by bringing in a currency hoard for exchange." (p. 143).

World War II was unusual in that the economics of warfare had been refined to produce as much wealth as possible for the middle class in America, as young economists who had been working in the New Deal were sure to appreciate. Galbraith was sure that his efforts controlling wages and prices had resulted in the greatest possible expansion of production.

"As the demands of war procurement converged on the economy, there were two possible designs for enhancing return, for increasing profits. One was to raise prices; the other was to expand production. The price controls and associated wage restraints made the increase of production the only available course. Profit maximization, not a subordinate goal in wartime, was served horizontally by more production, not vertically by higher prices. Though not greatly noticed at the time, the price and wage controls had a strongly functional role in expanding wartime production." (pp. 117-118).

I can remember when people who did not have oil wells complained that the only way to get rich was to have an oil well, because a depletion allowance in the income tax system allowed oil well owners to keep more of the money they made. The top tax rate was over 90 percent during World War II, after having been cut by President Hoover to avoid a depression:

"A taxpayer with an income of $5,000, a very comfortable return in those days, had his or her tax cut by two-thirds. It went from $16.88 to $5.63. Someone with $10,000, roughly the equivalent of $100,000 today, saw his tax go from $120 down to $65." (p. 78).

The federal budget was a few billion then. The previous war had been a significant expense, and John Kenneth Galbraith waits until Chapter 4 of this book to join with John Maynard Keynes (THE ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF THE PEACE) in an attempt to show that political views which settled in the minds of the negotiators of the Peace Treaty at the end of the Great War of 1914-1918 were an economic catastrophe. Money works best when people spend it for things they need, and most unpredictably when it is borrowed in dire distress and never repaid. "President Calvin Coolidge was adamant in expressing the reputable economic mood of the time: `They hired the money, didn't they?' " (p. 32).

"Besides destroying a political and economic structure that had long been in place, the war reshaped for all ensuing time the relationship between nations great and small, rich and impoverished. . . . The First World War was, indeed, rightly called the Great War; World War II was its last battle." (p. 10).
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hatching economy, June 8, 2000
This review is from: A Journey Through Economic Time: A Firsthand View (Paperback)
After the first world war the old world order begin to collapse.The great powers were no longer real great powers and then a new world order begin to form.This book gives you a realistic point of view about the whole economic events after WW1 till the end of communism.Reading this book also teaches the close contact between economy and the future of earth by showing us the collapsing empires,ideas and utopias because of economy.
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1 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Syntax Good No He At Which, January 4, 2009
Like everyone else in these days of financial alarm, I've been reading books on economics. Unfortunately much of what has been issued recently (e.g., Panic! by Michael Lewis) appears hastily thrown together to make a quick buck, so I've turned instead to the books already on my shelf. I don't seem to have finished "A Journey Through Economic Time" when I obtained it in the '90s, and on my second attempt through, the reason became obvious.

Why is is that members of certain professions seem unable to write in clear, plain and precise English? Economists, music critics, psychologists and other such quacks must all take some sort of blood oath never to write coherently, and I am flabbergasted at the accolades the late Professor Galbraith has received over the years. I suppose I could describe struggling through Professor Galbraith's turgid prose as tedious, but it's far worse than that; it's frequently painful, and I offer a few sentences as examples.

"Even by conservatives monopoly could not systematically be defended."
[pg.48]
Forget for the moment that in English, the adverb goes after the verb. (Galbraith doesn't write in English, so I guess the standard rules don't apply to him.) Isn't the syntax that sentence of which all wrong? (Whups! Now I'm doing it!) Here are others:

"I here, on occasion, retrieve what I've said before." [pg.52]
Do I have to explain to you why "on occasion" makes no sense and is completely superfluous in that sentence? Even if the offending prepositional phrase were removed, "I here retrieve what I've said before," would be awful. A normal person (of average intelligence or higher) would simply write, "As I've said before," but that would be too simple for Professor Galbraith.

"In Germany this commitment to rigorously orthodox finance was to extend into the 1930s under Chancellor Heinrich Brüning and make even more painful the Great Depression." [pg.52]

"There is a larger point here: no more than would President George Bush sixty years later did President Hoover like a depression or recession." [pg.80]

"They had developed new national accounts -- National Income and Gross National Product, present and potential -- and thus shown what war production was possible." [136]

"That the individual in the market system so pursues self-interest the classically devout conservative must, in all faith, concede." [pg.203]

"The recollection of the Reagan presidency would not have been of its last seven fat years." [pg.235]

Despite its topic, this is not a difficult book. Instead, it is a painful book to read, as such awkward syntax assails the retina and makes the optic nerve nervous. Why did the late Professor Galbraith write such tortured prose? I offer the following speculation:
1.) Galbraith was never able to completely abandon his native Scots farm dialect.
2.) That's what passes for English among economists.
3.) Galbraith actually did know English, but he chose to write in a pseudo-Elizabethan style so as to lend his books an intellectual cachet -- to try and fancy-up the language by making it awkward.

I suspect this last to be accurate. By 1994, the ever-changing winds of economic thought had shifted away from his baroque advocacy of wage-and-price controls and gasoline rationing in the 1970s [pg. 193], and Galbraith was thus held in low esteem even by such liberal economists as Paul Krugman, who dismissed him as a "policy entrepreneur" and "media personality." Attempting to write in the style of Beowulf was, I believe, Galbraith's way of trying to strike a loftier intellectual pose. (Another reviewer here called Galbraith's prose "elegant.")

Even worse than the graceless syntax is how Professor Galbraith casually rewrites history if it suits his thesis that he was always right, and everything that the Republicans ever did was catastrophic to the commonweal. As everyone knows, the double-digit inflation of the late 1970s was stopped dead when Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volker put a stranglehold on the money supply by raising the prime rate. But in Galbraith's version, it was instead the mischief of the Reagan administration: "More general in its effect was what the new administration did as to monetary policy. The latter [the later what?] . . . was tightened rigorously in 1981 and 1982." [pg.216] But Volker (whose name is never mentioned) was appointed by President Carter (in August, 1979), so how was the Reagan administration responsible? Galbraith seems not to have been concerned about inflation, and he states preposterously, "There are also the large number living on Social Security or pensions . . . . Inflation is then less of a threat to the many with fixed incomes." [pg. 237]

Economists are the high priests of Mammon, and every one of them I've read is every bit as dogmatic as any of the sacred clergy. Galbraith was no exception, and he wrote no better than the laissez-faire zealots.
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