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Can We Avoid Another Financial Crisis? (The Future of Capitalism) 1st Edition
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The Great Financial Crash had cataclysmic effects on the global economy, and took conventional economists completely by surprise. Many leading commentators declared shortly before the crisis that the magical recipe for eternal stability had been found. Less than a year later, the biggest economic crisis since the Great Depression erupted.
In this explosive book, Steve Keen, one of the very few economists who anticipated the crash, shows why the self-declared experts were wrong and how ever–rising levels of private debt make another financial crisis almost inevitable unless politicians tackle the real dynamics causing financial instability. He also identifies the economies that have become 'The Walking Dead of Debt', and those that are next in line – including Australia, Belgium, China, Canada and South Korea.
A major intervention by a fearlessly iconoclastic figure, this book is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the true nature of the global economic system.
- ISBN-101509513736
- ISBN-13978-1509513734
- Edition1st
- PublisherPolity
- Publication dateMay 1, 2017
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions4.8 x 0.5 x 7.4 inches
- Print length140 pages
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"No one is more qualified than Steve Keen to answer the question "Can we avoid another financial crisis?" with more than a single word. Read this book!"
―Yanis Varoufakis, former Finance Minister of Greece
"In this compelling essay, Steve Keen shows that the "Great Moderation" was in fact a great delusion and documents, to brutal effect, the foolish complacency of mainstream macroeconomists."
―James K. Galbraith, University of Texas at Austin
"Steve Keen explains why the financial crisis it occurred, and why it can't just get better on its own, along its present track. He also explains – in a hilarious and absolutely justified takedown – why mainstream economists have a "trained incapacity" in being unable to understand why the economy has broken down – and hence, why they don’t have a real solution. We are still living in the aftermath of the 2008 crisis. It’s all about debt. But economists fear they will lose their jobs if they say that debts must be written down. Keen asks what is more important: to save the economy, or to save the jobs for economists whose prestige rests on their not understanding why economies are in trouble today."
―Michael Hudson, author of Killing the Host and The Bubble and Beyond
"Non-academics interested in economic or financial markets should, if they read ony one book on the topic, absolutely read this one."
―International Investment
"Mr. Keen is surely right to argue that growth fuelled by the continuing expansion of private debt is highly risky for the overall economy, and that which cannot continue indefinitely will come to a sticky end sooner rather than later. We should heed his advice..."
―Globe and Mail
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Polity; 1st edition (May 1, 2017)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 140 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1509513736
- ISBN-13 : 978-1509513734
- Item Weight : 6.1 ounces
- Dimensions : 4.8 x 0.5 x 7.4 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,710,221 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #913 in Macroeconomics (Books)
- #1,255 in Economic Policy
- #1,650 in Economic Policy & Development (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

I'm Professor of Economics & Finance at the University of Western Sydney, Australia. In 2010 I won the Revere Award from the Real World Economics Review, for being the economist who most cogently warned that the economic crisis that began in 2007 was imminent. I am a staunch critic of mainstream economic thinking, and author of the influential blog www.debtdeflation.com/blogs.
Prior to becoming an academic in 1987, I was school teacher, education officer for an overseas aid organisation, conference organiser, editor, computer programmer, journalist, and finally a government advisor during the days when Australia's government had a serious industries policy.
The latter experience is what convinced me to undertake an academic career: I saw economists, employed by the government, actively undermine this industrial development policy at every step. I was already a trenchant critic of conventional economics at the time, having led the "Political Economy" revolt at the University of Sydney when I was an undergraduate student in the early to mid 1970s.
I realised that, if I was to help defeat the woolly thinking and ideological day-dreaming that passed for analysis amongst economists, I would have to do it on the home territory where these ideas were brewed and sustained: university campuses.
Incidentally, my targets in that weren't just neoclassical economists. My initial academic thesis (in my Masters) was on flaws in the Marxian labor theory of value. That led to my first two published academic papers, which provided the basis for the chapter on Marxian economics in Debunking Economics.
I've been substantially more successful than I had expected in academia. Iconoclastic views aren't well received in economics, but I have been lucky to have an unusual brand of iconoclasm that has led to substantial publications, and lots of support along the way from a number of mentors. I now try to return that favour to my own students, and readers.
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Top reviews from the United States
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"Anyone who paid serious attention to credit, as Keen did prior to 2008, could hardly have failed to notice that something was amiss. After all, credit was growing very rapidly in the United States, in Australia and across much of Europe. Keen’s own contribution at the time was to point out that it wouldn’t take a collapse of credit to cause a serious economic downturn – a mere slowdown in the rate of lending would do the job. This prediction was vindicated in 2008, when credit growth slowed sharply but remained positive, sending the U.S. economy into a tailspin.
Keen is now calling for the dominant macroeconomic models to be jettisoned and replaced by ones that take account of credit. In his book, he develops a simple credit-based macro model." - Reuters
"At first glance Steve Keen’s new book ‘Can We Avoid Another Financial Crisis’ seems too small-sized at 147 pages. But like a well-made atom-bomb, it is compactly designed for maximum reverberation to blow up its intended target.
Explaining why today’s debt residue has turned the United States, Britain and southern Europe into zombie economies, Steve Keen shows how ignoring debt the blind spot of neoliberal economics – basically the old neoclassical just-pretend view of the world. Neoclassical’s glib mathiness is a gloss for its unscientific “don’t worry about debt” message. Blame for today’s U.S., British and southern European inability to achieve economic recovery thus rests on the economic mainstream and its refusal to recognize that debt matters.
Mainstream models are unable to forecast or explain a depression. That is because depressions are essentially financial in character. The business cycle itself is a financial cycle – that is, a cycle of the buildup and collapse of debt.
Keen’s “Minsky” model traces this to what he has called “endogenous money creation,” that is, bank credit mainly to buyers of real estate, companies and other assets. He recently suggested a more catchy moniker: “Bank Originated Money and Debt” (BOMD). That seems easier to remember.
The concept is more accessible than the dry academic terminology usually coined. It is simple enough to show that the mathematics of compound interest lead the volume of debt to exceed the rate of GDP growth, thereby diverting more and more income to the financial sector as debt service. Keen traces this view back to Irving Fisher’s famous 1933 article on debt deflation – the residue from unpaid debt. Such payments to creditors leave less available to spend on goods and services.
In explaining the mathematical dynamics underlying his “Minsky” model, Keen links financial dynamics to employment. If private debt grows faster than GDP, the debt/GDP ratio will rise. This stifles markets, and hence employment. Wages fall as a share of GDP...
By being so compact, this book is able to concentrate attention on the easy-to-understand mathematical principles that underlie the “junk economics” mainstream. Keen explains why, mathematically, the Great Moderation leading up to the 2008 crash was not an anomaly, but is inherent in a basic principle: Economies can prolong the debt-financed boom and delay a crash simply by providing more and more credit, Australia-style. The effect is to make the ensuing crash worse, more long-lasting and more difficult to extricate. For this, he blames mainly Margaret Thatcher and Alan Greenspan as, in effect, bank lobbyists. But behind them is the whole edifice of neoliberal economic brainwashing...
This book enables the non-mathematician to pierce the shell of mathiness in which today’s economic mainstream wraps its lobbying effort for the big banks and their product, debt. The needed escape from the debt deflation they have caused is a debt writedown...
...Keen’s book should be basic reading for placing debt at the center of today’s political debate and replacing mainstream “barter” economics with a more reality-based discipline." -Michael Hudson
Once you get on terms with this, the message is fairly simple: With interest on debt, debt cannot grow faster than GDP (output, income) in the long run. When debt grows slower, stops growing, or contracts this will lead to less money, less demand, less output and less income.
And given Keen's very specific predictions and deadlines (2020!) the subject is all the more unnerving.
Short answer to title's question: No.
Long Answer: Read this book. But basically, the economic gatekeepers don't understand their own system, so they can't see the disasters looming, even when the data is forecasting it.
To those unfamiliar with Steve Keen, he works from the edgy Modern Monetary Theory (based on a book by the same name by Randall Wray). This theory is seen by many in mainstream economics as being subversive and 'fringe' but, like many 'established' theories that face criticism ("the earth is actually not the centre of the universe"), the mainstream response is attack-to-preserve-our-dominance, regardless of whether the challenging theory has validity.
Since I do not believe that the earth is the center of the universe, and am thus a subversive, not to mention the obvious mismanagement/misinformation/misunderstandings regarding recent economic policies and meltdowns, I was interested in this challenging theory of economics and was not disappointed.
It's accessible, easy to read and understand, well written and clear - even to non-economists / non-mathematicians / non-statisticians / non-money-policy-bean-counter-types - and especially interesting. Chilling, actually. I don't normally read these types of books, but it really hooked me and shed light on a subject that is usually shrouded in secrecy and confusion. It also made me realise that we - the nations of this world - are in deep muck from the hobbled economics theory that the world currently embraces. And it's probably going to sink us all before fixing the errors that it relies on.
P.S. If you are a conventionally-trained economist, it's up to you to decide if you're going to knee-jerk reaction this or if you're interested to possibly learn something new and counter to the mainstream. It's hard to see the light when you've been trained in the darkness, but none of us should claim to be above learning something new.
Top reviews from other countries
If you want to understand the intersection of finance and economics, read his work. He has started what I think will be a revolution in economics. Textbooks will have to be rewritten.
Une démarche scientifique sachant se limiter car l'économie reste une science sociale.
Et surtout une alternative crédible pour une sortie de la situation économique actuelle hors normes.

