| Name and Link | Type of Resource | Description |
| Davidson, Paul. Keynes's Serious Monetary Theory Available online here |
Paper on specific issue | "In this paper we will explain how why Keynes’s “nonEuclidean”economic theory was never incorporated into mainstream macroeconomic theory even though Keynes’s analysis is relevant to the economic world in which we live – a world where financial markets can not be “efficient”. In Keynes’s analysis, the civil law of contracts and the importance of maintaining liquidity in financial markets play crucial roles in understanding the operations of a money using, market oriented, entrepreneurial economy – both from a domestic national standpoint and in the context of a globalized economy where nations may employ different currencies and differing civil laws of contracts. " |
| Davidson, Paul. Samuelson and the Keynes/Post Keynesian Revolution: The Evidence Showing Who Killed Cock Robin Available online here |
Article on specific issue | "Samuelson is usually considered the founder of the American Keynesian school which he labeled neoclassical synthesis Keynesianism because of the classical microeconomic theory that Samuelson believed was the foundation of Keynes’s macro analysis. As we will explain, Samuelson’s neoclassical synthesis brand of ‘Keynesianism’ was not analytically compatible with the theoretical framework laid out by Keynes in The General Theory of Employment Interest and Money" |
| Davidson, Paul. WHAT REVOLUTION? THE LEGACY OF KEYNES Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, Fall96, Vol. 19 Issue 1, p47, 14p |
Article on specific issue | |
| Harcourt, G. C. The economics of Keynes and its theoretical and political importance: Or, what would Marx and Keynes have made of the happenings of the past 30 years and more? Post-autistic Economics Review, issue no. 27, 9 September 2004, article 1 Available online here |
Article on specific issue | "I start with two propositions: first, that Maynard Keynes and Karl Marx, were they still with us, would have made far more sense of the happenings of modern capitalism of the past 30 to 40 years than do the more modern approaches to macroeconomics of the same period; and, secondly, that Keynes would have sat down and tried again to save capitalism from itself....." |
| Deane, P. (1978) The Evolution of economic ideas. Ch 12 The Keynesian Revolution Published 1978Cambridge University Press Link to bookseller |
Single Chapter in a survey textbook | This text attempts to put theoretical controversies inherent in orthodox economic analysis into long term perspective by tracing their historical antecedents. A connected object is to interpret some of the doctrinal divisions in the modern debate to determine the questions to be answered. |
| Hutton, Will. The Revolution That Never Was: An Assessment of Keynesian Economics. Vintage; New Ed edition 2001 Link to bookseller |
Book | "Synopsis: According to the author, a true Keynesian revolution has yet to take place. By referring to Keynes' writing, he shows that Keynes was concerned to show how the financial sector of the economy originated and how it reinforced the incapacities of the market economy." |
| Turgeon, Lynn Bastard Keynesianism: Evolution of Economic Thinking and Policymaking Since World War II Greenwood Press; 1997 Link to bookseller |
Book | "The thinking of John Maynard Keynes is still relevant to successful development of the advanced capitalistic system as is shown by evolution of economic thinking since World War II. The changes in economic thinking in the United States and in the world are described, with a chapter devoted to each presidency from Eisenhower to Clinton. The importance of Military Keynesianism in winning the Cold War is described along with similarities and differences between the various national administrations." |