Looking for Windows & Mac Softwares, Android App, Audiobooks, Video Tutorials, Wordpress Themes, Music, Games…
Secure payment via Credit Card, Don't keep any cards information.
All download sources is secure & reliable through Google Drive.
All softwares and products gets unlimited access & lifetime use.
If you are going to buy up from 5+ products through our website you can asking for 30% OFF Coupon code.
The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money is Keynes’ masterpiece published right after the Great Depression. It sought to bring about a revolution, commonly referred to as the “Keynesian Revolution”, in the way economists thought especially challenging the proposition that a market economy tends naturally to restore itself to full employment on its own. Regarded widely as the cornerstone of Keynesian thought, this book challenged the established classical economics and introduced new concepts. It remains a relevant topic of debate to this day, perhaps more than ever. Given the economic turmoil of recent years, this debate is more heated than ever before, between the Keynesian model of economics of Bush and Obama which favors bailouts and other government intervention to try to stabilize the market, and the Austrian school of economics which sees government intervention as detrimental and favors letting the market sort itself out on its own with minimal government interference and regulation. You decide.
John Maynard Keynes was born in Cambridge, England, on July 5, 1883. His father, John Neville Keynes, was a professor and administrator at Cambridge University and himself the author of The Scope and Methods of Political Economy. After attending Eton (1897–1902), Keynes entered King’s College, where he studied economics. Following graduation, he worked in the India Office (1906–1908); lectured on economics at Cambridge (1908); was made a fellow of King’s College (1909), editor of the Economic Journal, and secretary of the Royal Economic Society (1911); and accepted a position in the British treasury.
In 1919 Keynes was principal representative of the treasury at the Paris Peace Conference. Disturbed by developments at the conference, however, he soon resigned. His Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919) gave voice to his strong objection to the punitive measures being enacted against Germany. In this eloquently argued and strangely prescient work, Keynes detailed the problems that would result from the war reparations to be made by conquered Germany beyond her ability to pay, as well as the devastating economic, social, and political consequences of continuing European ultranationalism.
$33 Original price was: $33.$3Current price is: $3.
To get more discount 20% OFF for every products
use this coupon code: VC20OFF
All software is lifetime version
One time payment only
Fully protected with your check-out.
Get the latest update of our digital products on our social post.
Submit your request or If you looking for your own customize for products which we don’t have in our list on site you can submit your request detail here, we will figure out the solutions for you!
Copyright © 2024, Easy Digital Pro