Title: The%20Rise%20of%20the%20Keynesian%20State%20-%20I
1The Rise of the Keynesian State - I
2Keynesian State
- The term Keynesian derives from the name of the
economist John Maynard Keynes - Keynes developed an economic theory of the
planning state for active government intervention - Even when policy makers were not consciously
Keynesian, his theory dominated policy for 30
years - As Keynesian policies failed in the late 1960s
both the Keynesian state his theories entered
crisis
3Keynesian State
- State usually understood as nation state
- i.e., national government
- But state can be understood more broadly
- governments, plus
- set of all institutions organizing a particular
social order - Keynesian state exists at several levels
- sub-national (regional, muncipal)
- national
- supra-national
4Elements of Analysis in this Section
- Historical Sketch of Emergence Development
- Social political character of Rise
- See how economic is rooted in social
political - See how economic is social political
5Prelude Source Great Depression
- Great Depression crisis of earlier order
- Earlier order involved
- Business cycle as growth regulator
- Taylorism, Fordism to control labor
- Repression of trade unions
- More limited government regulation of economy
- More laissez-faire
- Quasi-gold standard (at intl level)
6Business Cycle as Regulator
- when wage ? exceeded ? of productivity,
- profits dropped (often generated financial
crisis) - business cut back on I ? ? total output
- downturn ? increased unemployment
- ? downward pressure on wages
- ? restoration of profits, investment growth
7Crisis of Business Cycle
- In Great Depression downturn didnt produce an
upturn - Downturn produced Stock Market Crash of 29
- Economic activity prices fell, stayed down
- Unemployment rose dramatically, stayed high
- Wages fell, but increased profits dint raise I
- Investment fells, stayed down
8Behind Persistence of Depression
- Depth of unemployment despair
- Generated a collective refusal of suffering due
to impersonal forces - Rise of new form of labor organization
- waged labor forms industrial unions, CIO
- unwaged, unemployed demand support
- unemployment compensation to finance adjustment
- social security in face of financial collapse
- New demands for full employment, rising wages
9Capitalist Adaptation - I
- At the level of theory Keynes
- From classical view of wages as cost
- To understanding that both wages profits can ?
- ? wages ???costs but also ? demand
- ? pressure for I to raise productivity and reduce
costs - Economic theory extended to social sphere
- e.g., human capital theory, growth theory
- provided logic for investment in education, RD,
welfare, etc.
10Capitalist Adaptation - II
- At the level of policy New Social Compact
- Progressive response (unlike Nazis, Stalinists)
- Accepted unions, imposed bargaining, ? wages
- Subsidized I to ??productivity (WWII)
- Strict financial regulation (to avoid crises)
- Socialization of adjustment costs in UI Social
Security
11Capitalist Adaptation - III
- Post-war gifts of productive assets to private
industry - Full Employment Act of 1946
- Fordist production, fordist education
- Restoration of patriarchal nuclear family
- Racial hierarchy on job and off (ghetoization)
- Cold War, Point IV
12Capitalist Adaptation - IV
- Post-1950s investment in education central
cities - Post Sputnik Space Race
- Civil Rights Act
- Peace Corps Vista
- Green Berets
- Cuban Missle Crisis
- Bay of Pigs
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14The Rise of the Keynesian State - II
15Preoccupations of US Policy Makers, During
After WWII
- Planning for reconstruction of world order began
during WWII, - Before resolution of war was clear
- Basis was Keynesianism rather than Nazism or
Stalinism (assuming the Allies won) - Primary Aim Stability for trade investment
16Stability
- Stability desired vis à vis instability of Great
Depression - Depression, intl circulation of depression
- breakdown in gold standard intl trade
- Controls on capital flows
- Defaults on intl debts
- Stability desired vis à vis WWII
- Disruption of intl trade
- Disruption of intl investment
17No Going Back
- Refusal to return to Gold Standard
- Refusal of Free Markets in Currencies
- Refusal of Keynes proposal for intl currency to
be regulated by independent global central bank
18SolutionsEconomic Political
- Bretton Woods Agreements fixed exchange rates
??national foreign exchange reserves - ? International Monetary Fund (pool of
reserves) - ? Keynesian Nation state handles adjustment
- GATT toward free trade
- Free mobility of capital (for investment)
- United Nations (to avoid war foster intl
cooperation)
19Implementation
- US occupation and re-engineering of management of
Germany Japan, e.g., land reform union
busting - Marshall Plan in Europe as a whole
- Emergence of multinational corporation as major
vehicle of intl investment - Replacement of colonial empires being torn by
independence movements - Pax Americana nation/elite building
20--END--