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Examples

  • President Obama's whole economic stance—his stimulus package, quantitative easing, bailouts, attempt to abolish the Bush tax cuts, and efforts to raise the debt ceiling—define him as a child of J. M. Keynes, who advocated solving economic woes by "priming the pump," principally through government spending.

    Republicans and the Thatcher Legacy Andrew Roberts 2011

  • President Obama's whole economic stance—his stimulus package, quantitative easing, bailouts, attempt to abolish the Bush tax cuts, and efforts to raise the debt ceiling—define him as a child of J. M. Keynes, who advocated solving economic woes by "priming the pump," principally through government spending.

    Republicans and the Thatcher Legacy Andrew Roberts 2011

  • As his most brilliant pupil, J. M. Keynes, would later write, he created “a whole Copernican system, in which all the elements of the economic universe are kept in their places by mutual counterpoise and interaction.”

    The Worldly Philosophers Robert L. Heilbroner 1999

  • As his most brilliant pupil, J. M. Keynes, would later write, he created “a whole Copernican system, in which all the elements of the economic universe are kept in their places by mutual counterpoise and interaction.”

    The Worldly Philosophers Robert L. Heilbroner 1999

  • The famous economist J. M. Keynes didn't understand the link between the boom / bust cycle, fractional reserve banking and the central bank's manipulation of interest rates.

    unknown title 2009

  • J. M. Keynes, the economics guru of the the New Deal era, opined that it would be suitable government policy to hire men to dig holes one day, fill them up the next day, then re-dig them and refill them ad infinitum.

    NewsByUs 2008

  • J. M. Keynes, the economics guru of the the New Deal era, opined that it would be suitable government policy to hire men to dig holes one day, fill them up the next day, then re-dig them and refill them ad infinitum.

    NewsByUs 2008

  • J. M. Keynes, the economics guru of the the New Deal era, opined that it would be suitable government policy to hire men to dig holes one day, fill them up the next day, then re-dig them and refill them ad infinitum.

    NewsByUs 2008

  • J. M. Keynes, the economics guru of the the New Deal era, opined that it would be suitable government policy to hire men to dig holes one day, fill them up the next day, then re-dig them and refill them ad infinitum.

    NewsByUs 2008

  • J. M. Keynes, the economics guru of the the New Deal era, opined that it would be suitable government policy to hire men to dig holes one day, fill them up the next day, then re-dig them and refill them ad infinitum.

    NewsByUs 2008

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