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‘Macroeconomics After Kalecki and Keynes has certainly achieved the task that Eckhard Hein had set for himself, that is, to provide “a comprehensive and teachable post-Keynesian macroeconomic model, which includes the main features of post-Keynesian macroeconomics and from which a full macroeconomic policy mix for monetary policy, fiscal policy and wage or incomes policies can be derived” (Hein, p. ix). The book is a remarkable achievement.’
‘Macroeconomics After Kalecki and Keynes has certainly achieved the task that Eckhard Hein had set for himself, that is, to provide “a comprehensive and teachable post-Keynesian macroeconomic model, which includes the main features of post-Keynesian macroeconomics and from which a full macroeconomic policy mix for monetary policy, fiscal policy and wage or incomes policies can be derived” (Hein, p. ix). The book is a remarkable achievement.’
‘At a time when conventional macroeconomic theories and policies have visibly failed to promote sustainable and equitable economic growth, Eckhard Hein’s brilliant new book provides the most lucid synthesis to date of a comprehensive and progressive alternative: the post-Keynesian approach. Hein builds a complete short-run macro model connecting money, credit, output, inflation and the balance of payments, which he deftly applies to construct an alternative policy paradigm for stabilizing prices while maintaining full employment and external balance. The author then uses this foundation as a springboard to explore advanced issues about long-run growth, income distribution, financial instability, policy-induced stagnation and ecological sustainability. Hein’s clear presentation and persuasive analysis will make this volume an indispensable reference for university students, professional economists and economic policy makers for years to come.’
‘Macroeconomics After Keynes and Kalecki is a tour de force. It systematically theorizes the short-term outcomes and required policy responses on which macro instruction – and student interest in the field – typically focuses, linking this analysis to longer-term growth dynamics and associated concerns with financialization and ecological sustainability. The book will be of lasting value to all serious students of macroeconomics.’
‘This book provides a great guide to the vibrancy of post Keynesian macroeconomic analysis in the traditions of Kalecki and Keynes. Particularly welcome is that Eckhard Hein shows how post-Keynesian macroeconomic analyses has developed to incorporate issues of inequality and gender, and contributes to the studies of financialisation and confronting the major ecological issues.’
Eckhard Hein, Professor of Economics, Institute for International Political Economy, Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany