Subject: | |
From: | |
Date: | Sat Jan 27 14:34:19 2007 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
Mason Gaffney wrote:
> Krugman, wearing his journalist hat, was obviously oversimplifying a
>complex business.
Of course these questions are relative and, being
generalizations, admit of great exceptions. But
by the standards of the academic, corporate, and
bureaucratic elites of the year1900, we are all
Keynesians now; by the standards of the year
2000, they were all laissez-faire then.
In 1884, Herbert Spencer in "Man vs. The State"
railed against government interference in the
market. Some of the targets of his scorn were the
Chimney-Sweeper's Act, to prevent the torture and
eventual death of children set to sweep too
narrow slots; the Contagious Diseases Act, the
Public Libraries Act giving local powers "by
which a majority can tax a minority for their
books." And so forth, covering a range of
activities and powers that few today would find remarkable or objectionable.
John C. Medaille
|
|
|