Would Corbyn Take Us Back to the Seventies Crisis?

Would Corbyn Take Us Back to the Seventies Crisis?

It’s the catch cry for those who like to spread fear – Corbyn in power would take Britain back to the 1970s, when Britain experienced runaway inflation, the three day week, class hatred and soviet style stagnation. Yet, as Prof Steve Keen explains to Phil Dobbie in this free edition of the Debunking Economics podcast, the downturn in the seventies was less to do with government policy and more to do with a turnaround in credit. Households that had been increasing their borrowing in the late sixties, started to pull back, taking money out of the economy. If you’re not convinced the seventies situation was the result of a Labour government and powerful unions, you have to ask, why was exactly the same thing happening in most of the western world?

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Episoder(512)

Too slow for zero?

Too slow for zero?

This week Phil and Steve confront the mathematical and environmental reality of a "zero growth" future, sparked by a debate over the deflationary traps of finite currency systems like Bitcoin. Steve t...

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The world’s anti-migration shift to the right

The world’s anti-migration shift to the right

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GDP is hopelesss as a relative measure

GDP is hopelesss as a relative measure

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17 Jun 45min

 Is Labour right to cut tax incentives for housing speculators?

Is Labour right to cut tax incentives for housing speculators?

This week Phil and Steve dig into the storm of controversy over Australia's new budget rules targeting property speculators. The Labor government has scaled back negative gearing and abolished the 50%...

10 Jun 44min

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20 Mai 38min

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13 Mai 45min

Improving Productivity

Improving Productivity

In this episode of Debunking Economics, Steve Keen dismantles the mainstream economic obsession with "Total Factor Productivity" (TFP), labeling it a mythical construct that ignores the laws of physic...

6 Mai 32min

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