Book detail: Interviews with John Kenneth Galbraith is presented as a focused source page for quotations connected with this book, collection, transcript, or source record.
This volume presents discussions with John Kenneth Galbraith, the Harvard economist and public intellectual who shaped mid-twentieth-century economic thought. The interviews explore his perspectives on topics including the relationship between large corporations and the state, the nature of affluence in modern societies, and the limitations of conventional economic theory. Galbraith's analysis of the "dependence effect" in consumer demand and his concept of "countervailing powers" receive attention, as do his observations on financial instability and income inequality. The conversations reflect his characteristic willingness to challenge orthodox assumptions and his commitment to making economic ideas accessible to general audiences. Galbraith's background in agricultural economics, his service in government during the New Deal and postwar periods, and his later diplomatic appointments inform the breadth of discussion. The interviews capture his distinctive prose style and his skepticism toward mathematical abstraction in economics, emphasizing instead institutional and historical factors in economic analysis.
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