Come on Keen. You can do better. Much of Graeber's argument is DERIVED from Chartalist research. There is no contradiction. For someone who spends a bunch of time reading neoclassical drivel so you actually find the origins of their ideas, you don't seem to feel the same need for other heterodox economists. Check out Creating Economic Order: Record-Keeping, Standardization, and The Development of Accounting In The Ancient Near East. also check out Credit and State theories of money.
Just bought David Graeber's book - fascinating stuff. I've personally always been someone skeptical of how the various schools are so confident of *their* story of money.
Come on Keen. You can do better. Much of Graeber's argument is DERIVED from Chartalist research. There is no contradiction. For someone who spends a bunch of time reading neoclassical drivel so you actually find the origins of their ideas, you don't seem to feel the same need for other heterodox economists. Check out Creating Economic Order: Record-Keeping, Standardization, and The Development of Accounting In The Ancient Near East. also check out Credit and State theories of money.
nathantankus 3 months ago in playlist Behavioural Finance Lectures
Modeling the Economy with 150 Million Agents
watch?v=V_sGz4FcuPA
KenMacMillan 3 months ago in playlist Behavioural Finance Lectures
Just bought David Graeber's book - fascinating stuff. I've personally always been someone skeptical of how the various schools are so confident of *their* story of money.
dvdholden 5 months ago