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Past Event

Brookings/New America Foundation Briefing

The Legacy of John Kenneth Galbraith

Diplomacy


Event Summary

John Kenneth Galbraith has worn many hats throughout his life: economist, professor, government official, journalist, ambassador, novelist, antiwar activist. He is considered one of United States' first public intellectuals and his books, including The Affluent Society and American Capitalism, have sold nearly seven million copies. He is a scholar renowned for his energetic political engagement and irrepressible wit, and his books are models of provocative good sense that prophetically warned of the dangers of deregulated markets, war in Asia, corporate greed, and stock-market bubbles. Galbraith's work has also deeply—and controversially—influenced his own profession.

Event Information

When

Monday, April 04, 2005
2:30 PM to 4:00 PM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Event Materials

Contact: Office of Communications

E-mail: communications@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

At this briefing, co-sponsored by the Brookings Institution and the New America Foundation, panelists will discuss Galbraith's life and a new biography by Harvard professor Richard Parker entitled, John Kenneth Galbraith: His Life, His Politics, His Economics. Parker shows how Galbraith, from his early championing of Keynesian economics to his acerbic analysis of America's "private wealth and public squalor," regularly challenged prevailing theories and policies. Parker's account of Galbraith's remarkable friendship with John F. Kennedy, whom he served as a close advisor while ambassador to India, is especially relevant for its analysis of the intense, dynamic debates that economists and politicians can have over how America should manage its wealth and power. Panelists will take questions from the audience following the discussion.

Transcript

E.J. DIONNE: I just want to begin with a quotation from John Kenneth Galbraith that begins the last chapter of Richard Parker's wonderful book. Galbraith wrote:

"In making economics a non-political subject, neoclassical theory destroys the relation of economics to the real world. In that world, power is decisive in what happens. And the problems of that world are increasing both in number and in the depth of their social affliction. In consequence, neoclassical and neo-Keynesian economics regulates its players to the social sidelines. They either call no plays or use the wrong ones. To change the metaphor, they manipulate levers to which no machinery is attached."

A classic Galbraith line, and one of the reasons we are having this event today.

Read the complete event transcript (PDF—113kb)

Participants

Moderator

E.J. Dionne, Jr.

Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution; Columnist, Washington Post Writers Group

Panelists

Henry J. Aaron

Senior Fellow, Economic Studies

James Fallows

National Correspondent, The Atlantic Monthly

James K. Galbraith

Director, Inequality Project, University of Texas; Lloyd M. Bentsen, Jr. Chair in Government/Business Relations, Professor of Government, University of Texas

Richard Parker

Author, John Kenneth Galbraith: His Life, His Politics, His Economics; Senior Fellow of the Shorenstein Center, Harvard's Kennedy School of Government


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