Keynes Confronts the Crisis: Two Pivotal Roads to Recovery
This collection brings together two of John Maynard Keynes's most urgent and persuasive interventions during the darkest years of the Great Depression. In "The Great Slump of 1930," Keynes acts as a master diagnostician, dissecting the origins of the global economic collapse with chilling clarity. He explains why the world had plunged into a "virtuous circle" in reverse, where fear and falling demand fed upon themselves, and warns against the fatalistic belief that we must simply wait for nature to take its course.
In the seminal follow-up, "The Means to Prosperity," Keynes shifts from diagnosis to prescription. Here, he lays out the practical blueprint for government-led recovery that would redefine economic policy. With compelling logic, he advocates for deliberate public spending and loan-financed investment as the essential engine to break the cycle of depression, create employment, and restore confidence—ideas that would become the foundation of his revolutionary general theory.
Together, these essays capture a brilliant mind at a critical historical turning point, arguing not with abstract models but with persuasive force for action, hope, and a rational path out of despair.











