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Book Chapter

Risk and uncertainty

Details

Citation

Dow S (2019) Risk and uncertainty. In: Dimand RW & Hagemann H (eds.) The Elgar Companion to John Maynard Keynes. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, pp. 255-61. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781788118569

Abstract
Uncertainty, as unquantifiable risk, was central to Keynes¡¯s philosophy and economics, and continues to be relevant under modern conditions. For Keynes, knowledge is in general uncertain because of the organic nature of the subject matter; quantifiable risk is the special case. He developed a theory of how in practice we can still establish grounds for belief under uncertainty, drawing on weight of argument and multiple strands of reasoning, such that uncertainty is a matter of degree. The degree of uncertainty influences fundamentally the key variable in Keynes¡¯s theory of effective demand: planned investment. Further, money plays a crucial role as the refuge from uncertainty, such that the rate of interest is a monetary rate. Applied to modern institutions and conditions, this theory is shown to explain the recent crisis.

Keywords
risk; uncertainty; Keynes; investment; liquidity preference; financial crisis

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2019
Publication date online22/02/2019
URL
PublisherEdward Elgar
Place of publicationCheltenham
ISBN9781847200082
eISBN9781788118569

People (1)

Professor Sheila Dow

Professor Sheila Dow

Emeritus Professor, Economics

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