John Maynard Keynes died in 1946 but his ideas and his example remain
relevant today. In this distinctive new account, Peter Clarke shows how
Keynes's own career was not simply that of an academic economist, nor
that of a modern policy advisor. Though rightly credited for reshaping
economic theory, Keynes's influence was more broadly based and is
assessed here in a rounded historical, political and cultural context.
Peter Clarke re-examines the full trajectory of Keynes's public career
from his role in Paris over the Versailles Treaty to Bretton Woods. He
reveals how Keynes's insights as an economic theorist were rooted in his
wider intellectual and cultural milieu including Bloomsbury and his
friendship with Virginia Woolf as well as his involvement in government
business. Keynes in Action uncovers a much more pragmatic Keynes whose
concept of 'truth' needs to be interpreted in tension with an
acknowledgement of 'expediency' in implementing public policy.