the relevance of the Keynesian social thought in a global society /
Donatella Padua
xiii, 121 pages ;
23 cm
Palgrave pivot
Includes bibliographical references and index
Machine generated contents note: -- Preface -- 1. Introduction -- PART I: COMPLEXITY -- 2. Keynes, The 'Economist Of Complexity' -- 3. Environmental Complexity -- 4. Nominal Economy Vs. Real Economy -- PART II: TRUST -- 5. Classical Rationality And Keynesian Irrationality -- 6. The Elements Of Trust -- 7. Trust; Confidence; 'Rational Trust' -- 8. The Role Of Emotions -- 9. Trust In Social Systems -- PART III: VALUE -- 10. The Economy Of Trust In The Global Crisis -- 11. Uncertainty -- 12. Irrationality -- 13. Speculation -- 14. Complexity -- 15. Stories -- PART IV: DEVELOPMENT -- 16. Growth And Development -- 17. Redistribution, Equity, Trust -- 18. The Keynesian 'Civilization' -- Concluding Remarks -- The Economy Of Trust Generates Value
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"Why does trust collapse in times of crisis? And when, instead, does it become a driver of growth, generating value? This book offers an analysis of the dynamics of trust through a sociological interpretation of the thought of John Maynard Keynes, the first economist to understand the full extent of the confidence-lever. In the context of the 2007 crisis and following recession, the innovative concept of Economy of Trust explains how trust spontaneously replaces the weakened institutional system of quality assurance and control and generates value. Indeed, the deficiency of such a system has become the ideal breeding ground for the growth of the Nominal Economy: the economy that distorts the perception of reality as it widens economic and social disparities, unbalances relationships between risk and wealth in the global society and dissolves the bonds of responsibility. In this way, trust is channeled towards strong "new powers", such as hedge funds companies, rating agencies and investment banks. Within this context, only targeted policies of Economy of Trust can funnel the 'store of value' effect generated by trust towards positive intents of building social capital."--