Keynes, the Pope and the IMF
- 👤 Speaker: Mark Hayes, Durham University
- 📅 Date & Time: Wednesday 25 February 2015, 18:00 - 19:30
- 📍 Venue: McGrath Centre, St Catharine's College
Abstract
In this seminar Mark Hayes will discuss Keynes’s surprisingly positive views on the medieval scholastic teaching on usury and draw upon the work of Keynes to argue that the traditional view of usury (understood as the charging of rent for the use of money) as anti-social is well-founded. Keynes’s understanding of the nature of probability allows a clear distinction to be made between debt and equity finance which most economists dismiss. Rather than meriting remuneration, the demand for the security provided by money against an uncertain future imposes a social cost in one form or another. This proposition is illustrated with reference to the problems of the modern international financial and monetary system, specifically the role of deposit insurance and the obstacles to a renewed system of managed exchange rates, without which many regions appear doomed to enduring long-term austerity.
Series This talk is part of the St Catharine's Political Economy Seminar Series series.
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Mark Hayes, Durham University
Wednesday 25 February 2015, 18:00-19:30