http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/05/07/keyness-biggest-mistake/

Keynes’s Biggest Mistake
By BRUCE BARTLETT

Bruce Bartlett held senior policy roles in the Reagan and George H.W.
Bush administrations and served on the staffs of Representatives Jack
Kemp and Ron Paul. He is the author of “The Benefit and the Burden:
Tax Reform – Why We Need It and What It Will Take.”

Over the weekend, there was a kerfuffle about whether Keynesian
economics ignores the long-run implications of its policies. The
Harvard historian Niall Ferguson asserted that this was the case and
said that it resulted from the British economist John Maynard Keynes’s
homosexuality. Professor Ferguson said that those without children, as
is the case with most gay men and women, necessarily had less of a
long-term view of the world than those with children who will live on
after their death.


Professor Ferguson has apologized for his off-the-cuff comment, which
was widely interpreted as being homophobic. But before this incident
fades from memory, I’d like to take the opportunity to discuss the
questions raised by it: Is Keynes’s sexual orientation at all relevant
to the interpretation of his economic theories? Does Keynesian
economics completely ignore the long run?

First of all, Keynes’s sexual orientation has been known for some
time, at least since publication of Michael Holroyd’s biography of
Lytton Strachey in 1968. Strachey was a noted biographer, an active
member of the literary Bloomsbury Group and one of Keynes’s lovers.

The revelation of Keynes’s homosexuality greatly excited his
right-wing enemies, who have long used it to defame him and discredit
his theories. A 1969 book, “Keynes at Harvard: Economic Deception as a
Political Credo,” contains a long chapter on the subject, which
describes Keynes as “a lifelong sexual deviant.” Like Professor
Ferguson argued, it says that Keynes’s “aversion to human conception”
was a key to his economic theories, which the book likened to
Bolshevism.

The author of “Keynes at Harvard” is Zygmund Dobbs, but the driving
force behind it was Archibald B. Roosevelt, who founded the Veritas
Foundation, which published the Dobbs book. The youngest son of
Theodore Roosevelt, Archibald Roosevelt was very active in right-wing
politics throughout his life, attacking both Presidents Franklin D.
Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman for coddling communists. In 1954,
Archibald Roosevelt demanded that an organization named for his father
rescind an award to the United Nations under secretary Ralph Bunche
because of his “close affiliation with communism.”

Brad DeLong, an economist at the University of California, Berkeley,
has posted a long list of conservative attacks on Keynes that have
used his homosexuality as a reason to reject his economic theories.
But even economists who had no interest in this aspect of Keynes’s
life, like the economist James Buchanan, have criticized Keynesian
economics for its excessively short-term focus and negative long-run
consequences.

Unfortunately, Keynes himself was to a large extent responsible for
giving this criticism of his work currency. That is because he titled
his most important work “The General Theory of Employment, Interest
and Money.” The term “general theory” obviously implies that it is
applicable at all times, in all economic situations.

This was an unfortunate error, because the core insight of Keynesian
economics is that there are very special economic circumstances in
which the general rules of economics don’t apply and are, in fact,
counterproductive.

This happens when interest rates and inflation are so low that there
is no essential difference between money and bonds; money, after all,
is simply a bond that pays no interest. When this happens, monetary
policy becomes impotent; an increase in the money supply has no
stimulative effect because it does not lead to additional spending by
consumers or businesses.

Keynes called this situation a “liquidity trap.” Under such
circumstances, government spending can be highly stimulative because
it causes money that is sitting idle in bank reserves or savings
accounts to circulate and become mobilized through consumption or
investment. Thus monetary policy becomes effective once again.

This is an extremely important insight that policy makers have yet to
grasp, even though interest rates on Treasury bills are just a couple
of basis points above zero and inflation is virtually nonexistent.
Although the Federal Reserve has increased the monetary base to almost
$3 trillion today from $825 billion in 2007, it has had little
apparent stimulative effect.

In normal times, one would expect such an increase in the money supply
to be highly inflationary and sharply raise market interest rates.
That this has not happened is proof that we have been in a liquidity
trap for several years. We needed a lot more government spending than
we got to get the economy out of its doldrums.

Although Keynes’s theory was most appropriate to the Great Depression,
his followers did indeed believe in its general applicability and the
Keynesian medicine was overapplied and misapplied during much of the
postwar era, leading to stagflation in the 1970s. Conservatives like
Professor Buchanan were right about that.

But in their rejection of Keynesian economics at a time when it needed
to be rejected, conservatives threw the baby out with the bathwater
and are now preventing its adoption when it is badly needed.

The criticism that Professor Ferguson implicitly leveled at Keynes of
being excessively short-term oriented, therefore, has a grain of truth
in it. But the much greater truth is that we are now holding the
economy hostage to policies that are proper for the long-term – like
stabilizing the debt-to-gross-domestic-product ratio – at a time when
we face special circumstances that make such policies perverse.

In short, we are suffering from an excessive long-term focus that is
crippling the economy in the short run, and the short run threatens
never to end.
A friendly 1984 biography of Keynes by the economist Charles H.
Hession acknowledged that his sexual orientation shaped his political
philosophy. His homosexuality was “an independent element in his
reformist tendency; as such, he was an outsider in a heterosexual
world,” Professor Hession wrote.

I think this made Keynes more willing to think “outside the box,” as
we say today, and consider ideas that ran counter to the conventional
wisdom. But there is no reason to think he had any less concern for
the long-run health of the economy or society than heterosexuals.
Keynes understood that the long run is simply an infinite parade of
short runs.

But Keynes erred in implying a more general applicability of his
theories than he should have. We suffered for this in the past when
they were misapplied in inappropriate circumstances, unfortunately
discrediting them and preventing their adoption now, in highly
appropriate circumstances.
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