"The General Theory could be interpreted as an account of short-run departures from the ultimately inevitable full-employment equilibrium. It was not too many years after the publication of Keynes' work that a vigorous cottage industry grew up among neoclassical economists, aiming to show how underemployment could be accommodated in the framework of rational calculation as a temporary dynamic departure from full-employment equilibrium. If Keynes could not be ignored, he could be eaten and digested. The absorption was the more easily accomplished because Keynes himself had departed from neoclassicism only to the minimal extent necessary to provide some mechanisms for unemployment."
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Herbert Simon, An Empirically Based Microeconomics (1997), p. 15
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/The_General_Theory_of_Employment%2C_Interest_and_Money
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The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money
The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money was written by the English economist John Maynard Keynes. The book, generally considered to be his magnum opus, is largely credited with creating the terminology and shape of modern macroeconomics. Published in February 1936, it sought to bring about a revolution, commonly referred to as the "Keynesian Revolution", in the way economists thought – especially in relation to the proposition that a market economy tends naturally to restore itself
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