Note on the HET Edition of The General Theory
Edition
This is an electronic version of the John Maynard
Keynes's
famous treatise, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money.
It was made and hosted by the History of Economic Thought Website
(hetwebsite.net), although much of the
credit for original scanning is due to Per Berglund.
John Maynard Keynes's The General Theory of Employment, Interest
and Money was originally published in 1936 in London by the Macmillan Press and in New York by
the St. Martin's Press.
This electronic edition has been adapted from the Harbinger edition, printed in 1964 by Harcourt, Brace & World, New
York. By our understanding, this 1964 edition replicates exactly the formatting
(and emendations) of the 1936 English reprint of the original 1936 edition. Page numbers in bold square brackets, e.g.
[p.123],
denotes the particular point in the 1964 edition where that particular page begins.
Page numbers in regular brackets, e.g. (p.123), are page notes inserted by J.M.
Keynes himself. Footnotes and footnote numbers are precisely as in the
1964 edition.
The only modifications we have made to the formatting is in the
mathematical notation, e.g. we write W·f(N) instead of W.f(N).
Otherwise, all formatting is left intact as in the original 1964 edition.
Frills from the HET Website
We have taken the liberty of hyperlinking
chapter references to each other and hyperlinking the names of schools of
thought and individual economists
referred to in the text to their respective
profiles on the History of Economic Thought Website
and referenced texts to their electronic versions (where available, linked
directly in footnotes as [www]).
We have included the original index and linked page numbers to their
location in the text: Index A-K and Index
L-Z
For more information on the context, reception and impact of Keynes's General
Theory, see our review of the Keynesian Revolution.
Note on "classical" and "neo-classical":
Keynes uses the terms "classical" and "neo-classical" a bit
differently from the HET Website's classification of "schools
of thought". More precisely, Keynes uses the term "the classical school" to refer
not only to the Classical Ricardian
economists, but also to certain Neoclassical economists, such as those of the Marshallian
and Lausanne schools. However, on
p.177 of the General Theory, Keynes refers to a mysterious
"neo-classical" school, whom he differentiates from the
"classical" on the basis of their belief that "saving and investment can be actually unequal"
(1936: p.177), i.e. for Keynes, the difference between
"classical" and "neo-classical" boils down to those who do
and who do not adhere to Say's Law of
Markets. Thus, for Keynes, the "neo-classical" school would
probably include Knut Wicksell
and the Stockholm School, R.G. Hawtrey,
D.H. Robertson, F.A. Hayek
and himself.
Corrections
In Appendix I (p.385) of the Royal Economic Society's The Collected
Writings
of John Maynard Keynes: Vol. VII, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and
Money, published in 1973 by Macmillan and the Cambridge University
Press, the following printing
errors in the 1964 edition were noted by the editor, Donald Moggridge:
Page |
Line |
|
Correction |
60 |
6 |
|
For 'possession' read 'possessions' |
83 |
12 |
|
For 'has' read 'had' |
126 |
13 |
|
For '23' read '19' |
128 |
footnote 1, line 2 |
|
For 'th' read 'the' |
172 |
21 |
|
For 'security' read 'precautionary' |
212 |
9 |
|
For 'than' read 'that' |
229 |
32 |
|
For 'output' read 'the stock of assets in
general' |
233 |
25 |
|
For 'their' read 'its' |
237 |
31 |
|
For 'or' read 'of' |
267 |
28 |
|
For 'three' read 'four' |
271 |
4 |
|
For 'technique' read 'techniques' |
319 |
23 |
|
For 'income' read 'incomes' |
341 |
7 |
|
For 'Mercantilist' read 'Mercantilists' |
We have decided to adopt all these 1973 corrections (but one) in the electronic version of the
text (the exception is on p.341; we have decided to retain the original
expression). We will
alert the reader to the 1973 emendations by the placing the flag [RES]
at the point of correction in the text.
We have spotted (and corrected) the following additional typographical errors
in the 1964 edition:
Page |
Line |
|
Correction |
177 |
1 |
|
For 'éléments' read 'Éléments' |
259 |
34 |
|
For 'questio' read 'question' |
356 |
footnote 1 |
|
For 'Natura' read 'Natural' |
This is noted in the text by the flag [HET].
Additional Writings
The 1973 Collected Writings edition also includes two of John Maynard Keynes's later papers as
appendices. Specifically, the following two:
were added Appendices II and III, respectively, to the 1973 edition of the General
Theory. According to Moggridge, these papers "deal with errors on pages 103-4 and 9-10 respectively of the
[General Theory] text itself" (Editorial Introduction, CW of JMK:
vol. VII,
1973: p.xix).
Also elucidatory of the General Theory (although not included in the
1973 edition) are the following articles by John Maynard Keynes:
The 1973 edition also contains translations of J.M.
Keynes's prefaces to the German, Japanese and French editions of The General
Theory, which, for copyright reasons, we cannot reproduce here.
All comments and corrections on this text are encouraged and can be addressed
to hetwebsite@hotmail.com.
Gonçalo L. Fonseca, Editor,
The History of Economic Thought Website,
http://www.hetwebsite.net/het/
hetwebsite@hotmail.com
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