Henry Hazlitt, to confront the rise of Keynesianism in his day, put together this intellectual arsenal. In the Critics of Keynesian Economics, the most brilliant economists of the time show — in great detail and with great rigor — what is wrong with Keynes's economic system. With excerpts from books and articles published between the 1930s and the 1950s, the Critics of Keynesian Economics remains the most powerful anti-Keynesian collection ever assembled.• Introduction by Henry Hazlitt• Say's Law by Jean Baptiste Say• Of the Influence of Consumption on Production by John Stuart Mill• Mr. Keynes on the Causes of Unemployment by Jacob Viner• Unemployment: and Mr. Keynes's Revolution In Economic Theory by Frank H. Knight• Mr. Keynes's "General Theory" by Etienne Mantoux• The Economics of Abundance by F. A. Hayek• Liquidity Preference and the Theory of Interest and Money by Franco Modigliani• Digression on Keynes by Benjamin M. Anderson• The Philosophy of Lord Keynes by Philip Cortney• Beveridge's "Full Employment In A Free Society" by R. Gordon Wasson• John Maynard Keynes by Garet Garrett• The Fallacies of Lord Keynes's General Theory by Jacques Rueff• Appraisal of Keynesian Economics by John H. Williams• Continental European Pre-Keynesianism by L. Albert Hahn• Stones into Bread: the Keynesian Miracle by Ludwig Von Mises• Lord Keynes and Say's Law by Ludwig Von Mises• Lord Keynes and the Financial Community by Joseph Stagg Lawrence• The Economics of Full Employment by Wilhelm Ropke• The Significance of Price Flexibility by W. H. Hutt• Keynes's Theory of Underemployment Equilibrium by Arthur F. Burns• The Keynesian Mythology by Melchior Palyi• Mr. Keynes and the "Day of Judgment" by David McCord Wright