Gen X at 40

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George Marshall -

Galbraith is dead? I thought he was going to live forever. He certainly wrote as though he would. I've also enjoyed a number of his books and how they opened my mind to economic ideas that caused me to piss off a couple of my profs at McGill--ideas such as corporations have little incentive to maximize profits (New Industrial State) and utility is not gained through consuming goods if those goods satisfied a desire artificially created by advertisers (The Affluent Society). These arguments radically changed the way I see economics. So I am sad to learn today that the world has lost a great iconoclast.

Jay Currie -

Even when Galbraith was wrong - which was often - he was a wonderfully provocative thinker. Perhaps more importantly, he understood that economics may begin with the math but it ends with individual decisions to consume or save. And he was such a good writer that his ideas and insights could inform your thinking even when they ran contrary to it.

Plus, and not to be discounted, he brought the hard adged realism of an Ontario Scot to the often fuzzy abstractions of the economics profession. After all, at some point all that calculus has to be crafted into policy and that policy has to be made tangible and attractive to the voting public. Galbraith's hard scrabble realism often overcame his sentimental attachment to the wilder shores of Lord Keynes.

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