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