This
paper addresses how Keynesian narratives
are being used to reconstitute an orthodox
policy paradigm in the face of the current
economic crisis. Such ideological revisionism
also occurred alongside the 1982 debt
crisis and was crucial for the neoliberal
ideological triumph that ensued. Similar
revisionism can be observed now through
narratives that locate the sources of
the US financial bubble in Chinese external
surpluses. This narrative has captured
the imagination of many on both the political
left and right, hence the potential for
ideological reconstitution that cuts across
traditional political positions in the
North. These processes of paradigm maintenance
need to be urgently addressed if the current
crisis is to be leveraged for a return
to a more progressive, inclusive and developmental
policy paradigm in both the North and
the South. Failing this, current orthodoxies
risk being reconstituted or even reinforced,
and we could find ourselves soon entering
a new round of development debacles similar
to those of early 1980s.
February 3, 2010.
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