In last month's European parliament elections, eurosceptic and
extremist parties won 25% of the popular vote, with the biggest gains
chalked up in France, the UK and Greece. These results were widely,
and correctly, interpreted as showing the degree of disconnect between
an arrogant European elite and ordinary citizens.

Less noticed, because less obviously political, are current
intellectual rumblings, of which French economist Thomas Piketty's
Capital in the Twenty-First Century, a withering indictment of growing
inequality, is the latest manifestation. We may be witnessing the
beginning of the end of the neoliberal capitalist consensus that has
prevailed throughout the west since the 1980s - and that many claim
led to the economic disaster of 2008-2009.

Particularly important is the growing discontent of economics students
with the university curriculum. Undergraduates' discontent matters,
because economics has long been the west's political lodestar. This
discontent was born in the"post-autistic economics movement", which
started in Paris in 2000, and spread to the US, Australia, and New
Zealand. Its adherents' main complaint was that the mainstream
economics taught to students had become a branch of mathematics,
disconnected from reality.

full: 
http://www.theguardian.com/business/2014/jun/18/economics-upheaval-students-disssent-capitalist-thomas-piketty?CMP=twt_gu

Mike B)


-- 
Wobbly times
http://wobblytimes.blogspot.com.au/
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