Murray Rothbard, in a memo dated 1959, reviews Robbins’s book on the Great Depression:
Lionel Robbins’s The Great Depression (Macmillan, 1934) is one of the great economic works of our time. Its greatness lies not so much in originality of economic thought, as in the application of the best economic thought to the explanation of the cataclysmic phenomena of the Great Depression. This is unquestionably the best work published on the Great Depression.
At the time that Robbins wrote this work, he was perhaps the second most eminent follower of Ludwig von Mises (Hayek being the first). To his work, Robbins brought a clarity and polish of style that I believe to be unequalled among any economists, past or present. Robbins is the premier economic stylist. FULL ARTICLE
Did Capitalism Cause the Great Depression?
All Rights Reserved ©
Note: The views expressed on Mises.org are not necessarily those of the Mises Institute.