@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:02002280, author = {鍋島, 直樹 and NABESHIMA, Naoki}, issue = {4}, journal = {経済科学, The Economic Science}, month = {Mar}, note = {This paper examines how Keynes viewed socialism. Keynes had little sympathy for Marxism, seeing it as an already outdated idea. He was also uninterested in working class movement and the social change through it because he retained the lifestyle and values of the middle class throughout his life. Nevertheless, he was very interested in Soviet Russian experiment that sought to create a social framework that would make money-making less than a major motivation for human behavior. Keynes sought to save the engendered European civilization by attempting a particular amalgam of private capitalism and state socialism. He called such a position ‘new liberalism’ or ‘liberal socialism’. He advocated the ‘socialization of investment’ in which the state controlled the level of total investment based on a long-term plan as a means of securing an approximation to full employment while preserving individual liberty and initiative. Keynes thus argued that the expansion of planning was the only way to protect a free society.}, pages = {1--14}, title = {ケインズの社会主義論 : 自由と計画の狭間で}, volume = {69}, year = {2022} }