ABSTRACT

Roepke's The Social Crisis of Our Time is a series of blasts against the malformations of economics: the Nazi and Communist forms of collectivism both come in for severe criticism. Roepke shows the process by which the Western liberal tradition itself makes possible these rebellions against open economic systems. The drive toward social welfare, full employment policies, and the state management of fiscal fluctuations all lead away from free societies no less than market economies.

chapter |33 pages

Introduction to the Original Edition

part One|114 pages

Interpretation and Inventory

chapter I|46 pages

Seed and Harvest of Two Centuries

chapter II|17 pages

Political Systems and Economic Systems

chapter III|49 pages

The Splendor and Misery of Capitalism

part Two|106 pages

Action

chapter I|25 pages

Aberrations and Blind Alleys

chapter II|22 pages

Basic Questions of Reform

chapter III|57 pages

Avenues of Approach and Examples