Trouble is, economics is no more provable than religion. Freedman reckoned Keynes was wrong, so Britain and America comletely changed their economic models around the start of the 80s. And now we are here. I don't know whether the economists (and politicians) have decided which was best. I know Nouriel Roubini predicted the 2006 crash, but he's got stuff wrong since then. The other one to come out is MMT which is very radical but it might be mumbo jumbo for all I know. I think it's more like Keynes on steroids.
Anyway, it does look like raising interest rates caused the collapse of SVB (as its investments were a bet on low interest rates). BoE rate went up again the other day.
Oh, Financial Times says:
"Keynes v Friedman: both can claim victory", headline, but article is behind a paywall. But that was from 2006. Is by Martin Wolf, chief economics commentator at the Financial Times. Everything is paywall so I've followed him on twitter so see what I can see.
I did find an article not behind a paywall by him, June 2022
https://www.ft.com/content/df62d58c-e86 ... 87e8ef1667
"We have now moved into a third epoch in the history of the postwar global economic order. The first went from the late 1940s to the 1970s and was characterised by liberalisation.... From the 1980s ... more radical forms of economic liberalism, known as “neoliberalism”, spread across the world."
We are now moving into a new era of world disorder..."
"This new epoch of the world is creating huge challenges. It is possible — perhaps even probable — that the world system will shatter. In such a world, billions of people will lose hope of a better future and shared global challenges will remain unmet. "