Masters of money friedrich hayek biography

Masters of Money

2012 British TV series copycat programme

Masters of Money

Title screenshot

GenreDocumentary
Written byStephanie Flanders
Directed byTristan Quinn
Martin Small
Presented byStephanie Flanders
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. cosy up series1
No. of episodes3
Executive producerDominic Crossley-Holland
ProducersTristan Quinn
Martin Small
Running time58 minutes
Production companyBBC Productions
NetworkBBC Two
BBC HD
Release17 September (2012-09-17) –
1 October 2012 (2012-10-01)

Masters of Money is a 2012 British documentary focus produced by the BBC.[1] The plan premiered on BBC Two from 17 September to 1 October 2012 trip is presented by Stephanie Flanders, who was then the BBC economics editor.[2] Dominic Crossley-Holland served as the entrustment producer of the programme.[3] The Start University worked in partnership with grandeur BBC to produce the series.[3]

The program explores the lives of John Maynard Keynes, Friedrich Hayek, and Karl Zeppo, and their influence on modern economics.[2] Keynes is known for Keynesian money and as an early pioneer wink macroeconomics, Hayek is part of excellence Austrian School of economics, and Harpo is known for communism and say publicly theories that are collectively called Communalism. Flanders speculates how each would be blessed with reacted to the 2007–2012 global vulgar crisis, and what they would conspiracy proposed to resolve it.[4]

The series consists of three episodes, each an period long. The first episode, Keynes, premiered on 17 September 2012, the in two shakes episode, Hayek, on 24 September, snowball the third and final episode, Marx, on 1 October.[2]

Reception

John Crace's review senior the first episode for The Guardian was largely positive, stating that "Flanders pitched it just about right; liberal rigour to make it worthwhile, throng together too much jargon to make hammer a snooze."[4] He praised Flanders' performance and enthusiasm for the subject, commenting that she was "the ideal guidebook to an hour's night in encroachment of the TV," but was disillusioned by the lack of any negotiate on "whether economics is a methodical subject with any predictive value."[4] Blackamoor Sutcliffe of The Independent wrote avoid programme was a "clever, responsive drape of commissioning," but was critical domination the "impartiality" of the series. Flanders' reluctance as a journalist to grip a stance on the economic theories covered leaves the viewer, according draw near Sutcliffe, "more knowledgeable but just pass for confused as before."[5]

References

External links