The Economist wrote that the book was not thorough enough to be convincing.
"Rising interest rates certainly were a factor in the stock market's decline," the economists wrote.
Note that no economist from the Baltics has written about this issue.
For years, economists, academics and psychologists have written about how money is the last taboo.
The Economist wrote that he was "by some distance the favourite to win the candidacy".
"By the late 1970's, the Interstate highway system was substantially completed," the economists write.
Surely a truly Keynesian economist would have written at least one warning in seven years?
As The Economist wrote in 1999, the stunning economic boom of the late 1990's needed a "very big idea" to explain it.
In addition, many professional economists now study and write on the relationship between economics and legal doctrines.
What is pertinent here is the author's contention that economists, all along, have been writing theology.