Recently, my interest in economics has been on the rise. I just finished reading Economics in One Lesson, by Henry Hazlitt, which seems to be primarily a condemnation of Keynesian economics. One thing that struck me was the very last chapter. The book was originally written around 1946, and a later edition of the book, circa 1978, added a chapter called "The Lesson After 30 years". In this chapter, Hazlitt mentions the recent, at the time, backlash against Keynesian beliefs. I thought this rather strange, since looking at current times, the economy is rife with talk of stimulus, bailouts, quantitative easing, and other government interventions in the economy.
Since I'm obviously missing things that happened between 1978 and 2010+, I did what I usually do, I went to Wikipedia. I found an article
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008%E2%80 ... resurgence, which talks about the Asian market crashes in the late 90s, and the US recession starting in 2007, leading to a rejection of Austrian economics.
I'm looking for a broader understanding of the schools of thought in Economics. I am aware of two schools of economics: Austrian and Keynesian. Are there just these two? How does these schools relate to the basic rules of economics I learned about in school, ie the law of supply and law of demand? Are they just more advanced applications of these rules, or do they alter or supplant the rules in any ways?
I know we have proponents of both schools here; what are your opinions on the history of economics related to your favored philosophy? In the last century, economists seem to go back and forth between them, with every bad event being blamed on whichever school was popular at the time, and causing a resurgence in the opposite school. How do you feel about that? If your school fell out of popularity during a certain period, what do you think were the results of that? If people had continued along the same lines and not switched policies, do you think that the results would have been different?