SOME COMMENTS ON THE POLITICS OF FULL EMPLOYMENT.*) Since Kalecki wrote his famous classic on the politics of full employment (Kalecki 1943) nearly half a century has passed and the experience of history accumulated since invites us to use his methods and his questions on it. His paper predicted a stop-go cycle; more generally it analysed the attitudes of business to full employment policies. To generalise even more we might discuss the role of politics in this field. It seems striking to day that among the reasons Kalecki gives for the capitalists' dislike of full employment policies he does not mention their fear that deficit spending sooner or later would lead to increased taxation. And taxation, indeed, is a bugbear of capitalists. Looking at the post-war history of full employment policies in the United States one feels that this fear has played a very large role.Again, in Europe when the welfare spending continued to rise as a percentage of GDP this also led to a preoccupation with the question of taxes.The importance of the question of the public debt and its service is of quite a different order of magnitude now than it was in Kalecki's thinking. The reason for the difference is fairly obvious. Kalecki,as well as Keynes and his followers, were thinking in terms of interest rates as low as they were in England during the second world war, to a great extent owing to the influence of Keynes at the treasury. The reaction against the cheap credit began soon after the end of the war (some economists in U.S. talked of the "rediscovery of money") and reached its climax in the era of monetarism from 1979 on. When Kalecki considered the possibility,or even likelyhood, of a permanent deficit being *Acknowledgements are made to Alois Guger and Ewald Walterskirchen for valuable suggestions.