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Success Quote by John Kenneth Galbraith

"If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error"

About this Quote

Immortality, Galbraith suggests, isn’t reserved for the wise; it’s just as available to the catastrophically wrong. The line lands because it weaponizes a familiar human vanity - the desire to be remembered - and flips it into a warning label. “Spectacular error” is doing double duty: it’s funny in the dry, Galbraithian way, but it also names a real mechanism in public life. History has a short memory for competent management and a photographic memory for fiasco.

As an economist who lived through the Great Depression, the postwar boom, and the confident technocracy of the mid-century U.S., Galbraith had watched expertise get treated like a stage prop. The subtext is aimed at elites who chase legacy through grand schemes, sweeping forecasts, and high-stakes policy bets. Quiet correctness rarely makes a story; dramatic failure does. Think of the way financial crises become shorthand for entire eras, while decades of stable growth don’t even get a chapter title.

There’s also a sly jab at the attention economy before we had a name for it. “If all else fails” reads like career advice from hell: when you can’t secure fame by achievement, you can still get it by detonating something large enough that people can’t look away. Galbraith’s cynicism isn’t nihilism; it’s a critique of incentives. When institutions reward audacity and narrative over prudence, error doesn’t just happen - it gets promoted, televised, and eventually memorialized.

Quote Details

TopicWitty One-Liners
Source
Verified source: Money: Whence It Came, Where It Went (John Kenneth Galbraith, 1975)ISBN: 0395710855
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by adequate error. (Chapter XIII, “The Self-inflicted Wounds” (p. 176 in the digitized edition consulted)). Primary-source match found in John Kenneth Galbraith’s own book. The wording commonly circulated online (“spectacular error”) appears to be a later misquotation; the text in the book reads “adequate error.” The line appears in Chapter XIII (“The Self-inflicted Wounds”), in a paragraph discussing how historical fame often attaches to mistakes. The digitized text consulted shows the quote at lines 1816–1818, with the page number in that scan corresponding to p. 176. Bibliographic record confirming first publication year and publisher: WorldCat lists the book as published by Houghton Mifflin (Boston) in 1975. (If you need the *very first* appearance beyond doubt, the next step would be to check the 1975 first edition hardcopy to confirm the same page and wording.)
Other candidates (1)
Sometimes You Win--Sometimes You Learn (John C. Maxwell, 2013)95.0%
... John Kenneth Galbraith says, “If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.” “If all...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Galbraith, John Kenneth. (2026, March 2). If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-all-else-fails-immortality-can-always-be-3045/

Chicago Style
Galbraith, John Kenneth. "If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error." FixQuotes. March 2, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-all-else-fails-immortality-can-always-be-3045/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error." FixQuotes, 2 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-all-else-fails-immortality-can-always-be-3045/. Accessed 5 Mar. 2026.

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About the Author

John Kenneth Galbraith

John Kenneth Galbraith (October 15, 1908 - April 29, 2006) was a Economist from USA.

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