Confused. Michael Roberts needs to read more of the MMT primary literature if he wants to critique MMT in any detail. Nevertheless, MMT starts with the conviction that it is the state (not capitalist commodity relations) that establishes the value of money. Not quite.MMT starts with the observation of Warren Mosler that under the current monetary system, a contemporary sovereign currency is a public monopoly, with the currency issuing government acting as the people's representative — popular sovereignty and all that. A monopolist is the price setter. The purpose of currency issuance is to provision the government in order to serve public purpose, public purpose being a political issue in a popular democracy.While all currency sovereigns are the same operationally with respect to
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Nevertheless, MMT starts with the conviction that it is the state (not capitalist commodity relations) that establishes the value of money.Not quite.
MMT starts with the observation of Warren Mosler that under the current monetary system, a contemporary sovereign currency is a public monopoly, with the currency issuing government acting as the people's representative — popular sovereignty and all that. A monopolist is the price setter. The purpose of currency issuance is to provision the government in order to serve public purpose, public purpose being a political issue in a popular democracy.
While all currency sovereigns are the same operationally with respect to the currency, authoritarian governments are not restricted by public opinion and domestic political considerations. This includes oligarchies masquerading as popular democracies. Not all "democracies" are popular democracies, in spite of appearances (elections).
Therefore, power is an issue. Almost all contemporary states fall in this category to some extents at least. This needs to be addressed through policy changes that effect institutional change, e.g., to preempt rent extraction by special interests.
States that have given up currency sovereignty by either using a currency they do not themselves issue, or undertake obligations in a foreign currency are different operationally in that they are not monopoly providers of their currency. This includes the American states, which ceded currency sovereignty to the federal government, and the nations of the EZ, which ceded it to the ECB. Comparing currency sovereigns to currency issuers is like adding apple and oranges. Note that commercial banks do not issue currency. They extend credit denominated in the currency and are delegated a special relationship with the central bank as currency issuer that acts on behalf of the state as the government's fiscal agent.
In a modern monetary production economy (as described by Keynes, for example), this is how it begins — with "money." MMT agrees with Marx's observation that capitalism is based on using money to make more money — M-C-M', instead of starting the Robinson Crusoe just-so story about barter. This means that money is not neutral and that the loan funds theory is wrong. However, MMT defines "money" carefully. Failure to grasp these key distinctions will result in missing MMT.
Failure to begin at the beginning is to misunderstand MMT and sets up a straw man argument that is DOA. As Aquinas said, paraphrasing Aristotle, "A small mistake in the beginning is a big one in the end." Most economic theory stumbles out of the gate by getting this wrong.
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