For years, those who want selective access to government spending benefits (like the military-industrial complex and other parasitic sectors), while claiming the government cannot afford to provide adequate income support to the most disadvantaged citizens have used various ruses to give an air of authority or legitimacy to their claims. So in the UK, the lie in 1976 by the then Labour government that it was going to have to borrow from the IMF to stay solvent has been regularly wheeled out. In Europe, it was the ‘tournant de la rigueur’ (austerity turn) introduced by the French government of François Mitterrand in 1983 that effectively cancelled the commitment to the progressive – Programme commun – that is often cited as a demonstration of the limited capacity of governments to resist
Read More »Articles by Mike Norman
Mark Blyth: Unionists ‘taking my words on independence out of context’ — Xander Elliards
3 days agoThe sequel.The National (Scotland)Mark Blyth: Unionists ‘taking my words on independence out of context’Xander Elliards
Read More »Philip Pilkington turns the page on MMT?
3 days agoPhilip Pilkington turns the page on MMT?https://twitter.com/philippilk/status/1772538175564447823
The US, like the UK, can’t go broke in their own currency. But if foreign lenders don’t buy into net bond issuance, USD will have to adjust to shrink the trade deficit. This will put upward pressure on inflation and is what the UK faced under Truss. Will Trump get Trussed?… pic.twitter.com/fDuYrC3Gzx— Philip Pilkington (@philippilk) March 26, 2024
Read More »Monetary Sovereignty and Mark Blyth’s critique of MMT — Peter May
3 days agoAnd there is indeed a ‘current account constraint’ – if you are a small open economy you need things you can sell in order to get the stuff you don’t have.MMT really applies, as many others suggest, uniquely to the US as it issues the world’s reserve currency.If you are not the US and your Sovereign Currency is weak, it will drive import inflation so it really means that your currency is not properly sovereign. MMT does recognize this constraint by treating it with more nuance.MMT’s basic framework includes the priority or primacy of real resources over government finances for all countries including those that issue their own currency and don’t undertake obligations is other currencies.MMT acknowledges that a country must either be able to produce is own real resources, which implies
Read More »Climate Reparations, not “finance” — Fadhel Kaboub
4 days agoA brief note on the EU, Egypt, Palestine, and CopenhagenMMT’s man on the ground in the Global South. Global South Perspectives—Reflections & Analysis by Fadhel KaboubClimate Reparations, not "finance"Fadhel Kaboub, Associate Professor of economics at Denison University (on leave) and President of the Global Institute for Sustainable Prosperity. He currently serves as the Under-Secretary-General for Financing for Development at the Organisation of Educational Cooperation in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. He also held a number of research affiliations with the Levy Economics Institute, the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, the Economic Research Forum (Cairo), Power Shift Africa (Nairobi), and the Center for Strategic Studies on the Maghreb (Tunis). Fadhel is a
Read More »Untangling the “socialism” vs. “capitalism” dichotomy — Alex Krainer
6 days agoInteresting post that deal with some of the same concepts as MMT but is not MMT. It’s an interesting take. He has seen both sides, having grown up in a communist country (Yugoslavia). He is former hedge fund manager, commodities trader and author based in Monaco. He now blogs on geoeconomics and geopolitics at TrendCompass on Substack.Alex Krainer’s TrendCompassUntangling the "socialism" vs. "capitalism" dichotomyAlex Krainer, The Naked Hedgie"For full disclosure, I do have a university degree, but I’ve worked hard ever since to recover from it."
Read More »Entropy, the Theory of Value and the Future of Humanity — James K. Galbraith
6 days agoIn a keynote address to a conference on “Geopolitical Changes” at Kozminski University, Warsaw, on January 29, 2024, Professor James Galbraith called for economics to break with equilibrium dogma and re-found itself on the life principles that govern physics, biology and every existing mechanical and social system. Noting the distinguished presence of Professors Francis Fukuyama and E.S. Phelps, Galbraith called attention to the spectacular fallacies of “an end to history” and a “natural rate of unemployment,” arguing that these doctrines have helped blind our generation to the damage inflicted by rising resource costs and neoliberal policies of austerity and precarity, with dire consequences for households in wealthy societies, for their reproduction rates, and for the long-term
Read More »Top 25 Heterodox Economics Books — Lars P. Syll
6 days agoChronological order. Randy Wray and Stephanie Kelton each make the list.Lars P. Syll’s BlogTop 25 Heterodox Economics BooksLars P. Syll | Professor, Malmo University
Read More »Claims that mainstream economics is changing radically are far-fetched — Bill Mitchell
11 days agoI have received several E-mails over the last few weeks that suggest that the economics discipline is finally changing course to redress the major flaws in the curricula that is taught around the world and that perhaps Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) can take some credit for some of that. There has been a tendency for some time for those who are attracted to MMT to become somewhat celebratory, even to the point of declaring ‘victory’. This tendency is not limited to the MMT public who comment on social media and the like. My response is that we are probably further away from seeing fundamental change in the economics profession than perhaps where we were some years ago – after the GFC and in the early years of the pandemic (which continues). My answer reflects the incontestable fact that the
Read More »Will BRICS launch a new world in 2024? — Pepe Escobar
13 days agoBRICS doubled its membership at the start of 2024, and faces huge tasks ahead: integrating its newest members, developing future admission criteria, deepening the institution’s groundings, and most importantly, launching the mechanisms for bypassing the US dollar in international finance.The financial plans are toward the end of the post. No details yet, but a plan is supposed to be presented at the BRICs meaning in the fall of this year. An alternative BRICs currency is not being planned at this stage when BRICs is just getting off the ground and has yet to be adequately institutionalized yet itself. It still just "a club" at this point. Lots of work to be done, especially with many more countries already lining up for membership.The CradleWill BRICS launch a new world in 2024?Pepe
Read More »Joe Stiglitz really should not talk about modern monetary theory when he so obviously has no clue about what it actually says — Richard Murphy
14 days agoJoseph Stiglitz makes freshman mistakes about MMT in addressing the House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee on the sustainability of the UK’s national debt. Richard Murphy calls him out on it.Funding the Future (formerly Tax Research UK)Joe Stiglitz really should not talk about modern monetary theory when he so obviously has no clue about what it actually saysRichard Murphy | Professor of Practice in International Political Economy at City University, London; Director of Tax Research UK; non-executive director of Cambridge Econometrics, and a member of the Progressive Economy Forum
Read More »Keynes was wrong because he failed to consider class conflict — Bill Mitchell
15 days agoImportant for MMT aficionado’s. I was asked during an interview the other day from Paris whether I was a Post Keynesian. I replied not at all and explained that I have never felt that my ideas fit into that category although in a facile sense we are all post keynesian in a temporal sense. Most progressive economists would answer yes if confronted with that question, even most of the economists involved in advancing Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). My point of departure is that while there was a lot of important analytical material in Keynes’ writing that is worth preserving and integrating into, say, MMT, where Keynes went astray was his antipathy to the insights provided by Karl Marx. In particular, I consider that Keynes seriously misunderstood what the dynamics of the class conflict were
Read More »Disclaimer
15 days agoLOL… Need a similar disclaimer when reporting on the debt doomsday morons who have been continuously wrong for 40 YEARS…I find it hilarious that Bloomberg feels it necessary to include this disclaimer every time Kolanovic makes a market call. pic.twitter.com/sclIvqZm9V— wu wei (@wu_wei_invest) March 12, 2024
Read More »EU: Austerity for the people and Keynesianism for the war — Riccardo Zolea
15 days agoMMT-related.Monetary Policy InstituteEU: Austerity for the people and Keynesianism for the warRiccardo Zolea, Sapienza University of Rome
Read More »Global South Repositioning — Fadhel Kaboub
16 days agoNot MMT per se, but a post on recent doings in the real world by an MMT economist of rising prominence in the Global South. This post is broadly about a strategy for decolonization and leveling the playing field.Global South Perspectives—Reflections & Analysis by Fadhel KaboubGlobal South RepositioningFadhel Kaboub, Associate Professor of economics at Denison University (on leave) and President of the Global Institute for Sustainable Prosperity. He currently serves as the Under-Secretary-General for Financing for Development at the Organisation of Educational Cooperation in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.He also held a number of research affiliations with the Levy Economics Institute, the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, the Economic Research Forum (Cairo), Power Shift
Read More »How Sustainable is our National Debt? — NeilW
17 days agoThe UK House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee is running an inquiry entitled “How sustainable is our National Debt?”The GIMMS written evidence to the inquiry has now been published….New WaylandHow Sustainable is our National Debt?NeilW
Read More »The Trouble with Words — Peter Radford
17 days agoThe title of the post should be "The Trouble with Economics." Words. The point is well-taken.The Radford Free PressThe Trouble with WordsPeter Radford
Read More »Why and how economics must change — Jayati Ghosh
21 days agoWhile this post is not MMT, it is consistent with MMT and implies that MMT is needed to address the issues that stem from wrong assumptions about the relationship of economics, finance, money and banking, as well as the mistaken view that money is neutral, being only a veil over what is at bottom a barter economy under the veneer of a monetary economy.While MMT doesn’t deal directly with the relationship of economics and power, being an institutional approach is incorporates the role of power implicitly in its analysis of the the relationship of economics and finance. Much of what is presented as received economic wisdom about how economies work and the implications of policies is at best misleading and at worst simply wrong. For decades now, a significant and powerful lobby within the
Read More »America Enters the Samizdat Era — Matt Taibbi
21 days agoThe bloodiest period of Soviet totalitarianism ended in the fifties, but the habits remained long after, including the advanced system of alternative media that ultimately broke the state: samizdat.Tonight, along with Stanford’s Dr. Jay Bhattacharya and New York Post reporter Miranda Devine, I’ll be accepting the inaugural Samizdat Prize, given by the RealClear Media Fund. Samizdat is a bit of a play on words, since like a lot of politically oppressive groups the Soviets had a mania for reducing beautiful language to state-acceptable ugly compound words (GosPlan, GULAG, etc.), so in place of GosIzdat (State-Publish, the official publisher) dissidents created Sam- or “Self” Izdat: “Self-Publish.”Ten years ago PBS did a feature that quoted a Russian radio personality calling Samizdat the
Read More »“The Debt Crisis Is Here”: The Conference Board Is At It Again — Brian Romanchuk
21 days agoThe Committee for Economic Development (CED) of Conference Board recently put out “Explainer: The National Debt” which is pretty much a greatest hits of debt scare mongering. Other than the references to recent events and data, it is timeless: the authors could have put out the same report in any year since the mid-1980s and not much of the contents would have changed. Anyone who thinks that the MMT debate would improve things just needs to read the report to see that progress in conventional economics is largely illusionary.….Bond Economics"The Debt Crisis Is Here": The Conference Board Is At It AgainBrian Romanchuk
Read More »Pavlina Tcherneva – Whatever it Takes: How Neoliberalism Hijacked the Public Purse — Pavlina R. Tcherneva
22 days agoThe spectacular government spending post-2008 and post-2020 appeared to upend the neoliberal logic of the past decades, enabling bold public action and opening the door to a more just and democratic social order. Specific policy choices stamped out this opportunity. These pivotal moments did, however, point to policy levers that can facilitate a breakthrough….Brave New EuropePavlina Tcherneva – Whatever it Takes: How Neoliberalism Hijacked the Public PursePavlina Tcherneva | Founding Director of OSUN-EDI, Professor of Economics at Bard College, Research Scholar at The Levy Economics Institute, and Senior Research Associate at the Center for Full Employment and Price Stability
Read More »MMT sees America through rapid economic recovery — Stephanie Kelton
22 days agoModern monetary theory has been influential in helping America rise out of the recession that crippled the economy during the pandemic, writes Professor Stephanie Kelton and Dr Steven Hail.The overwhelming number of articles appearing attack MMT pretty much as the work of the devil. Regarding the the quote, "first they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win" (misattributed to Mahatma Gandhi), we seem to be at the attack stage. Independent AustraliaMMT sees America through rapid economic recoveryStephanie Kelton | Professor of Public Policy and Economics at Stony Brook University, formerly Democrats’ chief economist on the staff of the U.S. Senate Budget Committee, and an economic adviser to the 2016 presidential campaign of Senator Bernie Sanders
Read More »After Nigeria’s eNaira Disaster, Another “Live” Central Bank Digital Currency, Jamaica’s Jam-Dex, Founders — Nick Corbishley
24 days agoJust three countries have so far introduced CBDCs, according to the IMF, and two of them are already having serious issues. The roll-out of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), while still in its early stages, is not going as smoothly as the central banking community may have hoped. The latest central bank to admit to serious difficulties is the Bank of Jamaica (BOJ) whose governor Richard Byles has acknowledged that the rollout of the country’s CBDC, the Jam-Dex, has been a lot slower than originally anticipated. In fact, the total amount of Jam-Dex in circulation has remained stuck at just 230 million Jamaican dollars (USD 1.47 million) since the first — and so far only — batch of the digital currency was “minted” 19 months ago.The Jam-Dex is one of just three fully-launched retail
Read More »Google Demands That We Censor Our Content — Yves Smith
24 days agoFYI. The information space is narrowing.Naked CapitalismGoogle Demands That We Censor Our ContentYves Smith
Read More »Voters Say Biden Will Make Inflation Worse
24 days agoBiden still has a big “inflation!” political problem…. Story at National Pulse:As the U.S. economy braces itself for the third year of an inflation surge that has substantially hiked the cost of living and sharply depressed real wages, most registered voters believe President Biden’s policies will cause prices to rise. A poll by CBS News and YouGov released Sunday shows that 55 percent of registered voters believe Biden’s policies will trigger price increases. Only 17 percent of registered voters believe his policies will cause prices to decline. Twenty-seven percent believe his policies won’t impact prices either way, suggesting that 82 percent of voters believe Biden is ineffective at controlling inflation or is actively making it worse.Voters Say Biden Will Make Inflation Worse,
Read More »British government designs fiscal policy within a flawed framework – result = poor policy — Bill Mitchell
25 days agoThis week, the UK Chancellor releases the latest fiscal statement (aka ‘the budget’) and will also have a eye to the general election which must be held before January 28, 2025. One would expect the government would stall the announcement and delay the election for as long as is possible, given the current situation and the cumulative impacts of 12 years of Tory rule, which are plain to see at all levels of British society. All the talk is of tax cuts, that typical ‘sugar hit’ approach to winning votes that soon works it way out of the system. The debate as to what the British government should now be doing is clouded, as these debates are always clouded, by the input of organisations such as the Office of Budget Responsibility, which claims its charter is to “to examine and report on the
Read More »Prince: How to flood Hamas tunnels
27 days agoPrince is ripping off my stuff! … I was saying this a week after the attack duh…. sheesh no brainer..[embedded content]
Read More »Finding the Money: Can a film about modern monetary theory change our economic debates? — Cameron Murray
February 25, 2024Finding the Money is now debuting in Australia. Murray is an Australian economist that writes chiefly about housing. Fresh Economic ThinkingFinding the Money: Can a film about modern monetary theory change our economic debates?Cameron Murray
Read More »As US Modern Monetary Theory advocates make their case in Australia, Gareth Vaughan explains the world through their lens and how it might go down in New Zealand — Gareth Vaughan
February 24, 2024This article, which is favorable to MMT, contains a good explanation of what MMT is and isn’t.interest.co.nzAs US Modern Monetary Theory advocates make their case in Australia, Gareth Vaughan explains the world through their lens and how it might go down in New ZealandGareth VaughanAnother side of the story.[US] Conservatives, [El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele] said, “always tell me that the problem is high taxes, but they are wrong.”“The real problem is that you pay high taxes only to uphold the illusion that you are funding the government, which you are not,” he claimed, before describing how the government is financed by Treasury bonds, which are purchased by the Federal Reserve with printed money backed by the bonds themselves.“The government is funded by money printing, paper
Read More »Argentina Economy Shrank in December by Most Since Pandemic
February 23, 2024“Oh sheeeeeeeeeeit!”…. 😂😂😂Argentina’s economy contracted more than expected in December as newly elected President Milei put in motion shock austerity measures https://t.co/HHMFKEqo1v— Bloomberg Economics (@economics) February 22, 2024
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