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Mike Norman Economics

PCR: Gilbert Doctorow – Vladimir Putin to the West: “We Will Bury You!”

Putin Is Soft. He Should Learn to Scare the West Like Khrushchev Did PCR has always said that Putin is too polite and this increases the risk of WW3. If Putin was more aggressive, says PCR, the West would back down. I'm not so sure, maybe Putin knows what he is doing as the West is crazy and run by criminals.  Apparently, Putin was very upset about Gaddafi's brutal death and vowed never to let it happen to Assad.  Putin might well just be a brilliant statesmen, but I've always detected an...

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Who’s at fault for Yellow Vests protests? Macron blames…

Russia gets the blame again. The ruling elite are like children - except they're so dangerous. Everything gets blamed on the Russians. - [embedded content] Who is at fault for Yellow Vest protests raging in France since November? For President Emmanuel Macron it's not actual economic problems or his own decisions, but the right, the left, social media and, of course, 'Russes'.

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Allan Nairn: Trump’s Venezuela Envoy Elliott Abrams Is a War Criminal Who Has Abetted Genocide

An absolutely shocking report by Allan Nairn about U.S involvement with the death squads that operated in Latin America during the 1980's under the Reagan administration.As most of the population in Latin American countries were for the liberation the right-wing knew they were in a minority. Knowing their mercenary armies were greatly outnumbered they decided to use the most brutal and and terrifying tactics to frighten the population into submission with shear unbelievable psychopathic...

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Pierre Ortlieb — Central Banks and the Folk Tales of Money

On the other hand, a number of central banks have taken the dangerous approach of simply tailoring their message based on their audience: when speaking to technical experts, say one thing, and when speaking to the public, say another. The janus-faced SNB is a case in point. This rhetorical duplicity is important as it allows central banks to both assuage popular concerns over the stability of money, by fostering the illusion that they maintain control over price stability and monetary...

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Stephanie Kelton, Andres Bernal, and Greg Carlock — We Can Pay For A Green New Deal

Here’s the good news: Anything that is technically feasible is financially affordable. And it won’t be a drag on the economy ― unlike the climate crisis itself, which will cause tens of billions of dollars worth of damage to American homes, communities and infrastructure each year. A Green New Deal will actually help the economy by stimulating productivity, job growth and consumer spending, as government spending has often done. (You don’t have to go back to the original New Deal for...

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Bill Mitchell — Monetary policy has failed – we must reprioritise fiscal policy

Remember back in early 2009, when the then head of the European Central Bank Jean-Claude Trichet (boasted that the “euro … is a success … it helps to secure prosperity in participating states”. He was still making these claims in October 2018. At an event in honour of he and former German finance minister Theodor Waigel, organised by the Banque de France, Trichet said that “the euro is a historic success … in terms of credibility, resilience, adaptability, popular support and real growth...

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Richard Murphy—A challenge to Simon Wren-Lewis on modern monetary theory and Labour’s fiscal credibility rule

Richard Murphy challenges Simon Wren-Lewis to put up or shut up. So my question is, I suppose, inevitable. What I would like Simon to do is show how he and Jonathan Portes have written, as he claims, a rule that delivers a real-world political economic solution (because that is what Labour's rule is, because it is not an academic paper) that is the same as modern monetary theory. And I want him to show this even though: i) The rule he has written works subject to financial constraints, and...

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Michael Roberts Blog MMT 2 – the tricks of circulation

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 —...

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