Personally, I’d recommend Marxists to pay MMT closer attention. It has plenty to teach us. I would say the same to MMTers. Marxism is about emancipation of workers from wage-slavery, which Marx analyzes in terms of capitalism as concentrated private ownership of the means of production being based on rent seeking and rent extract. This is free riding on the system and is parasitical. Under capitalism, workers are in a position similar to serfs and peasants under feudalism and the...
Read More »Bruce Currie — How can America pay for things the people want? With ease.
Good summary article on MMT.Here's a teaser: With a sovereign currency, what this nation chooses to spend money on should be removed from any discussion of how a program should be paid for. Congress can authorize such spending at any time. Inflation is never a concern, so long as sufficient goods and services are available to purchase with the money spent into the economy.In fact, government spending that invests in new infrastructure, more efficient buildings and transportation, and in...
Read More »Christopher Carley — My Turn: Money, wealth and balloon navigation
Hyperinflation crank.Concord MonitorMy Turn: Money, wealth and balloon navigationChristopher Carley
Read More »Institute for Energy Research — MMT and the Green New Deal
I hate to break it to the MMTers, but fuddy-duddy economists already knew this. Indeed, among free-market economists it is a standard pedagogical device to tell the audience that the government has three ways of financing its spending, namely (1) taxes, (2) borrowing, or (3) inflation. So this notion that only the MMTers perceive the possibility of the printing press as a means of “paying for” government programs is silly. For proof, consider the following excerpt from Austrian economist...
Read More »Desmond Lachman — Planet earth to Modern Monetary Theorists
Interesting title since the primary issue of the day is the survival of life on Planet Earth as the sixth extinction progresses. Should be "Planet earth to AEI."Bond vigilantes again.AEIPlanet earth to Modern Monetary Theorists Desmond Lachman |AEI scholar, previously managing director and chief emerging market economic strategist at Salomon Smith Barney after serving as deputy director in the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) Policy Development and Review Department
Read More »Mark Hendrickson — MMT: Modern Monetary Theory or Monopoly Money Tyranny?
"Stealth Socialism." The Epoch TimesMMT: Modern Monetary Theory or Monopoly Money Tyranny? Mark Hendrickson | adjunct professor of economics and sociology at Grove City College
Read More »Jared Dillian — It’s Dumb To Have No Gold Amid All Of This
A bit of ideological bias at work influencing view of causality, namely, that austerity is expansionary because saving funds investment? I suppose that if Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) were implemented, foreign exchange markets would have their say about it (provided we still had floating exchange rates). Do you think it is a coincidence that the two biggest bull markets correspond with government austerity? I do not. And tell us what happened after the two biggest bull markets? MMT...
Read More »Nathan Lewis — The Problem With “Modern Monetary Theory” Is That It’s True
Nathan Lewis is totally confused about government finance and central banking. And he has an attitude to begin with. Amazing that this kind of rant gets published. Oh well, Forbes. ForbesThe Problem With "Modern Monetary Theory" Is That It's True Nathan Lewis
Read More »Brad DeLong — I would not have called MMT “nonsense economics”.
Brad DeLong schools Jonathan Portes.Grasping RealityI would not have called MMT "nonsense economics". Brad DeLong | Professor of Economics, UCAL Berkeley
Read More »Bob Adelmann — CBO: National Debt to Nearly Double by 2029
What Bob Adelmann doesn't seem to get is that government spending adds to GDP and if GDP and the debt grow at the same rate, then the debt to GDP ratio remains the same. There is a multiplier, however, and if the multiplier is greater than 1, then the ratio decreases (GDP goes up more than debt), while if the multiplier is less than 1, the ratio increases (debt goes up more than GDP). The focus therefore should be on the multiplier if one evaluates growth as the priority and assumes that...
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