A layperson-friendly introduction to MMT, a heterodox school of economics that could finance a Green New Deal


Modern Monetary Theory (AKA MMT) is the latest incarnation of a long-running current in economic thought, once called Chartalism, which has gained prominence in recent years as an alternative to austerity economics, whose dictates have immiserated millions, destabilized world politics, and threaten the extinction of the human race thanks to climate inaction in the guise of "fiscal restraint."


MMT's core precept is that governments first spend money into existence and then tax it out of existence (contrast this with the standard account that says that governments must tax citizens to pay for programs, which raises the question, "How did the citizens get the money to pay for their taxes unless the government first spent that money into existence, given that governments are the sole source of currency?").


The implications for this are relatively easy to follow, but are profound in terms of where they lead you. MMTers hold that sovereign currency issuers (most countries, but not Eurozone countries like Greece, say) cannot default on their debts so long as those debts are denominated in the currency they issue (unlike Venezuela, say, which owed debts denominated in US dollars).


And while government spending can lead to inflation, it's not deficits that cause inflation, it's government spending on things that the private sector is also seeking to buy — if the government is procuring materials, labor or goods that the private sector is already using, it creates a bidding war that drives up the prices of these things. But if there is stuff that the private sector is not using — notably, if there are unemployed people who want work that the private sector isn't delivering — then the state can spend as much as it needs to mobilize that labor in service to public goals, like remediating climate change.

And even when governments do spend money into existence to buy things the private sector is using, it needn't be inflationary. The most prominent example of massive, non-inflationary public spending is WWII, when governments procured a huge amount of things the private sector was using (including labor and materials) but despite all that spending, states were able to control inflation by selling war bonds, which sequestered away the new capital so it wasn't available to chase the things the state needed to tool up for war.


On his Macrotourist blog, Kevin Muir has written an excellent, plain-language two-part primer on MMT and its implications. It's an important guide to a difficult subject that has profound implications for us all.

During a lecture a couple of years ago, MMT Professor Randall Wray recalled how the American Central Bank did everything contrary to the Bagehot Dictum. In his famous book, Lombard Street, Bagehot argued that the Central Bank should lend freely, at a high rate of interest, and on good securities. Well, the Federal Reserve broke all three tenets. They did not lend freely but instead put quantitative limits on the amounts of loans. Instead of punishing the banks that needed to borrow, they subsidized them with discounted rates. Finally, the Fed took all their shitty credits. They did everything they could to help the financial economy while ignoring (or even worse, punishing) the real economy.

The reason I bring this up? MMT has a completely different solution than traditional economic theory.

MMT'ers don't believe in force-feeding more monetary stimulus in the hope that somewhere it will ignite and cause an economic rebound. Although at the time I didn't understand that my views were consistent with MMT, during the financial crisis I felt like the government's response was ridiculous. The problem was a lack of demand, not "overly expensive" money. I argued that if the bond market was begging for an investable riskless asset, why doesn't the government give it to them? At the time the 30-year US Treasury was ticking just above 2%. Instead of doing more QE, why didn't the government float a gazillion of 50 or 100-year paper (back then I thought the government had to borrow first) and install internet-fiber to everyone's home? Or fix all the bridges and airports. You know, something productive. I figured that even the government could invest the capital at a rate which would yield a return greater than the 3% interest rate I reckoned the bonds would trade at.

Practitioner's Guide to MMT: Part 1 [Kevin Muir/Macrotourist]


Practitioner's Guide to MMT: Part 2 [Kevin Muir/Macrotourist]


(via Naked Capitalism)