Interesting perspectives from the fringe. MMT may be bogus, but it may 
highlight areas the mainstream undervalues. 

E

Modern Monetary Theory is an unconventional take on economic strategy - The 
Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/modern-monetary-theory-is-an-unconventional-take-on-economic-strategy/2012/02/15/gIQAR8uPMR_print.html



Modern Monetary Theory, an unconventional take on economic strategy

By Dylan Matthews, Published: February18

About 11 years ago, James K. “Jamie” Galbraith recalls, hundreds of his fellow 
economists laughed at him. To his face. In the White House.

It was April 2000, and Galbraith had been invited by President Bill Clinton to 
speak on a panel about the budget surplus. Galbraith was a logical choice. A 
public policy professor at the University of Texas and former head economist 
for the Joint Economic Committee, he wrote frequently for the press and 
testified before Congress.

What’s more, his father, John Kenneth Galbraith, was the most famous economist 
of his generation: a Harvard professor, best-selling author and confidante of 
the Kennedy family. Jamie has embraced a role as protector and promoter of the 
elder’s legacy.

But if Galbraith stood out on the panel, it was because of his offbeat message. 
Most viewed the budget surplus as opportune: a chance to pay down the national 
debt, cut taxes, shore up entitlements or pursue new spending programs.

He viewed it as a danger: If the government is running a surplus, money is 
accruing in government coffers rather than in the hands of ordinary people and 
companies, where it might be spent and help the economy.

“I said economists used to understand that the running of a surplus was fiscal 
(economic) drag,” he said, “and with 250 economists, they giggled.”

Galbraith says the 2001 recession — which followed a few years of surpluses — 
proves he was right.

A decade later, as the soaring federal budget deficit has sharpened political 
and economic differences in Washington, Galbraith is mostly concerned about the 
dangers of keeping it too small. He’s a key figure in a core debate among 
economists about whether deficits are important and in what way. The issue has 
divided the nation’s best-known economists and inspired pockets of passion in 
academic circles. Any embrace by policymakers of one view or the other could 
affect everything from employment to the price of goods to the tax code.

In contrast to “deficit hawks” who want spending cuts and revenue increases now 
in order to temper the deficit, and “deficit doves” who want to hold off on 
austerity measures until the economy has recovered, Galbraith is a deficit owl. 
Owls certainly don’t think we need to balance the budget soon. Indeed, they 
don’t concede we need to balance it at all. Owls see government spending that 
leads to deficits as integral to economic growth, even in good times.

The term isn’t Galbraith’s. It was coined by Stephanie Kelton, a professor at 
the University of Missouri at Kansas City, who with Galbraith is part of a 
small group of economists who have concluded that everyone — members of 
Congress, think tank denizens, the entire mainstream of the economics 
profession — has misunderstood how the government interacts with the economy. 
If their theory — dubbed “Modern Monetary Theory” or MMT — is right, then 
everything we thought we knew about the budget, taxes and the Federal Reserve 
is wrong.

Keynesian roots

“Modern Monetary Theory” was coined by Bill Mitchell, an Australian economist 
and prominent proponent, but its roots are much older. The term is a reference 
to John Maynard Keynes, the founder of modern macroeconomics. In “A Treatise on 
Money,” Keynes asserted that “all modern States” have had the ability to decide 
what is money and what is not for at least 4,000 years.

This claim, that money is a “creature of the state,” is central to the theory. 
In a “fiat money” system like the one in place in the United States, all money 
is ultimately created by the government, which prints it and puts it into 
circulation. Consequently, the thinking goes, the government can never run out 
of money. It can always make more.

This doesn’t mean that taxes are unnecessary. Taxes, in fact, are key to making 
the whole system work. The need to pay taxes compels people to use the currency 
printed by the government. Taxes are also sometimes necessary to prevent the 
economy from overheating. If consumer demand outpaces the supply of available 
goods, prices will jump, resulting in inflation (where prices rise even as 
buying power falls). In this case, taxes can tamp down spending and keep prices 
low.

But if the theory is correct, there is no reason the amount of money the 
government takes in needs to match up with the amount it spends. Indeed, its 
followers call for massive tax cuts and deficit spending during recessions.

Warren Mosler, a hedge fund manager who lives in Saint Croix in the U.S. Virgin 
Islands — in part because of the tax benefits — is one proponent. He’s perhaps 
better know for his sports car company and his frequent gadfly political 
campaigns (he earned a little less than one percent of the vote as an 
independent in Connecticut’s 2010 Senate race). He supports suspending the 
payroll tax that finances the Social Security trust fund and providing an $8 an 
hour government job to anyone who wants one to combat the current downturn.

The theory’s followers come mainly from a couple of institutions: the 
University of Missouri-Kansas City’s economics department and the Levy 
Economics Institute of Bard College, both of which have received money from 
Mosler. But the movement is gaining followers quickly, largely through an 
explosion of economics blogs. Naked Capitalism, an irreverent and passionately 
written blog on finance and economics with nearly a million monthly readers, 
features proponents such as Kelton, fellow Missouri professor L. Randall Wray 
and Wartberg College professor Scott Fullwiler. So does New Deal 2.0, a wonky 
economics blog based at the liberal Roosevelt Institute think tank.

Their followers have taken to the theory with great enthusiasm and pile into 
the comment sections of mainstream economics bloggers when they take on the 
theory. Wray’s work has been picked up by Firedoglake, a major liberal blog, 
and the New York Times op-ed page. “The crisis helped, but the thing that did 
it was the blogosphere,” Wray says. “Because, for one thing, we could get it 
published. It’s very hard to publish anything that sounds outside the 
mainstream in the journals.”

Most notably, Galbraith has spread the message everywhere from the Daily Beast 
to Congress. He advised lawmakers including then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi 
(D-Calif.) when the financial crisis hit in 2008. Last summer he consulted with 
a group of House members on the debt ceiling negotiations. He was one of the 
handful of economists consulted by the Obama administration as it was designing 
the stimulus package. “I think Jamie has the most to lose by taking this 
position,” Kelton says. “It was, I think, a really brave thing to do, because 
he has such a big name, and he’s so well-respected.”

Wray and others say they, too, have consulted with policymakers, and there is a 
definite sense among the group that the theory’s time is now. “Our Web 
presence, every few months or so it goes up another notch,” Fullwiler says.

A divisive theory

The idea that deficit spending can help to bring an economy out of recession is 
an old one. It was a key point in Keynes’s “The General Theory of Employment, 
Interest and Money.” It was the chief rationale for the 2009 stimulus package, 
and many self-identified Keynesians, such as former White House adviser 
Christina Romer and economist Paul Krugman, have argued that more is in order. 
There are, of course, detractors.

A key split among Keynesians dates to the 1930s. One set of economists, 
including the Nobel laureates John Hicks and Paul Samuelson, sought to 
incorporate Keynes’s insights into classical economics. Hicks built a 
mathematical model summarizing Keynes’s theory, and Samuelson sought to wed 
Keynesian macroeconomics (which studies the behavior of the economy as a whole) 
to conventional microeconomics (which looks at how people and businesses 
allocate resources). This set the stage for most macroeconomic theory since. 
Even today, “New Keynesians,” such as Greg Mankiw, a Harvard economist who 
served as chief economic adviser to George W. Bush, and Romer’s husband, David, 
are seeking ways to ground Keynesian macroeconomic theory in the micro-level 
behavior of businesses and consumers.

Modern Monetary theorists hold fast to the tradition established by 
“post-Keynesians” such as Joan Robinson, Nicholas Kaldor and Hyman Minsky, who 
insisted Samuelson’s theory failed because its models acted as if, in 
Galbraith’s words, “the banking sector doesn’t exist.”

The connections are personal as well. Wray’s doctoral dissertation was advised 
by Minsky, and Galbraith studied with Robinson and Kaldor at the University of 
Cambridge. He argues that the theory is part of an “alternative tradition, 
which runs through Keynes and my father and Minsky.”

And while Modern Monetary Theory’s proponents take Keynes as their starting 
point and advocate aggressive deficit spending during recessions, they’re not 
that type of Keynesians. Even mainstream economists who argue for more deficit 
spending are reluctant to accept the central tenets of Modern Monetary Theory. 
Take Krugman, who regularly engages economists across the spectrum in spirited 
debate. He has argued that pursuing large budget deficits during boom times can 
lead to hyperinflation. Mankiw concedes the theory’s point that the government 
can never run out of money but doesn’t think this means what its proponents 
think it does.

Technically it’s true, he says, that the government could print streams of 
money and never default. The risk is that it could trigger a very high rate of 
inflation. This would “bankrupt much of the banking system,” he says. “Default, 
painful as it would be, might be a better option.”

Mankiw’s critique goes to the heart of the debate about Modern Monetary Theory 
— and about how, when and even whether to eliminate our current deficits.

When the government deficit spends, it issues bonds to be bought on the open 
market. If its debt load grows too large, mainstream economists say, bond 
purchasers will demand higher interest rates, and the government will have to 
pay more in interest payments, which in turn adds to the debt load.

To get out of this cycle, the Fed — which manages the nation’s money supply and 
credit and sits at the center of its financial system — could buy the bonds at 
lower rates, bypassing the private market. The Fed is prohibited from buying 
bonds directly from the Treasury — a legal rather than economic constraint. But 
the Fed would buy the bonds with money it prints, which means the money supply 
would increase. With it, inflation would rise, and so would the prospects of 
hyperinflation.

“You can’t just fund any level of government that you want from spending money, 
because you’ll get runaway inflation and eventually the rate of inflation will 
increase faster than the rate that you’re extracting resources from the 
economy,” says Karl Smith, an economist at the University of North Carolina. 
“This is the classic hyperinflation problem that happened in Zimbabwe and the 
Weimar Republic.”

The risk of inflation keeps most mainstream economists and policymakers on the 
same page about deficits: In the medium term — all else being equal — it’s 
critical to keep them small.

Economists in the Modern Monetary camp concede that deficits can sometimes lead 
to inflation. But they argue that this can only happen when the economy is at 
full employment — when all who are able and willing to work are employed and no 
resources (labor, capital, etc.) are idle. No modern example of this problem 
comes to mind, Galbraith says.

“The last time we had what could be plausibly called a demand-driven, serious 
inflation problem was probably World War I,” Galbraith says. “It’s been a long 
time since this hypothetical possibility has actually been observed, and it was 
observed only under conditions that will never be repeated.”

Critics’ rebuttals

According to Galbraith and the others, monetary policy as currently conducted 
by the Fed does not work. The Fed generally uses one of two levers to increase 
growth and employment. It can lower short-term interest rates by buying up 
short-term government bonds on the open market. If short-term rates are 
near-zero, as they are now, the Fed can try “quantitative easing,” or 
large-scale purchases of assets (such as bonds) from the private sector 
including longer-term Treasuries using money the Fed creates. This is what the 
Fed did in 2008 and 2010, in an emergency effort to boost the economy.

According to Modern Monetary Theory, the Fed buying up Treasuries is just, in 
Galbraith’s words, a “bookkeeping operation” that does not add income to 
American households and thus cannot be inflationary.

“It seemed clear to me that. . . flooding the economy with money by buying up 
government bonds . . . is not going to change anybody’s behavior,” Galbraith 
says. “They would just end up with cash reserves which would sit idle in the 
banking system, and that is exactly what in fact happened.”

The theorists just “have no idea how quantitative easing works,” says Joe 
Gagnon, an economist at the Peterson Institute who managed the Fed’s first 
round of quantitative easing in 2008. Even if the money the Fed uses to buy 
bonds stays in bank reserves — or money that’s held in reserve — increasing 
those reserves should still lead to increased borrowing and ripple throughout 
the system.

Mainstreamers are equally baffled by another claim of the theory: that budget 
surpluses in and of themselves are bad for the economy. According to Modern 
Monetary Theory, when the government runs a surplus, it is a net saver, which 
means that the private sector is a net debtor. The government is, in effect, 
“taking money from private pockets and forcing them to make that up by going 
deeper into debt,” Galbraith says, reiterating his White House comments.

The mainstream crowd finds this argument as funny now as they did when 
Galbraith presented it to Clinton. “I have two words to answer that: Australia 
and Canada,” Gagnon says. “If Jamie Galbraith would look them up, he would see 
immediate proof he’s wrong. Australia has had a long-running budget surplus 
now, they actually have no national debt whatsoever, they’re the 
fastest-growing, healthiest economy in the world.” Canada, similarly, has run 
consistent surpluses while achieving high growth.

To even care about such questions, Galbraith says, marked him as “a 
considerable eccentric” when he arrived from Cambridge to get a PhD at Yale, 
which had a more conventionally Keynesian economics department. Galbraith 
credits Samuelson and his allies’ success to a “mass-marketing of economic 
doctrine, of which Samuelson was the great master . . . which is something the 
Cambridge school could never have done.”

The mainstream economists are loath to give up any ground, even in cases such 
as the so-called “Cambridge capital controversy” of the 1960s. Samuelson 
debated post-Keynesians and, by his own admission, lost. Such matters have 
been, in Galbraith’s words, “airbrushed, like Trotsky” from the history of 
economics.

But MMT’s own relationship to real-world cases can be a little hit-or-miss. 
Mosler, the hedge fund manager, credits his role in the movement to an epiphany 
in the early 1990s, when markets grew concerned that Italy was about to 
default. Mosler figured that Italy, which at that time still issued its own 
currency, the lira, could not default as long as it had the ability to print 
more liras. He bet accordingly, and when Italy did not default, he made a tidy 
sum. “There was an enormous amount of money to be made if you could bring 
yourself around to the idea that they couldn’t default,” he says.

Later that decade, he learned there was also a lot of money to be lost. When 
similar fears surfaced about Russia, he again bet against default. Despite 
having its own currency, Russia defaulted, forcing Mosler to liquidate one of 
his funds and wiping out much of his $850million in investments in the country. 
Mosler credits this to Russia’s fixed exchange rate policy of the time and 
insists that if it had only acted like a country with its own currency, default 
could have been avoided.

But the case could also prove what critics insist: Default, while technically 
always avoidable, is sometimes the best available option.

© The Washington Post Company

(via Instapaper)



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