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by RobertoG
2247 days ago
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But MMT it's not a policy, but a model, a description of how the system really already works. For example, many people here is predicting hyperinflation, using the MMT model we can predict that's not going to happen. Many people here are predicting "slave grandsons by public debt", the MMT model tell us that doesn't make sense. >>"MMT relies heavily on the fact that tracing back who is paying for it is so convoluted that its backers can claim nobody is" I don't know what that means. >>"At any moment there is a fixed pool of real resources that we have to divide up" That sentence agrees totally with the MMT cannon. |
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Lets jump over the the Wiki page on MMT where it has a helpful comparison to Keynesian economics [0]. First line in that table:
Keynesian: Advocates taxation and issuing bonds (debt) as preferred methods for funding government spending.
MMT: Emphasizes that taxation and debt issuance are not required to fund spending.
Under the Keynesian model I can tell who is paying for government activity - taxpayers and lenders. I can also work out how much, by comparing how much tax they pay or how much they lend. It is reasonably transparent about who the government is distributing resources away from (net taxpayers, current lenders) and towards (net tax receivers, people who are enjoying the latter stages of a bond where the interest is payed back). People could have claimed resources; then they were taxed/saved so they didn't.
How do I do that under the MMT model where neither of those things are necessary? Who is the government distributing resources away from? How do I figure that out? I know where they are going. Where do they come from? When we debate MMT inspired ideas, how will we figure out who will be worse off in real terms and in what proportion?
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Monetary_Theory#Compari...
PS.
> But MMT it's not a policy, but a model
People aren't interested in MMT because it is a neat model; but because if we use that model then it becomes very hard to explain that policies are wasteful uses of time and stuff. It is very easy to make a taxpayer understand why government waste is bad. Quite hard to make people take an interest when nobody knows if they are net givers or takers.