MMT and the theory of the bottomless government piggy bank: Don Pittis - Action News
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MMT and the theory of the bottomless government piggy bank: Don Pittis

A theory that suggests governments, including Canada, can keep on spending has become so high-profile that the world's most powerful central banker, Jerome Powell, has weighed in.

Popularity of Modern Monetary Theory prompts U.S. Federal Reserve chair to scoff

This exhibition in Seoul, South Korea, tries to explain Albert Einstein's Theory of Relativity. Understanding Modern Monetary Theory may be just as hard. (Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters)

In both physicsand monetary policy, common sense is not always a perfect guide.

The idea that time passes at different ratesdepending on your velocity, as Albert Einstein's Theory of Relativity tells us,is hard to grasp intuitively. That light emitted from the front ofan acceleratingobject still travels a constant speed seems absurd.

And when new concepts, such as Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) the ideagovernments whichcontrol their own moneyhave little need for fiscal austeritycome along, it seems normal that the first intuitive reaction will be:"Nonsense!"

That is certainly howU.S. Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powellrespondedwhen asked about MMT at congressional hearings earlier this week.

'Just wrong'

"The idea that deficits don't matter for countries that can borrow in their own currency, I think, is just wrong," said Powell."U.S. debt is fairly high to the level of GDP, and much more importantly, it's growing faster than GDP really significantly faster. We are going to have to spend less or raise more revenue."

Intuitively, that sounds right. Just as with our household accounts, once we are deeply in debt, the only way out is to spend less or earn more.

At some point, lenders will stop lending and interest payments will become prohibitive;the only alternative to austerity is bankruptcyand, perhaps, poverty.

But just as special relativity does not apply when we are rushing to an appointment(no matter how fast),it is an absolute fact that government finances, and the ability ofcentral banks to create money, has very little to do with the way you manage your personal budget.

U.S. Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell does not think much of Modern Monetary Theory. (Jim Young/Reuters)

In some ways, Einstein's special relativitydiscussed with various levels of exactitude in popular science fictionis more accessible than the principles of monetary theory. As a popular genre, monetary theory fiction does not exist.

Not only that, butmonetary theorylike economics as a wholemay also beharder to tie down and examine.

Whereas the vast majority of scientists, guided by theory and experiment based on a common data set, have the same basic idea of how relativity works, any two economists are likely to disagree.

As Noam Chomsky reminded us, complex, unfamiliar concepts do not lend themselves to capsule explanation.

But, in essence, MMT is the idea that a government's debt-to-GDP ratio, even when it rises to 200 per cent, need not create inflation in an economy thatcontrols its own currency.

Keep on spending

MMT's idea is instead that governments should keep on spending until such time as every person is employed and inflation finally kicks in. The government then can take action of some kindraising taxes, for instanceto arrest that inflation.

For most of us, a new brilliantand complex way of understanding economics (or science)is impossible to distinguish from bafflegab. But in aclear and excellent piece on the Financial Times site Alphaville, Brendan Greeleywrites thatMMT "is neither Marxist, nor is it bullshit."

To the horror of proponents of small government, MMT appears to give the U.S. Congress, as well as countries like Canada and the U.K., withtheir own currency, carte blanche for spending on programs like the Green New Deal.

But the theory's critics do not just include traditional anti-tax think-tanks and Republicans.Centre-left economistPaul Krugman,writing in the New York Times, has been a vociferous opponent of MMT, prompting counter-arguments from the current high-profile proponent of the idea,Stephanie Kelton, a professor of public policy and economics at Stony Brook University in New York.

Stephanie Kelton, an economics professor at Stony Brook University, is currently the best known proponent of Modern Monetary Theory. (Stony Brook University)

The debate will clearly not be resolved here.But for those who are interested, there has been plenty of ink spilled and breath expended on the subject, including this long interview with Keltonon the podcast Left Out.

Basing her argument on the writings of illustrious economic thinkers, such as John Maynard Keynes and Adam Smith, and using the example of the U.S. funding of the Second World Warand Japan's current economy, Kelton says people like Powell and Krugman are trapped in old, conventionalthinking.

Radically new ideas in economics, as in science, are almost universally opposed at first by the old guard. And there is logic in that response:Anuntried idea that didn't work could bring an entire economy crashing down.

But even ideas that turned out to be successful were attacked when they were proposed.Exchangingthe gold standard for the U.S. dollar in 1944, and then the ending of the convertibility of dollars for gold in 1971, both led to predictions of doom. I've spoken to scholars who feel the danger isn't yet over.

In the aftermath of the 2008 financial meltdown, plans for central banks to inject money,imagined into existencewith quantitative easing,and other schemes to cut interest rates below zero, or to distribute cash to the public using helicopter money all had traditionalists twisting their shirt tails with worry.

It is no wonder that the idea ofchanging the conventional rules about spending, inflation, government bonds and interest rates, asit seems MMT wouldleave those of us who have longconsidered those things to be real and solid facts baffled and a little lost.

But that doesn't prove it wouldn't work.


Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis