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金曜日, 6月 14, 2019

#16 When the MMT critics jump the shark – Bill Mitchell

ミッチェル#16:247

#16 When the MMT critics jump the shark – Bill Mitchell [General Aggregate Supply Function]

https://nam-students.blogspot.com/2019/06/12-when-mmt-critics-jump-shark-bill.html@

When the MMT critics jump the shark – Bill Mitchell – Modern Monetary Theory

http://bilbo.economicoutlook.net/blog/?p=42113


参考
#12:187
Keynesian aggregate labor supply function

The Keynesian Aggregate Supply Function for Labor - jstor

 

(Adobe PDF)

www.jstor.org/stable/2284639

The Keynesian Aggregate SupplyFunction for Labor. JAMES M. HOLMES*. This article formulates a class of aggregate ...


When the MMT critics jump the shark

Inflation

Palley wrote in 2013 that MMT “failed woefully” because it did not have an inflation analysis.

I responded to that criticism in this blog post – I wonder what the hell I have been writing all these years (February 12, 2013).

At the time, it was a ridiculous claim that suggested he had read very little of our work or was just being a vindictive or both.

So, six years later, after I had responded to his claims and pointed him towards our work, he writes in the paper – What’s Wrong With Modern Money Theory (MMT): A Critical Primer – that in MMT:

Inflation is therefore presented as a “threshold” problem, but that is not how inflation develops in the real world. Instead, the economy consists of multiple sectors, and some hit the full employment barrier before others. Consequently, inflation starts bubbling up before there is aggregate full employment, and government lacks the capacity to target its demand injections sector by sector and market by market.

This is just a rehashed point from his 2013 critique which I addressed in the blog post cited immediately above.

But it made me wonder – what were all those articles and a few of the books I have written actually about.

I had thought they were about inflation, bargaining conflict, the battle of mark-ups, imported inflation via resource prices; incomes policy and indexation, and the Phillips curve and related articles – some with mathematics, many with the latest econometric modelling.

Further, in our new textbook – Macroeconomics – we summarise a lot of our past work on inflation and costs in the Chapters on Aggregate Supply (Chapter 16), and, in Chapter 17 Unemployment and Inflation.

I had written draft sections of this in early 2013. But much of the material goes back to my published work starting in 1987 and continuing from there.

In the textbook, we initially present the L-shaped aggregate supply (AS) schedule as below, which is a simple beginner’s approach to understanding the difference between a quantity-adjusting economy (horizontal supply curve) and a price-adjusting economy (vertical supply curve).

This is Figure 16.3 in our new textbook (and also appeared in our previous introductory book published in 2016 and now withdrawn from sale).

[General Aggregate Supply Function]

This is the “threshold” type schema. The right angle point is the threshold between those two different types of adjustment responses to increases in nominal aggregate spending.

But in the text accompanying the graph, we write:

… all firms are unlikely to hit full capacity simultaneously. The reverse L- shape simplifies the analysis somewhat by assuming that the capacity constraint is reached by all firms at the same time. In reality, bottlenecks in production are likely to occur in some sectors before others and so cost pressures will begin to mount before the overall full capacity output is reached. This could be captured in Figure 16.3 by some curvature near Y*, thus eliminating the right-angle as prices begin to rise before reaching Y* (full capacity). We consider this issue in more detail in Chapter 17.

In Chapter 17, further discussion takes place along these lines.

So you have to ask yourself – how can “A Critical Primer” be critical if the substance of the criticism has already been dealt with in full along the lines of the criticism?

The implication of this is obvious: He either hasn’t read much and therefore should not be holding himself out as any sort of expert on the matter or he has deliberately avoided referring to those sections of our work that are inconvenient for his vindictiveness, which disqualifies him through a lack of credibility.


インフレーション


Palleyは2013年に、MMTはインフレ分析を行っていないため、「失敗した」と述べました。


私はこのブログ記事でその批判に答えました - 私がここ何年に何を書いてきたのでしょうか(2013年2月12日)。


当時、それは彼が私たちの仕事のほんの少ししか読んでいなかったか、あるいは単に真実であること、あるいはその両方であったことを示唆したばかげた主張でした。


それで、6年後、私が彼の主張に答え、私たちの仕事に向けて彼を指摘した後、彼は紙に書いています。


したがって、インフレは「限界」問題として提示されていますが、現実世界でインフレがどのように発展するのかということではありません。代わりに、経済は複数の部門で構成されており、いくつかの部門は他の部門よりも完全な雇用障壁を打っています。その結果、総雇用が発生する前にインフレ率が上昇し始め、政府は部門別および市場別に需要注入を目標とする能力を欠いています。


これは私が直前に引用したブログ記事で述べた彼の2013年の批評からの改訂点です。


しかし、それは私を驚かせました - それらすべての記事と私が実際に書いた本のうちのいくつかは何でしたか。


私はそれらがインフレ、交渉の交渉、値上げの戦い、資源価格による輸入インフレだと思っていました。所得政策と指数化、そしてフィリップス曲線と関連記事 - 数学に関するもの、最新の計量経済学的モデリングに関するもの。


さらに、私たちの新しい教科書であるマクロ経済学の中で、私たちは過去の多くの過去のインフレとコストの仕事のまとめを第16章、そして第17章の失業とインフレーションにまとめています。


私は2013年の初めにこの草案の一部を書きました。しかし、資料の多くは1987年に始まってそこから続く私の出版された研究に戻ります。


教科書では、最初に以下のようにL字型総計供給(AS)スケジュールを提示します。これは、数量調整経済(水平供給曲線)と価格調整経済(垂直供給)の違いを理解するための簡単な初心者のアプローチです。曲線)。


これは私達の新しい教科書の図16.3です(そして2016年に出版されたそして今や販売から取り下げられた私達の前の紹介書にも現れました)。




これが「しきい値」型スキーマです。直角ポイントは、名目上の総支出の増加に対するこれら2つの異なるタイプの調整応答の間のしきい値です。


しかし、グラフに付随するテキストでは、次のように書いています。


…すべての企業が同時にフル稼働する可能性は低いです。逆L字型は、容量の制約がすべての企業によって同時に達成されると仮定することによって、分析をいくらか単純化します。実際には、生産におけるボトルネックが他のセクターより先に発生する可能性があるため、全体の生産能力の生産量に達する前にコスト圧力が高まり始めます。これは図16.3でY *の近くのいくらかの曲率によって捉えることができ、それ故に価格がY *(全容量)に達する前に上昇し始めるので直角を排除します。この問題については第17章で詳しく説明します。


第17章では、これらの方針に沿ってさらに議論が行われます。


それで、あなたは自分自身に尋ねなければなりません - 批評の実体がすでに批評の線に沿って完全に扱われたならば、どのように「A Critical Primer」が批判的であることができますか?


このことの含意は明らかです。彼はあまり読んでいないので、この問題に関する専門家のようなものではないと考えているか、または私たちの作品の直観的に不便な部分を参照することを意図的に避けています。信頼性の欠如を通して彼を失格にします。





When the MMT critics jump the shark – Bill Mitchell – Modern Monetary Theory

http://bilbo.economicoutlook.net/blog/?p=42113

When the MMT critics jump the shark

I was sent two papers by Thomas Palley the other day. I have known him for decades. He continually disappoints. He has become one of those self-styled Post Keynesians who are trying to destroy the credibility of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) for reasons that are not entirely clear although I know things I won’t write here. He thinks that if he drops a reference to Michał Kalecki, the Polish Marxist economist, into a paper, it qualifies one as being Post Keynesian. But, the reality is that his work (what limited academic work that he has published) sits squarely in the Neoclassical IS-LM synthesis tradition, which is not Post Keynesian nor heterodox at all. It is the antithesis of Post Keynesian. So I have never understood how he wants to appear Post Keynesian. Anyway whatever the answer to that little puzzle is, he definitely has a set on MMT and regularly recycles the same sorts of attacks, which, continue to have the same problems. In other words, he does not seem to (or does not want to) learn. He also accuses those who respond of dishonesty – playing the pure is me card – although his own work on MMT fails, in part, because he deliberately (or not) refuses to acknowledge the extant MMT literature, which addresses the issues he claims are missing in the MMT approach. Go figure!

His latest papers are:

1. What’s Wrong With Modern Money Theory (MMT): A Critical Primer (April 10, 2019).

2. Macroeconomics vs. Modern Money Theory: Some Unpleasant Keynesian Arithmetic (April 4, 2019).

I don’t think they are worth reading but they do allow me to make some points that regular readers often ask about.

When the Swedish economist Lars P. Syll wrote a critique of Palley’s latest papers (April 12, 2019) – Thomas Palley claims MMT fails to provide plausible macroeconomics​ – he was met with this response from Palley:

Your blog post is misleading to the point of being dishonest.

I didn’t find anything misleading at all with Lars P. Syll’s short overview of the problems in Palley’s work.

Further, if you consult the reference list in both Palley papers above you will, curiously, find my own name missing.

Now I am not precious about that. But as the person who has written the most of anyone about MMT over the last 25 years, and, being one of the original academic developers of the work, one would think that at least one of my articles, books, blog posts, Op Ed articles would appear in a piece of work which claims to be “A Critical Primer”.

The reason this is significant is that many of the deficiencies he claims render MMT useless have actually been dealt with in detail in my own work and less so in the work of other MMT academic writers. Which is not to criticise my MMT colleagues. We all contribute in different ways.

So I am then wondering.

Has Palley not read my work?

The answer is he has, and indeed, in February 2014, he did cite my work and lied about it. He claimed that my work showed that I was:

… a strong advocate of the traditional Phillips curve.

Which, for anyone who has read my academic work, including my earliest articles, my PhD dissertation and countless other writings, would know, that I have opposed the traditional Phillips curve conception and presented alternative depictions (based on buffer stocks and hysteresis).

The next option, then, is that Palley has decided not to reference my work because he knows that would significantly compromise his case to the point of rendering his attack on MMT a non-starter.

The selective quoting of literature is, in fact, the exemplar of the way academics construct dishonest scholarship. Not that Palley is working in an academic post (despite trying).

Here are some examples.

Central bank and currency-issuance

In the paper – What’s Wrong With Modern Money Theory (MMT): A Critical Primer – Palley claims that:

As regards injecting state money to pay taxes, MMT is strictly wrong with its claim that the public cannot pay taxes until government has first spent. In fact, the central bank is the source of such money. It can inject money into the system by buying existing government bonds, buying private sector assets, or by lending to private banks. Moreover, under the current system, the central bank can increase the money stock by paying interest on existing money balances. That means government spending is not the only way to get state money to pay taxes into the system.

So did we actually miss that reality?

Clearly not.

For example, in a 2005 Centre of Full Employment and Equity (CofFEE) Working Paper – Essential elements of a modern monetary economy with applications to social security privatisation and the intergenerational debate – we produced two diagrams.

Subsequent discussion occurred in my 2008 book with Joan Muysken – Full Employment abandoned: shifting sands and policy failures

That is, way back then.

I then reproduced the diagrams with simpler explanations in my suite of blog posts:

1. Deficit spending 101 – Part 1 (February 21, 2009).

2. Deficit spending 101 – Part 2 (February 23, 2009).

3. Deficit spending 101 – Part 3 (March 2, 2009).

Here are the diagrams for reference.

Diagram 1 Essential Government-Non Government Relations

essential_government_non_government_relations

Diagram 2 Vertical and Horizontal Relations

vertical_horizontal_relations

They were reproduced again in our new textbook – Macroeconomics – with further discussion.

These diagrams are core MMT.

Both diagrams and the related discussion acknowledge the Government sector is the sum of the Treasury and Central Bank.

In describing the way currency enters the economy (vertically in our terminology), you will see we include:

1. Central bank operations (Open Market Operations, Standing Arrangements).

2. Foreign exchange and gold transactions by the central bank.

3. Government (Treasury) spending.

MMT has never been “strictly wrong” on this issue. From the outset we recognised the dual role of the government macroeconomic institutions (Treasury and Central Bank).

So why would he write that? Ignorance? Vindictiveness?

All he does is make a fool of himself and discredits his professional standing.

Framing and Language

Palley writes that:

MMT objects to its being called a constraint as if government were a household. However, that is a terminological objection. Moreover, Old Keynesians also recognized it was not a constraint and referred to it as the budget identity or budget restraint.

Later he writes:

More generally, it is pure semantics whether taxes raise money to finance government spending, or taxes destroy money in order to create the space for reissue of money to finance spending.

The second quote comes after a section berating MMT for being politically naive.

Terminology, semantics matter a lot in framing arguments and educational dissemination.

Take the first of these quotes.

First, the issue about “Old Keynesians” is important because it means Palley has not understood what happened in August 1971 in his own nation (the US). At that point, all of the “Old Keynesian” analysis about government fiscal restraints became moot because governments around the world freed fiscal policy by floating their exchange rates and introducing fiat currencies.

The abandonment of convertibility (and the gold window) was a major turning point in monetary history, which apparently escapes Palley’s comprehension.

Second, it is no meagre terminological difference to construct a fiat currency-issuing government as a household in the way mainstream macroeconomics does and to break with that construction in the way MMT does.

The behaviour and possibilities of a currency issuer are not comparable to those of a currency user.

Our perception of what is possible for a currency issuer cannot be informed by our experiences as a currency user.

A household cannot buy whatever is for sale in the currency it uses. A currency-issuing government can, if it chooses, any time it wants. Clearly there are consequences in doing that but the point is that it can.

That opens up a completely different dialogue about what our elected governments might do to advance public well-being.

An appreciation of that difference allows us to reject a political narrative that says we have to tolerate mass unemployment because the government hasn’t the capacity to provide sufficient work.

Once we understand that the government can create sufficient work then the political options broaden and the quality of our democracies rises – there is more accountability, for example.

So framing and language matter and one of the things that the core MMT group has been mindful of and intent on ensuring is that these conceptual points are clear in peoples’ minds.

Take the second quote.

Leaving aside considerations relating to the allocative reasons for taxes (such as imposts on alcohol and tobacco for health reasons), there is nothing semantic at all between an awareness that we are paying taxes to a government in order that it can then provide public services and infrastructure (for example) against the reality that those taxes are not paying for public expenditure.

A public that thinks that its taxation payments are funding public services is an ignorant public and will therefore be susceptible to spurious arguments from politicians, which justify policies that undermine well-being but are presented within the TINA frame.

I could construct many examples of how it would dramatically change the political debate if the public understood the way governments spend, the capacities the currency-issuing government has, and the role that taxes actually play in the system.

We could actually focus on class struggle more squarely by talking about power in relation to issues relating to increased taxes on the rich, instead of falling into the mythical story that the rich are somehow important for funding public services, which is the current way ignorant progressives are talking.

I consider class struggle further below.

Inflation

Palley wrote in 2013 that MMT “failed woefully” because it did not have an inflation analysis.

I responded to that criticism in this blog post – I wonder what the hell I have been writing all these years (February 12, 2013).

At the time, it was a ridiculous claim that suggested he had read very little of our work or was just being a vindictive or both.

So, six years later, after I had responded to his claims and pointed him towards our work, he writes in the paper – What’s Wrong With Modern Money Theory (MMT): A Critical Primer – that in MMT:

Inflation is therefore presented as a “threshold” problem, but that is not how inflation develops in the real world. Instead, the economy consists of multiple sectors, and some hit the full employment barrier before others. Consequently, inflation starts bubbling up before there is aggregate full employment, and government lacks the capacity to target its demand injections sector by sector and market by market.

This is just a rehashed point from his 2013 critique which I addressed in the blog post cited immediately above.

But it made me wonder – what were all those articles and a few of the books I have written actually about.

I had thought they were about inflation, bargaining conflict, the battle of mark-ups, imported inflation via resource prices; incomes policy and indexation, and the Phillips curve and related articles – some with mathematics, many with the latest econometric modelling.

Further, in our new textbook – Macroeconomics – we summarise a lot of our past work on inflation and costs in the Chapters on Aggregate Supply (Chapter 16), and, in Chapter 17 Unemployment and Inflation.

I had written draft sections of this in early 2013. But much of the material goes back to my published work starting in 1987 and continuing from there.

In the textbook, we initially present the L-shaped aggregate supply (AS) schedule as below, which is a simple beginner’s approach to understanding the difference between a quantity-adjusting economy (horizontal supply curve) and a price-adjusting economy (vertical supply curve).

This is Figure 16.3 in our new textbook (and also appeared in our previous introductory book published in 2016 and now withdrawn from sale).

This is the “threshold” type schema. The right angle point is the threshold between those two different types of adjustment responses to increases in nominal aggregate spending.

But in the text accompanying the graph, we write:

… all firms are unlikely to hit full capacity simultaneously. The reverse L- shape simplifies the analysis somewhat by assuming that the capacity constraint is reached by all firms at the same time. In reality, bottlenecks in production are likely to occur in some sectors before others and so cost pressures will begin to mount before the overall full capacity output is reached. This could be captured in Figure 16.3 by some curvature near Y*, thus eliminating the right-angle as prices begin to rise before reaching Y* (full capacity). We consider this issue in more detail in Chapter 17.

In Chapter 17, further discussion takes place along these lines.

So you have to ask yourself – how can “A Critical Primer” be critical if the substance of the criticism has already been dealt with in full along the lines of the criticism?

The implication of this is obvious: He either hasn’t read much and therefore should not be holding himself out as any sort of expert on the matter or he has deliberately avoided referring to those sections of our work that are inconvenient for his vindictiveness, which disqualifies him through a lack of credibility.

Absence of class

Another example of this behaviour in Palley’s paper relates to his accusation that:

Noticeably absent in the MMT discourse are the issues of income distribution and class conflict. Consequently, from an MMT perspective there is no economic need to address income distribution, and nor does class conflict pose a problem for government’s ability to do as it wishes regarding spending and taxes.

He is trying to place himself in the same camp as the Marxists who criticise our work and I addressed some of their issues in this blog post – The conga line of MMT critics – marching into oblivion (March 7, 2019).

One doesn’t have to search very hard to see that in my own work class struggle has been an important organising concept.

For example, this blog post – We need to read Karl Marx (August 30, 2011).

Several academic articles I have published and – Full Employment abandoned (Edward Elgar, 2008) and Reclaiming the State: A Progressive Vision of Sovereignty for a Post-Neoliberal World (Pluto Books, 2017) all consider class as a major organising framework, within which, one should situate Modern Monetary Theory (MMT).

Our new textbook has a lot of discussion about class conflict and its implications for the distribution of income.

The Chapter on Inflation builds a theory of inflation based on class struggle over the distribution of national income.

There is a section in one chapter on theories of profits and this discussion is explicitly conducted within the context of class struggle.

Here is a sample of the index. If my eyes are not deceiving me it looks like there is discussion about “class struggle”, “crises”, “capitalist production” etc.

The textbook is recent but contains material that draws on decades of work by Randy Wray and myself (with help from Martin Watts).

In many of my articles I construct an understanding of the monetary system within the context of the struggle between labour and capital. My Phd centred on that struggle. My early 1998 article on Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) considers class and class power.

Palley either hasn’t read my work or deliberately avoids citing it. That is not the behaviour of a person acting in good faith.

Concept of costs

Palley’s second paper – Macroeconomics vs. Modern Money Theory: Some Unpleasant Keynesian Arithmetic – covers the proposals for Green New Deal in the US.

The nub of the paper (to save you reading it) is that the GND, as enunciated by the proponents (even though it is still lacking operational detail), would be a very large intervention and would imply a significant fiscal shift.

He asserts there would be “a final increase in AD of 17.0 per cent of GDP” (AD is aggregate demand or spending). Whether that number is accurate is not the point. We can agree that the GND in its totally would be a large shift in public spending.

He then says that the labour market impacts of that shift would “likely … produce high inflation” and that the central bank could “spike interest rates to control AD”. 

But he notes that “MMT proponents … reject using interest rate policy to fine tune the economy”. Which is an accurate statement given how ineffective interest rate management is in accomplishing that task.

So then Palley claims in these situations “the inflation situation would be even more dire”.

As a result, he argues that major tax increases would be required (“a 78 per cent increase in the federal tax take and fee take”). Again, whether that piece of arithmetic is accurate is not the point here.

His point is that either way – interest rate rises or tax hikes – the political costs that would arise from the anti-inflationary policies would damage the progressive movement.

Which then leads Palley to write:

MMT proponents are now asserting society can enjoy a range of large government spending programs for free via money financed deficits, which has made it very popular with progressive policy advocates.

That is a dishonest representation. I would forgive a non-economist, not trained in concepts such as opportunity cost etc ,if they had made that statement.

A non-economist is so conditioned by the faux statements of politicians, mainstream economists, and financial media types to associate ‘cost’ with numbers placed in government fiscal documents that they might use the term ‘free’ inappropriately.

But Palley knows better.

No MMT proponent thinks a government program is ‘free’ in the sense that real resources have to be harnessed to make the program operation. The larger the program, the greater the stress of real resources.

For example, in this blog post – Very costly fiscal programs are needed (December 14, 2010) – I wrote:

Ultimately, when resources are finite political decisions have to be made by government as to which sector uses them. If the government determines that its political mandate requires more public use and less private use, then fiscal policy has to be used to ensure that the private sector can spend less.

And here is another blog post (of many) that consider ‘costs’ – British Labour has to break out of the neo-liberal ‘cost’ framing trap (April 12, 2017).

I wrote that if, for example, we were to take a public employment program that required government to spend $x billion in wages, capital equipment, administration and oversight, we might reasonably ask about the cost of that program. The conservative frame tells us that the cost is $x (the figure that appears in the annual fiscal documents against the program).

An MMT frame considers the $x in the fiscal papers to be of little interest.

The actual cost of the program is the change it causes in the usage of real resources – more consumption by the unemployed workers, some equipment etc. An additional cost would be the opportunity costs of such a program, which are minimal, given the unemployed are idle.

In fact, in this frame, the increased use of the real resources provides benefits to both the individuals and for society so the use of the term ‘cost’ would be misleading.

When we ask whether the nation can afford a policy initiative, we should ignore the $x and consider what real resources are available and the potential benefits. The available real resources constitute the fiscal space. The fiscal space should then always be related to the purposes to which we aspire, and the destination we wish to reach.

So if the economy is at full employment, then political decisions have to be made about whether the nation needs more real resources being diverted into, say, health care and less into bombing the hell out of Iraq or wherever the bombs are falling now.

The national government is never revenue constrained because it is the monopoly issuer of the currency. So it can buy whatever real resources that are for sale in the currency it issues.

Which means that it the nation determines through the political process to drop bombs and leave sick people sick then it can financially accomplish that goal without issue.

So it is plainly false to claim that the MMT proponents have not considered these issues and just think there is a ‘free lunch’.

Palley’s poor form is exemplified when he quotes some other article from Max B. Sawicky, who I generally find to be reasonable.

The article (January 4, 2019) – The Best Way To Argue Against PAYGO – discusses the ‘paygo’ debate in the US.

Max Sawicky notes that:

But at some point, increased government spending runs up against that capacity constraint. If we are already at full employment, with full utilization of all productive resources, more deficit spending can result in undesirable inflation.

The above is, in fact, MMT doctrine, but often hard to find in their popular treatments.

Note the distinction between “MMT doctrine” (which is the body of literature that the core MMT group has developed over the last 25 years) and the “popular treatments” (which I take to mean the derivative versions of our work by other writers who may or may not be sympathetic to the “doctrine”.

I don’t use the term ‘doctrine’ to describe our core work. It is a body of knowledge that has stood the empirical tests and is the best explanatory framework currently on offer for people to use to understand how the monetary system operates.

But that beside, the distinction is very important and refutes Palley’s entire argument that MMT advocates ‘free’ spending, despite him using other quotes in the article (out of context) to criticise our work.

I wrote about the GND in this blog post – The erroneous ‘lets have a little, some or no MMT’ narrative (February 20, 2019).

I wrote that the debate should be focused on what a GND means for real resource usage and what redistributions of access to real resources might be required to ensure that total spending (on the available real resources) can accomplish the GND goals without accelerating inflation.

Those redistributions of access is just another way of saying – if the current real resource usage is leaving a stock of free or underutilised real resources that is smaller than those required to effectively implement a GND – then the government has to increase that stock by depriving some of the current usages access.

One way to do that is through taxation – which reduces the capacity of the non-government sector to utilise real resources (by reducing spending capacity).

There are other ways including through regulation.

However, it is important to understand, that if taxes are raised to build a stock of free resources that can be then redirected into productive use via the GND, this has nothing to do with ‘funding’ the spending outlays that are operationalising the GND.

Once you fall into the ‘funding’ narrative you have left MMT thinking and gone back to neoliberalism.

My other recent post on the GND – The Job Guarantee is more than a Green New Deal job creation policy (December 17, 2018) – is critical of those who only see the GND in cyclical terms, as Palley seems to do.

The original New Deal during the Great Depression (specifically, the relief and recovery elements) was largely concerned with implementing what macroeconomists refer to as a ‘counter-cyclical’ fiscal intervention – working to redress non-government spending shortages, which leads firms to lay-off workers.

These expenditure initiatives are not intended to be permanent supports to regions and communities. As non-government spending returns, the fiscal intervention is withdrawn.

But, while the details are to be provided, the ‘Green New Deal’ proposal is not really (primarily) about resolving a cyclical shortfall in aggregate spending.

Rather it is a structural program designed to significantly change the patterns of industry output, employment and the consumption patterns of households and firms.

And further, it is about fundamentally altering the shifting the line between government and market responsibility for resource allocation both in aggregate but also spatially.

This shift would go much further than a stimulus package for some regional areas.

It would involve a fundamental reconfiguration of the concept of government in the US context, going against the historical norms that have dominated American society since its inception.

Which means that the way in which the expenditure is introduced and the accompanying policies to ensure that there is sufficient real resource space to accommodate that new GND expenditure are likely to be different to a purely counter-cyclical stimulus approach.

Palley doesn’t consider that at all.

He clearly has decided to ignore many articles I have written on these issues, which counter his facile stylisation of MMT.

He just wants people to think that MMT claims “that the US can enjoy a massive permanent money financed program spree that does not cause inflation”.

That might make him feel important.

But it certainly doesn’t help him establish the credibility he has so sorely desired over the years but never seems to find.

Conclusion

I only decided to explicitly address the Palley papers, not because they are important in any way, but because some of the points are still raised in E-mails I receive from readers who are acting in good faith.

I get many E-mails with many questions. And the topics above reflect many of those queries.

But you can see why Palley avoids citing my work – because I have already written the stuff he claims MMT ignores!

So, Tom, you can do better than the pathetic stuff you are pumping out at present. It doesn’t help your standing at all.

That is enough for today!

(c) Copyright 2019 William Mitchell. All Rights Reserved.

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