https://freeassociations2020.blogspot.com/2021/01/freeassociationskelton-2012mmt-mct.html
MMT-MCT Fields Institute Seminar: Stephanie Kelton
2012
https://youtu.be/khaypwRG5C0?t=23m
貨幣ヒエラルキー
文字起こし yeah all right nice start so thank you for coming this morning so just to remind yourself what yourself what we are doing so it's team convene this visit is pretty much all right that's a stateless visit in the fields Institute for the month and then to have a forum for us to exchange ideas and said research problems to work in theater with father Kevin and regular series of sending us up in heaven then since that's what this is going to be the fit of those so we call it ruins and nonlinear economics and just to hand on a high note so we invited distinguished friends from other places so today would be all from the external researchers who have talks in the morning and to talks in the afternoon and the last one will be stiff stiff gets the privilege of having the last word so it's a great question I have is the first speaker Stephanie counsels from University of Kansas thank you thank you for helping them put this together thank you to see from the invitation suggested all together so I know this is the fields Institute and ordinarily you would come in you and have a nice rigorous mathematical presentation of some time but that's not what I'm going to do today this is a lecture that's intended for a general audience people who have an interest in some economic question those policy questions want to understand maybe the issues way that you don't often hear them explain in media and press and so forth and so I just want to begin by do we have time consent is how to projector on this attend on everything I'll say you just press ok so the it was all to get this kid here we go it's fine lay eggs again we've had what we have mr. Nesmith does anybody ever meant anything to chance okay here we go all right okay so the title of the talk is money is no object and I'm being provocative here in a couple of different ways and what I hope to convince you out of money and the hour is a cop look two things the way that we conventionally think about money is is wrong we tend to think of money as a thing and we most often the something that's finite in its existence money is an object and there's only so much of it out there right so we have to make difficult choices about what to do with money allocating money like any other scarce resource in the economy and so forth so I want to kind of pull that into question and then I want to extend that to say if money is not a physical thing whose limited and scarce like other resources and it can be created at will sense the money is no object when it comes to do the kinds of things that we want to do to sustain the math very funny at a targeted level of employment for example so this question what is money begs an answer and the usual description that you find in the textbooks is one that I find very unsatisfying and I like this from gentleman named Hyman Minsky who's an economist that many of you in the room are probably familiar with in Minsky's most famous work stabilizing an unstable economy Minsky says anyone can create money that's kind of nice to know anyone can create money the trick is to get it accepted hey how different does that sound from what if you've ever had a course in economics whether it's micro or macro from the principals level all the way up to the graduate level you've probably encountered a story that begins you get to the page that begins to talk about money what's the first thing you see once upon a time right it begins like a fairy tale why because it is once upon a time man conducted his affairs on the basis of barter right this is dominant within the discipline in economics it has its roots in the medalist tradition which is the bipolar right the opposite end of the spectrum from what I'm going to describe in a few moments the chart elasaur cartola state theory of money the old idea that money emerges spontaneously within the private sector as individuals make about how better to conduct their affairs.
so as Smith said man has a
natural propensity to truck barter and
exchange it's an art DNA it's what we do
right we produce things or specialize at
some point and then we pick those things
up and we love them to the local trading
venue called the market where we attempt
to change that which we have into that
which we desire we attempt to make a
trade
this is very clumsy specialize in
something you're the best fisherman in
the village so you catch fish and you go
to the local trading venue and you have
all the fish you need or want to sustain
yourself but what you really need is a
clay pot to cook your fish in maybe a
new pair of shoes to walk around in
whatever it is right so off you head to
the local training venue with your
surplus fish looking for someone who
both has what you want and once what you
have right so barter is inefficient it's
clumsy
it requires the famous double
coincidence of wants unless the double
coincidence of wants to satisfy no no
trade can take place I barter involves
these heavy transaction costs this week
economists sometimes use the two terms
shoe leather costs you have to
presumably walk around for a long time
in order to find someone who wants what
you have and has what you want
so money helps to take care of this
problem right.
and what did the textbooks
tell you old money and banking textbooks
new money and making textbooks it
doesn't matter the same story gets
repeated in all of them and the story
begins in that once upon a time sort of
fashion where we struggle to overcome
the inefficiencies of order and the
first
humans decide to use to mediate to
alleviate the efficiencies of barter our
primitive monks beads feathers calorie
shells dancing ladies bigots and
money-making textbook dancing ladies you
know cattle fish stones all of these
things that were supposedly early forms
of money somewhere at some point in
human history.
and then eventually the
next stage of evolution the story goes
well some of those things just don't
make a very good money thing fish don't
last forever right
cattle are very hard to lug down to the
marketplace and what do you do as cattle
is your money thing and what you're
after is just a pair of shoes or a clay
pot what's the exchange value by the leg
for a pot it's not divisible it's not a
good money thing this is the story so
humans decide precious metals that's
what we should be using this makes a
better money thing it's portable it's
durable it's divisible.
this is this is
what we ought to do so the next stage of
the evolution in the story and the text
books goes man invented commodity monies
and then eventually you move away from
having to actually pull out gold coins
silver coins and make transactions you
begin trading with paper but the paper
is convertible into precious metals gold
or silver so you have convertibility so
when you're answering the question why
would people take
those pieces of paper in exchange for
something of value like a cattle or fish
whatever well it's because paper is as
good as gold I convertible into gold and
then we reached the next stage in the
evolution of money which is where we are
today pure fiat currency I intrinsically
worthless not convertible into anything
else at a fixed price what do people
accept it this gets difficult for the
conventional textbook story because if
you ask them why do people accept to be
hot like worthless oh well they take it
because they know they can go down and
go to the marketplace and spend it well
why does the shopkeeper take it
well the shopkeeper takes it because he
knows that he can pay his worker
well the worker takes it because they
know they can pay their landlord well
what you see where the problem is it's
an infinite regress problem you never
get a satisfactory answer to the
question why do people accept
intrinsically worthless fiat currency
nevertheless The Economist's are
undaunted by the problem and press
forward with the simple once upon a time
story what is money money is what money
does primarily money is a medium of
exchange it's not interesting in and of
itself it's the thing we handed each
other to get the real good or service it
simply intermediates
it's the exchange process it also serves
as a mythical store value my money is
what money does it's a veil over the
real economy we don't too much have to
pay attention to money it's there but it
doesn't do anything important this is
something that Steve Keene has been
critiquing for an awful long time right
that we don't really need money in our
most important to bail it's just there
to help us make the transactions that
were pre-programmed in our DNA to make
anyway right we don't even need it
in Marmont sitting next to Steve Keen is
Michael Hudson who's written a lot of
work tell me a very different story
about the nature and origins of money
where does money come from why do people
use money how do we tell a very
different story and this story involves
out of what we refer to as the card list
for charmless theories of money an
economist by the name of George
Friedrich map wrote home while the state
theory of money many other economists
have written about this less extensively
than an octave but in any event the
story is there but it's best told not by
economists most economists don't know
their history they don't read outside of
their discipline.
so they don't but
they're not simply just not aware of
this other story about what motivates
the use
where do we find the origin of money
what is the nature of money if you read
the work vamp apologists sociologists
misma tests Michael Hudson this is where
you're going to get I think a much
richer and much more historically
meaningful tale about why societies
began to use my Nana's ruins you find
here the story focuses on the origin of
money in early credit and debt
relationships money evolves along with
death right where you have not a society
of people all deciding collectively hey
let's use money it would be easier to
conduct transactions but in authority
who imposes debt on a population
requires them to pay that debt and tells
them how they can eliminate the
obligation in order to eliminate the
debt to meet the authority whether on
the path of its apalis community whether
other palace chief whether on the
nation-state.
I'm going to impose that on
you I will tell you what you have to do
to eliminate the death you will provide
real resources to me I will pay for
those real resources with something that
you can then turn around and give back
to me to eliminate your obligation right
the purpose in all of this as Michael
has told the story so about anything is
that we should be focusing on the desire
of the authority to get resources moved
from the private to the public domain
and the way that that's achieved is
through
by imposing liabilities on others that
they have to work off in order to earn
that which is necessary to pay the tax
the fee find to the state so yeah
can't you have both stories like in some
places there is a strong state that does
that and then maybe not the discipline
that was both stories I mean can you do
you have this article records of both
alright this is my we may never know but
they're not what other stars in there
quickly that's worse than David greatest
exactly.
I was gonna mention that yet
that we're looking about societies you
only find it quite trivial handful even
if I'm in modern tribal society law and
in historical records we find and what
you tend to find we look at the star
birth was ending cultures it's actually
communal exchange that precedes the
money period
and what really goes on a mutual
gift-giving which then generates mutual
credit and that's part of how those
societies evolved because they were
cooperative.
we're not you know in the
barcode it again has it's the having
like a couple of one of them wild
animals that hunt alone and get together
to exchange and don't have any communal
relations but in fact it's a friendship
thing and at the society to you I'll
give you a gift you feel an obligation
to me and you didn't return the gift
later and I think what we see coming out
of when we get to the agrarian societies
and that I think that mutual or
gift-giving becomes a mutual credit
because encapsulated what the entity
which is a combination religious state
and commerce roots together yeah I think
I mean great book goes out looking for
answers and he goes out looking for
examples where the other story actually
hold certain water and it comes up with
this steep set very few examples that in
fact what economists have intended to do
is to read the present into the past.
and
so when you see tribal societies engaged
in communal gift-giving and you see ones
that go like that and the other cycle
like that and you see wampum beats you
know moving back and forth we say oh it
must be paying with the beads that must
be how they paid for the other thing
so therefore beads were an early form of
permanently it's not what's going on
okay but that takes okay so forget all
the history regardless of the origin of
money what do we know today is now I
want to move into the present and have a
discussion about the kind of monetary
system we have today and what needs
regardless of where money came from all
money exists.
and I argue and I have my
viewed in many publications as
simultaneously Democratic money at the
end of the day it's a social
relationship it involves two parties you
must have a debtor and the creditor
money exists
is an asset and a liability all money is
an IOU the eye is the debtor is the
creditor okay all of these io u--'s
money is a recording device money debt
credit is recorded in some unit of
account I would choose this punitive
account in Australia the unit of account
is the Australian dollar.
in the US the
US dollar in Canada Canadian dollars
Japan the Japanese yen in Britain the
British pound and in Italy what's
different it turns out to be very
important right the money of account the
unit of account is an abstract
convention it's not something you can
feel it's not an object it's like an
inch or a hectare or a yard or a year
it's abstract it's something that only
humans can conceive it represents a
relationship it reports those social
debts in any modern nation the money of
account is chosen by the national
government any place on the globe that
you can point to the money that is
circulating you can rest assured it's
chosen
state government this is something
that's not new it's not modern in this
sense it's something that if you go back
to Aristotle you can find this it's
certainly an Adam Smith and it runs
through the works of a large number of
economists so I do not even fully
developed form in James's treatise on
money which is the major work that he
published just before the general theory
Keynes tells us the age of journalists
or state money was reached when the
state declared what things should answer
to the money of a cat to the Union what
things should answer today all civilized
money's beyond the possibility of
dispute Chartist
he says also in the treatise the state
claims the right to write and rewrite
the dictionary so think Italian
government to write the dictionary it's
clear and then to rewrite the dictionary
cross out the lira and Europe right to
write and rewrite the dictionary this is
a right claimed by all sovereign
governments so the sovereign government
has four important things it defines the
unit of account what will be the unit of
account in that state it imposes taxes
fees fines and other obligations it
decides what it will accept in payment
of those taxes fines fees and
obligations and it chooses how it will
make its owner payments those are four
important decisions that any sovereign
government makes most sovereign
governments
clearly not all choose their own unique
money of account and issue their own
currency in that unit of account the
Japanese yen the Canadian dollar.
I most
go with a one nation one money approach
the money and the national borders most
governments also require that taxes be
paid in a currency that the state has
the exclusive right to issue exclusive
right it gives itself the monopoly to
create that which is necessary to settle
obligations to the state when it does
these things its operating with
sovereign currency why does that matter
as long as the state has the power to
enforce the tax obligations the people
need the government's money.
we are so
used to I think thinking in terms of the
government need our money but if the
state is the issuer of the currency and
grants itself exclusive power to create
the currency why not earth do they need
to come to us to get the currency the
currency comes from them.
and we accept
it because we need it to settle
obligations to the state the currency
will have value people will be willing
to work in order to produce in order to
earn the currency because it's
Cerie in order to settle death in order
to settle obligations right.
whatever the
government accepts in payment to itself
becomes what George Friedrich Knapp called
the definitive money of the system.
my
foot definitely definitive and it is the
final means of settlement so here the
Charter lists the card lists emphasize
the means of payment function of money.
the the role that many pays and
extinguishing obligations and
eliminating death okay.
so go back to
minute see anyone do create money the
trick is to get it accepted anything can
create life then make it think of a
whole range of money things.
I can create
money Michael can create money he's got
the gist of everybody in this room can
create money.
the state can create money
banks create money but all the money is
not created equal some io u--'s are more
acceptable than others some will
circulate more rightly some will serve
as a good medium of exchange.
and others
will be rejected some will make a means
of payment a final means of payment you
can settle your debt by handing over the
IOU up someone else others won't okay.
what's the difference which I owe you
use our most special I mean my argument
is that the io u--'s at the top of the
pyramid are the most special those are
the io use the money things that are
going to be the most accepted and whose
io u--'s are those so if anyone can
create money households can do it
financial institutions banks can do it
non-bank firms can do it government can
do it
who's io u--'s
did you get a layering of I only use
like a pyramid the most acceptable are
at the top the least acceptable or at
the bottom so imagine that after this
lecture today I've allowed too much and
I pay with my credit card I go into
death is you in I owe you one myself and
I get to eat the food and I get to walk
out am I finished
I'm not finished I a couple the weeks
later I go to the mailbox there's the
bill for visa what do they want they
want to be paid for the meal but if they
extended be credit so what do I do I get
out my checkbook I write a cheque put it
in the mailbox off to the center visa
gets the check so I'm transferring the
IOU of someone higher in the pyramid
Lisa gets my check
are they happy is it done visa doesn't
want my shiny I have a really lovely
signature but it's not at the end of the
day with their actor they aren't happy
with the cheque they want what happens
after the cheque goes through it's
clearing process what visa wants is a
credit to its bank account which gives
it a claim on I have to transfer the IOU
of someone higher in the pyramid to get
out of my home debt that results in the
transference of another ionian higher in
pyramid and the only way to ultimately
eliminate my debt is to pay the state
line and we have a long discussion about
bank reserves and I'll add
trust me at the end play what happens is
that visa gets paid with something that
gives it a claim on the government's IOU
okay so if we look at the u.s. hierarchy
it looks like this that what I want to
emphasize is the relationship between
the government and the thing at the top
of the pyramid so in the case of the
United States the pyramid looks like
this the most acceptable form of payment
is the US dollar is the only way
ultimately to settle any debt
denominated in u.s. dollars right the
government's bends in u.s. dollars
collects taxes in US dollars it issues
the currency that sits at the top of the
pyramid that currency the US dollar is
non convertible it's a pure floating
fiat currency we don't have a fixed
exchange rate system the government
doesn't promise to convert dollars into
gold or anything else at a fixed price
it's purely a fiat currency again why
does that matter what are the benefits
of issuing a currency that sits at the
top of the pyramid it means all the
stuff that at least in the US we hear
every single day on the television and
newsprint that the nation is on a fiscal
fiscally unsustainable path that we're
going broke that we're going to become
like Greece all of that stuff is wrong
the issuer of the currency can never run
out of the currency that
your assets of the exclusive right to
issue can go grow you can't be forced to
miss a payment in your own currency you
can afford anything that's for sale in
that unit of account so the upper limit
to the US government's ability to spend
what's for sale many dollars because I
could have it all if I wanted to right
if you're willing to sell something to
me for US dollars
I can I can have okay
it doesn't mean to borrow its own
currency in order to spend it issues the
currency it can set the policy interest
rate and any level it doesn't have to
use its interest rate to defend or
protect a stock of gold or another
country's currency if it's on a fixed
exchange rate system it has control of
the policy interest ring this gives the
state and expanded policy space it gives
you more elbow room in terms of your
ability to use primarily physical but
also monetary policy to try to influence
what's happening in the macro economy
this is the u.s. before 1971 1973 two
years matter here I go with 73 that's
when the golden window is closed for
good
you're you're right I didn't say that
there were no constraints I said there
was no constraint on the government's
ability to spend in its own currency
that's very different and inflation is a
real constraint we recognize that I'll
come to that yeah I'm not saying that
there are no constraints on spending I'm
saying there's no constraint on the
government's ability to create its
currency and buy whatever's for sale in
that unit account of different cities
okay so before 1973 1974 lon a fixed
exchange rate system that was known as
international monetary system called
renin with 44 countries participated 43
of them fixed the value of their
currency to the US dollar and the US
government
as convertible into gold at a fixed
price oh okay so it's a fixed exchange
rate system under that monetary
arrangement the government in the u.s.
is promising to convert dollars into
gold and a fixed price what sat at the
top of the hierarchy under that type of
monetary system was not the US dollar
and that places constraints on the
government's ability to issue the US
dollar because if it issues too many
dollars and it's going to happen before
all that I want to start converting to
gold then there's only so much because
that is finite right so it constrains
your policy space there's less fiscal
room there's less positive space under
monetary system like that same thing
even after 73 you have lots of countries
that continue to run fixed exchange rate
systems and as a consequence you have
lots of currents and crises and debt
defaults Russia 1978 Argentina in early
2000 sadly station 97 Mexico in 94 95
all of these countries experienced
payment problems as a consequence of the
fact that they don't control the
currency that sits at the top of a
pyramid.
they get a debt in a currency
that they have trouble then servicing
debt because of the nature the monetary
system that they've adopted it gives
them limited policy space.
it robs them
of the ability to use the interest rate
to set the interest rate anywhere they
want to so in the case of Russia for
example Russia is fixing the value of
the ruble to the US dollar so they're
pledging on demand to allow holders of
ruble balances to convert rules into the
US dollar to fixed price fun until
everybody wants to do that right and
when too many people start choosing to
convert to the u.s. dollar problem
because in order to maintain the peg you
need a sufficient holding of your
reserve asset which is the dollar and if
everybody's converting into dollars
you're losing your dollar reserves so
what is the Russian government do they
respond by trying to compete with the
desire to convert to US dollars this
they hold on
you don't want US dollars what you
really want are gkos Russian government
bonds have a take this instead this pays
interest you'll like it it's nice right
and the rural people who were holding
rubles said no I really just prefer the
dollar things well hang hang on what
about a higher interest rate wouldn't
that appeal to you just raise the
interest rate a bit come on take the G K
up no go to the dollars I'm gonna have
the dollar please oh wait wait wait wait
a little bit higher a little bit higher
interest rates with 150% before the
fixed exchange rate system who love
so these are very limiting types of
monetary systems you give up control of
your interest rate you constrain your
policy space and you become heavily
dependent on current account surpluses
on trade because it's the only way to
accumulate non-government sector for the
private sector when you're constrained
in your ability to run deficits the
surplus in the private sector and I'll
talk more about that okay what about the
euro euro is an exceptional case it's
not a fixed exchange rate system but it
definitely limits the policy space and
it introduces a relationship between the
government's that use the euro and the
hierarchy that takes away that
relationship of one nation one currency
I control the currency that sits at the
top of the pyramid because they don't
write all of these countries the
seventeen countries that adopted the
bureau gave up their sovereign
currencies and adopted what's
effectively a foreign currency to them
modeled on the one market one money
principle one impart we all do so much
trade together
why don't we for efficiency reasons just
use the same thing it goes back to the
old medalist apartment high money is
just the thing we hand around and it's
more efficient if we all hand around the
same thing because we do so much trading
together what difference could it make
so it turns out it makes a huge
difference
I now these countries are users
currency not issuers of the currency and
because they no longer issue the
currency that sits at the top of the
pyramid they can run out of heroes they
can go broke they can become insolvent
they can be forced to miss a payment
they have limited policy space and they
have to pay market rates of interest so
it turns out that money matters money is
not this afterthought that you may or
may not put into your model because it's
really just like a veil over the real
economy and that's what matters at the
end of the day money matters and
governments should be in control of the
currency that sits at the top of the
pyramid if they give up the control they
also give up some of their policy space
this is a bomber who was a contemporary
of Keynes's.
and institutionalists
post-keynesian economists who says by
virtue of its power to create and
destroy money by Fiat or to take money
away from people through taxation the
state is in a position to keep the rate
of spending in the economy at the level
necessary to achieve order and to
sustain
okay something that no pathless economy
has ever achieved
we have fleeting periods of what might
be characterized as full employment
unemployment rates of two and a half
percent in Europe three percent three
and a half percent in the US and you
call that full employment but they're
always fleeting and they usually come
during wartime or speculative bubbles
but no capitalist economy has never
successfully sustained full employment
and learner's arguing that if you have
the right type of monetary system and
the degree of policy space that comes
with that then you can take advantage of
that and you can actually do what hasn't
been achieved before so how do currency
issuers spend how does the issuer for
the current extent it spends by giving
instructions to have somebody else's
account credited now with modern money
the age of electronic money in support
this frequently happens without the
government even writing a check Social
Security payments are made automatically
you're sitting at home looking online at
your bank statement and you see two
thousand dollars in your account and
then suddenly the numbers change you see
I just got my credit they spend with
keystrokes this is something Ben
Bernanke it's been really forthcoming
that Alan Greenspan has been very
forthcoming this is how modern
governments spend do we understand this
no too often we don't
so we have our president going on
television and in response to a question
are we are we out of money when we'll be
running
lady he says we're out of money now
that's his response on television we're
out of money
it all starts really getting bad when
this guy makes his appearance this is
Ross Perot boy I did 92 so he goes on TV
runs for president right he's famous
with his flip charts and he's sort of
the Pete Peterson of his day he goes
around scaring the hell out of everyone
telling them that if I ran you know my
business the way this government runs
its operations why I be bankrupting a
little Texas accent you know and he just
showed everybody that this is really
really irresponsible the government is
spending money it doesn't have its
burdening our grandchildren you know the
arguments all that it's kind of live
within its means just like the rest of
us do
right so we think
and this narrative that governments are
like households it's just like one big
household really needs to play by the
same rules of the household when you and
I type our belts it's responsible for
the government to tighten its belt too.
and so forth is that this have any sense
at all does the government really like a
household you know a fixed exchange rate
system you know pledge to convert our
currency in the gold or anything else we
spend like hitting the keys on a
keyboard but we act like we're still on
one of these ancient monetary systems.
I
mean the world truly does change in 1971
Nixon closes the gold window we go off
Bretton Woods completely by 73 it's all
time everything changes and we play by
the same rules that applied under the
old monetary system why well for one
thing we look around we see what's
happening in other parts of the world
that we say dear God if I don't get my
fiscal house in order I'm going to end
up like Greece Spain Portugal iron right
oh this is very powerful the u.s. they
hit this over and over again and
Americans by and large are convinced
because if you take polls Americans say
the deficit is one of the most important
problems we face today about the deficit
to come down.
and this is part of the
reason that we're so terrified but we
don't understand what makes us different
from those countries over there we still
have our keyboard
we have a currency to be issued we have
sovereign money they adopted a foreign
currency they can't issue the currency
and because they gave up there are
sovereign currencies and adopted
something that they can't issue
financial markets have a great deal of
power that they don't have in a country
like the US like the UK like Japan where
financial markets know that the risk of
default
that's essentially nil if you can always
pay the presumption is you will always
be right there is the ability to pay and
that gives financial markets confidence
they don't make your payment's financial
markets understand that Greece and
Ireland and Portugal might not be able
to come up with it's the only place they
can get the eros is to raise it by
collecting taxes and when your economy
goes your tax receipts go and so to fill
the gap as other forms of spending
increased right automatic stabilizers
kick in government spends more on social
safety net programs taxes are falling
off the deficit lightens have you fill
the gap borrowing but you gotta go to
capital markets hat in hand ask for
euros and they say well well we have
lend but the risk of default is getting
fairly high so in order to make the loan
we need a premium right that default
risk premium begins to climb the penalty
is assessed by the financial markets and
these countries are now like individual
states in the u.s. Greece is like
Georgia Georgia can issue
see Georgia has to go he borrowed the
dollars in order to spend this is why
they're such a crisis with state local
governments in the u.s. they can't do
what the federal government can do okay
the eurozone countries have transferred
the spending authority to the financial
markets you tell us how much we can
spend how much are you willing to lend
you can shut us off completely I have
been cross waterway the u.s. still has
its keyboard
we're not like Greece we're not going to
be like groups we can never be forced to
miss a payment we can't become insolvent
we always have the ability to pay we
can't run out of money any more than a
scorekeeper a sporting event can run out
of points right when was the last time
with you Jake's played last night things
I would say they beat my Kansas City
Chiefs Oh see I don't even know the
Royals right that's baseball it seems
like last night and when was the last
time you went to a sporting event and
saw you know a really website a game one
thing once besides just running away
with it putting that point after point
after point and your son in the stands
and you thought oh god if they keep
scoring at this rate they're gonna run
out of points worry you'd never respond
that way though never occur to you but
this is basically how we respond but
it's been government issuing its own
currency as if it's somehow is an object
that is finite and it's going to run out
up at some point like money is not an
object
here's Alan raining spam on 60 minutes
with an interviewer named Scott Pelley
and stock pelvis ever visit your clothes
i penny says is that tax money the
Venice spending
Bernanke says it's not tax money he says
we just use the computer to mark up the
size of the account I mean that's how we
spent that's a quote
my colleague at UMKC randy ray wrote a
paper with a couple of PhD students
looking carefully and we extend to the
feds intervention and last but since it
started 2007 I guess and they came up
with a number of 29 trillion dollars the
Fed has intervened to the tune of 29
trillion dollars since the start of a
true 29 trillion no where did they get
their 29th I think you served it into
existence doesn't exist until it's cute
stroke but once it's what is world GDP
that's awesome about you trillion if 50
trillion original
okay so the point I want to leave with I
mean I don't want to leave and not have
everyone at least remember that I said
this the issue where the currency can
always head and here's Alan Greenspan
government cannot become insolvent with
respect to obligations in its own
currency if my debt is in the US dollar
and I'm the US government of course I
can always service the debt the dollar
comes from me the US dollar comes from
the US government a fiat money system
like the ones we have today can produce
such claims without limit that doesn't
say it should produce such claims
without limit that says it can right
there's no operational constraint on its
ability to create the currency it's the
monopoly issuer the currency so if we
can do all of these things and have all
of this policy space why is the recovery
so weak and we could all probably answer
this question for one thing we
significantly underestimated the
severity of the damage our pocket with
traditional pump priming a little pump
priming and a good swift response from
the central banks of the world cutting
interest rates
maybe little QB of necessary we can
write this really just here's your
use your policy tool same ones always
used by believing that the Fed is much
more powerful than it is believing that
the money multiplier words that if you
give banks reserves they will allow to
make loans those ones will result in
spending the spending will drive GDP
growth employment and so
we'll be on the road to recovery so all
of these things were mistakes a failure
to appreciate that what we're really
dealing with is a balance sheet
recession that the private sectors debt
to income ratio is so high that even if
you provide more income for a sustained
period of time people are going to be
paying down debt not buying newly
produced goods and services the economy
is going to take a long time so I think
for all of those reasons we've been
fighting the fight the wrong way on top
of that you have all this fear about
becoming Greece and all the deficit
hysteria especially in the US okay so we
have juice use the terms in Canada
deficit Hawk who deficit though is a
common term so you know that the
dominant groups in the u.s. come from
essentially the two different parties
the party that likes to call themselves
fiscal conservatives the Republicans
there the deficit hawks I mean a deficit
is a bad thing it's irresponsible it
burdens the next generation we should
never run them unless they're in office
and you know you just don't want
deficits at all you've been given you
bad times you don't want deficit
spending so they say they oppose it on
principle and they say they favorite
things like sound money
and sometimes you hear people in this
camp advocate for things like 100%
reserve backing we ought to go back to
the gold standard governments have to be
restrained and what they can spend and
that will restore fiscally responsible
governments and so forth okay they would
advocate things like balanced budget
amendments amend the US Constitution to
make sure that the government all these
balances its budget today you have the
deficit hawks the funders sorry-sorry
does the deficit does thank you
the deficit doubts are the kinder
gentler anti-deficit folks they say well
it's true that deficits are dangerous
and it's true that we do need to tighten
our belt to get our fiscal house in
order but it's also true that
unemployment is high the economy is sort
fragile and if we start to tighten too
soon we could jeopardize the recovery
and so let's focus on deficits in the
medium term but in the short run let's
focus on you know growth and so forth we
might actually have to spend a bit more
to do that and but we'll take care of
the deficit because you're right we
agree with you
deficits bad and then you have and I'm
sure you've all heard of the deficit
devil the deficit owl this this is part
of this was taken from the Washington
Post article that was written about the
approach that I'm describing which is
sometimes referred to as monetary
monetary theory or modern money theory
and it's been featured just this year in
places like the Economist magazine in
the Washington Post the Financial Times
Playboy magazine last month serious five
pages so anyway there there was this
piece in The Washington Post they could
be either this little family tree I kind
of put a low stubs and Hawks up above to
show the distinction here but what's a
deficit owl okay
this just tells us some of the people
who are beginning to pay attention to
this broad approach that I've been sort
of describing to you for the last 35
minutes modern monetary theory or modern
money theory departs sharply from the
conventional textbook stories about most
things certainly money in deficit
spending and so forth focus is on
unemployment as socially harmful and
economically efficient and advocates for
employment economy using the power that
you have by virtue of the fact that you
have the right monetary system says well
then we ought to do it
right you don't need 25 million people
who want full-time jobs and can't find
when we can make that happen
okay so the MMT deficit or any deficit
at all would assign no arbitrary limit
to the size or the duration of the
deficit you would never say if you're a
deficit cowl the deficit should be cut
in half by the year 2017 I know you
might have a surplus trade balance
reverses and get a huge current account
surplus and your budget can actually
move into circle you don't know today
what your budget should look like in the
future the policy bold target should not
be the size of the deficit the target
should be what's happening in the real
economy except real bowls like full
employment I can let the deficit move
where it needs to to achieve that goal a
deficit owl would you never consider the
government's budget position
isolation they would always think about
where the government's budget is surplus
or deficit with respect to what's
happening any other sectors in the
economy you have to you can't look at
the government's budget in isolation so
as a starting point you can say the
government's deficit if the government
is spending more than its collecting
spend a hundred collect ninety or the
other about the tenth non-government
sector so the government's deficit is by
definition into the penny the
non-government surplus in financial
terms right similarly if the government
collects more than it spends Oh take a
hundred and I'll spend ninety I I have
the extra ten that you have lost ten so
my surplus is your deficit right this is
double entry bookkeeping it's true by
definition follows the laws of
accounting so what is it show it shows
that in any certain period any sector in
the economy can be spending more than
its income running a deficit spending
less than its income
running a surplus or exactly spending
equal to its in
it's budget if we separate the
non-government sector into private
domestic and foreign then we have three
sectors for dealing with domestic public
domestic private and the rest of the
world foreign sector all of those income
parents purchasing newly produced goods
and services savings the leaking
leakages and injections in the economy
everything has to come from somewhere
and everything has to go somewhere has
to end up somewhere so you have flows
that results at the end in an
accumulation or a drawdown to stop all
right so it's a stop flow analysis of
the payments that take place across the
sectors in the economy it has to follow
just one rule
not everybody can be in surplus at the
same time not everybody can get in
deficit at the same time that should be
intuitive right I can't run a surplus I
can't earn more than I spend unless
someone else
spent more than their right so at least
one sector has to be in deficit at least
one could be the domestic private could
be the domestic public could be the
foreign sector but someone's gonna take
that deficit position who who usually
takes the deficit position this is a
graph it's got full-leather
put together and he maintains and
updates and the rest of us are also
grateful because we all lose it all the
time this is the actual native this is
not you know manufactured hypothetical
stuff this is the actual data
yes economy and the red is the public
sector
whenever the red is below the zero line
government is running a deficit the
green is the rest of the world so back
in the back of the old days the u.s.
used to run trade surpluses little ones
foe beer and trade surpluses the rest of
the world ran a deficit against us now
we run trade deficits so the rest of the
world is accumulating surpluses against
us right so look what happens if the
government is running a deficit it means
they're spending more than they're
taxing that ends up adding to the
private sector surplus if the rest of
the world is also buying more from us
than there then we're buying from them
that also adds to the private sector
surplus so if you add these two together
you get exactly that right what do you
notice about the picture first thing
it's a mirror image you can see that
right why because the sum of all
balances has to equal zero it has to the
private sector is almost always in
surplus public sectors almost always
deficit
look what happened during the so-called
Clinton boom the Democrats would love to
brag
in the US this is a badge of honor to
have been associated with the Clinton
administration which brought us the
first budget surpluses in decades we are
the real fiscally responsible party to
be you know however you a surplus well
was that really good for the economy
take the federal government's surplus
which means they're taking more in taxes
than they're spending
driving the private sector down on top
of the fact that the rest of the world
is taking more from us because we buy
influence then they're buying from us
driving us further down so you get these
huge private-sector deficits that are
being financed by the private sector
taking on more and more debt right so
this is huge leverage building up here
here results in a recession the
government's budget moves right back
into deficit where it normally is would
plug along for a while we get the
housing booming right house has become
ATM machines people buy houses not homes
you get more leverage you get another
recession the government's budget boots
sharply into deficit but what happens to
the private sector they move sharply
into surplus and so this is what's
happening as a consequence of those huge
government deficits that everybody's so
worried about the private sector is
being pushed back into surplus territory
where they're now earning more than
their spending income greater than
expenditure the private sectors running
surpluses and it's helping the private
sector
leverage it's helping them repair their
balance sheets okay one thing I want to
point out I'd love additional help in
thinking this through and the math and
all of this but there is something going
on here that I always emphasize and this
is the private sectors balance and what
I try to point out is not only is the
private sector usually in surplus but
that it needs to be its surplus
okay the private sector lives up here in
surplus until recently when we start
taking on so much debt and becoming so
leveraged that we cross the zero line
and we end up down here running deficits
but what I notice these are recessions
the US has had eleven recession since
World War two 11 in every single case
immediately preceding the recession you
have a sharp reversal in the private
sectors budget position it doesn't mean
the private sector went into deficit it
just means that either the surplus
shrank significantly or that we moved
into deficit but you have a reversal
leading up to every one of these
recessions you have right at every
single time so it seems to me then what
policymakers should be doing is focusing
on
havior of the private sectors budget
position and anticipating those turning
points that seem to proceed all of the
recessions that we have since the end of
World War two
okay very quickly I'm almost to the end
this is the deficit the government ran
after the financial crisis and the
ensuing economic meltdown through the
budget deficit exploded look weighed in
to the private sector balance remember
they move opposite to one another as the
government begins to cut its deficit
it's cutting the private sectors surplus
why is that a concern because of the
last graph I just showed you that when
the private sector's balance turns
sharply down it tends to proceed a
recession okay I just I've already said
that
okay so I'm making the argument that the
private sector needs to be in surplus
and so how do you do that there are
three ways to put the private sector the
surplus a combination of a government
deficit government spending more than it
takes leaves you with a surplus plus the
rest of the world spending more buying
from us than we spend buying from them
leaves us with more so those two things
together guarantee you a private sector
surplus or if you're like the US and you
run current account deficits you have to
have a government deficit that's bigger
than your current account deficit to
offset the outflow that's happening
because of the trade deficit and keep
your private sector in surplus so you if
it would require the government deficit
bigger than whatever your current
account deficit is or you could have a
current account surplus like the lucky
countries in the euro zone those Germany
those that are able to achieve current
account surpluses can afford to run the
smaller government deficits and still
keep their private sector in surplus
only countries with trade surpluses can
avoid running government deficits what
I'm saying is to keep their private
sector in surplus okay the problem with
that is as wonderful is it sensible then
the solution is for everybody to run a
trade surplus and then we don't have to
have
deficits anymore promise of course that
everybody can run a trade surplus
because one country surpluses so we
can't all adopt that strategy
I'm sorry Germany right we can't all do
what you've done okay
these are questions that came up and I
scared him off with provisions and
Bymark Germany and so he's gone now but
but maybe they'll come back so what are
the things that prevent us from moving
forward with more sensible macroeconomic
policy I think the usual responses that
it would set up hyperinflation if we
were to use the government's power to
spend in the way that I've described
that somehow it would cause interest
rates to or love because the deficit
goes up the interest rate will go up
it's all the Orthodox thinking about
loanable funds markets and crowding out
and all this the Chinese we can use them
to buy our debt and you know people
losing faith in the dollar whatever
sewins are resolved of those fears
unfounded as I think they are we end up
in this muddling along sort of economic
situation where these are graphs that
were actually done by Bill Mitchell who
said well let's just project out the red
line is where we would have been have
there never been a financial crisis and
an economic downturn the red line is
sort of a path that we were on the blue
line is where we actually ended up
that's actual real GDP the difference is
the it's all the output that we're
giving up we're not producing it's the
income
being generated because we continue to
stay on that lead path and so what he
does is estimate that on a daily basis
this is for the US every single day we
don't bring about a strong recovery and
get back on that red line we're giving
up the equivalent of nine point eight
billion dollars every day like leaving
nine point eight billion on the table
every day right it's it's the
opportunity cost of sustaining and and
muddling along as opposed to getting
back to full employment so in the u.s.
we have now one in four children
officially living in poverty we have an
eight point three trillion dollar
infrastructure deficit on the Corps of
Engineers surveys all of the country's
infrastructure a B - C D plus F overall
the brain in the u.s. led 2.3 trillion
they say it would be needed just to get
us up to pass so we have tremendous
needs we have unemployment vaccinating
workers construction workers people with
skills to build things stuff that needs
to be built repaired maintained and we
can't seem to figure out how to put the
two together and as I said 25 million
Americans who want a full-time job and
can't find work so it's a colossal
failure of policy and they think it's a
failure of policy that derives directly
from our failure to understand the
nature
sister the flexibility that it gives us
to do things why we're not linked Greece
and so very quickly just in closing the
policy proposals that many of us have
been putting forward for the last few
years or so I don't heels the economic
downturn what should we do we sent these
three things like a full payroll tax
holiday in the u.s. we all have income
withheld from every paycheck pay into
Social Security for retirement you think
it's suspended just stop taking that
income stop it altogether cut back to
zero that would put additional income
into the pockets of those who most need
it 95% of Americans pay Social Security
tax on every single dollar they earn so
if you eliminate for a time garol tax
holiday that tax you're putting the
money right where it needs to go some
folks who are struggling with high debt
levels would use it to pay down debt
that's a good thing other folks like me
will go out and buy something that's a
good thing both need to happen and so we
like that policy revenue sharing just
recognizing state local governments or
users of the currency they're not
issuers they're in the deep trouble and
because they're in deep trouble they
continue to cut so everything the
federal government is trying to do that
the left hand to stimulate is being
snatched away with the right hand by
state local governments who are doing
exactly the opposite and the last thing
is as I said before no matter how good
your macro policy is fiscal monetary
policy you're not going to keep very
funny you can do it your fun
there are always going to be people who
want jobs you can't find them and for
those folks when you get all the policy
as good as you can get it you're still
gonna leave some people behind and so
for those people we like that yeah of an
employer of last resort or job guarantee
program something caught along with FDR
did under the new deal which Works
Progress Administration WPA program the
Civilian Conservation Corps the CCC
which was about sustainable development
vitalizing pay attention to energy use
and environmental concerns and so forth
put people to work there was a National
Youth administration we need something
to get you back on the board it's
interesting that the people you call
over the deficit that they call the
deficit doves are actually the depth
Hawks their solution is not only to run
a government never said before important
they say if only we can get the banks
lending again the economy can are worse
way out of debt
yeah so their solution is no more
government set before public debt and or
public sector debt and that's really
will here in the later cost the problem
today they are the difference is that
government debts never have to be repaid
Adam Smith said that no government and I
would paid the debt over time it goes up
and up enough private debts have to be
repaid or else you lose the property of
pledged as collateral so what they're
doing is invest their solution with the
downturn is to increase the debt
deflation and increase the riskiness of
the economy because they're unwilling to
see that running the government deficit
is a good thing because the government
money doesn't have to be repaid by the
government deficit if the economy grows
faster and that's it back to GE we'll
pull the plate yeah we're so preoccupied
Hartley with the numerator into those
equations it's also the deficit to GDP
ratio debt to GDP ratio everyone focuses
on the numerator and nobody pays
attention to the denominator and says if
you want that ratio for whatever reason
if you want it to come down
grow the denominator then they need to
run a product deficit
there's another way to look at that I'll
be talking about my own days.
so if
you're going have a growing economy and
there are two sources of money creation
in the system and when it's growing both
of the macro which means you have to
have muses of private debt exceeding
refinements and new issues of government
spending exceeding taxation if you don't
have them both happening roughly
proportion of the economy you're going
to have one or two things happen if
you're going to have the cipro or the
government as well secret ballot sharing
if the government runs a zero balance
for example then the local money's going
to grow relative to the level of say
and you're going to get this we actually
have seen happen in the last 40 years so
I don't take exactly the same phenomenon
but I'm sure everything a different
insight if you guys have growing economy
then you have to have growing private
debt and growing government created mine
surely we would say that too
yeah but if you simply looking at the
same home with Lorena a different way
it's the first that yeah part of my
argument again is that it's when you say
and the sexual downside in a private
sector saving is a protector deficit
it's partly arguing that it has to be
otherwise the system can wear it means
imply that we on this deserve it we
raised that way the period of the
disservice to this whole second aspect
to have the account if I'm a little bit
about well knock the table to find out
resolving not necessarily including the
change of that it's on side there too we
need to have a comprehensive one that
does all of that so how do what I'll
make you know what it's a principle that
having yes probably take the deficit his
private sector say when you have the
entire property to and include banks as
part of it doesn't differentiate them
but we need to get the size we
differentiate all of that and then push
you get the relationships where shine
that you created that you know if you
can have the difference when spending
the comic will be the sum of all the
tops of transit deprecating into the
system let me connect oh yeah this
particular graph is
it's about understand an indicator of
instability that's what it is so when
you see the blue coming down too far
that's an indicator cue that there may
be Minsk infertility build-up it's so we
can't we shouldn't critique this by
expecting it to be telling us
information that it's not intended to
tell us yeah okay feels like it's yeah
it's to me it's saying it okay so dude
which is like and it's necessary I think
half the West are both are true yeah
what I said it's like what you turn out
if you turn I have a bike is exactly the
same composition was different emphasis
right that's really right whatever
people misunderstand both yes yeah so
you put that on the graph you learn that
have the recession's
under grade yeah so so the thing is that
when the private sector of the surplus
is going down that's the point where
there's an expansion they're averaging
so I bet that there's growth there so
the problem is not that point the
problem is the threat there's enough
surplus which is paint and it's just
depended less that is the recession the
private sector hole pulling back the
upturn begins I mean you need to begin
right yes besides exhibition point and
that's that that's for you if you could
show the pyramid that you started again
with the government at the top which yes
yeah the government at the top
amazingly enough the Europeans don't
understand this the Europeans in the
euro say that the government can up run
a deficit and that's a tan 123 of their
the EU Constitution so they say because
the government there was no central bank
governments all the government deficits
have to be financed by the bank so in
Europe the banks are on top and that
means when the government created runs a
deficit they have to pay interest to the
banks whereas the US government doesn't
and it's so different over there it's
cognitive business they cannot
understand this they just imagine that a
central bank is to lend money to the
banks to lend money to the governments
and it's a completely different almost
biological structure it's a different
Kingdom and they don't understand this
central bank will be part of it but in
Europe the Sanko bank is part of it's
part of the banking systems right not
part of the government so they can I
show the banks are on top determining
everything not the government so in
Europe the free marketers believe in
central planning much more than Soviet
Union and much more even the Nazi
Germany they believe that both central
planning should be in the hands of Wall
Street in the City of London not the
government why they say Angela Merkel
got so upset the priest said you can't
ever referendum over this you have to
appoint a technocrat meaning a bank
lobbyists someone like Alan Greenspan
someone who does what he's told by the
bank the other thing that tried to be
personally crazy is the idea that you
can legislate the budget position then
you can say your deficit may not exceed
3% of GDP right so so you say no no I
mean the idea that governments have
control over the size over the side the
budget so you get a government like you
know
well Spain it's running a surplus right
that's right this but some surplus sits
on its hands touches nothing all of a
sudden the economy tanks taxes fall off
automatic stabilizers payments kick in
for an employment conversation and all
the other stuff sir I haven't done
anything
my deficit is exploding around me and
it's completely out of my hands tonight
you know this idea that this is a
willful policies profligate spending at
all that kinds of I didn't do anything
prank the taxes went this way and the
government spending automatically went
that way and the difference became my
lightening deficit the idea that you
know first it's the stability and growth
pact then it's the fiscal pact will end
you you but only if you promise to
really really really stick to the rules
this time the kids stick to the rules
didn't have to follow the rules because
they had current account surpluses in
case the buyer when they have a big
current account surpluses which allowed
them to keep the private sector in
surplus not have a big government so the
economy was held via running big trade
surpluses and so we got there widely
praised right true shame comes up
everybody says look at Ireland the
Celtic Tiger the model for the rest of
you but there's a poor sector she left
out and that's bro
he visited an assumption that the
government is the since the US
government gives its own currency so
it's in some it's not easy
yes very can afford to do the things I
said so the kind of policy measures that
he mentioned it seems that the
government would like it's it's in that
it's just one part of the story because
at one point of time fifty government is
very lots of deficit will at the end
lose faith in the commitment you put
that take the kind of policy measures
that you are seeing that the government
always there there it is
I mean we didn't lose face but over the
course of two hundred and forty seven
years is that the right a number of US
history the US government has been no
eight times in your periods but they
have all ended in either depression or
recession me well I guess what what a
dick say saying is that so you need to
tell the story there's a specific for
each of the countries of this holds for
the US and over this always receivers
also happen to be dominant military
power of relationship holds for every
company has a PowerPoint that will show
you about you know you see many court
cases as we're talking before that you
know some countries did the fortune and
you say what but they were all the
circumstances for the country for
example they were in a fixed exchange no
no no not that I was in
Brandon Brandon policy - so why would
our government want to be in the fixed
exchange rate to begin with they must
have had good reasons for their it's not
that they are you know dumb and stupid
oh I just wanted must that must have
been other reasons
about training because without a fixed
exchange rate people wouldn't invest in
their country and there were political
reasons there were there were
demonstrations before there were
economic or perceived economic reason
right but don't underestimate the
importance of having the wrong paradigm
I mean we've had Steve here for five
weeks fighting against the wrong
paradigm
don't underestimate I understand but now
you know talking amongst friends yet so
understand them what the right paradigm
is healing to see that each of the
countries has a particular historical
economic cycle but I think I can show
you lots of data for lots of countries
that are not global superpowers they
have sustained deficits for decades and
decades and nobody's lost faith in the
government the currency or anything I
could show out of that independent of a
country's reserve statuses and reserve
currency issue or the fact that most of
the debt is held domestically I mean I
can do it for anything but I guess what
it is isn't is that you know sometimes
shape happens to countries that try to
do that it's a hyperinflation different
into well you know people taking all
these not investing in the trenches at
all so there must be some reason when we
talk about the job guarantee what we're
saying is let the government bid for
labor that the private sector has a zero
bit off so you're not competing for any
resources or not bidding up the price of
anything right when we say to rebuild
the infrastructure we're talking about
taking resources that are currently in
by the private sector you have tons of
slack we're not saying use the
government's power and push the economy
beyond for employment but when the
resources are available and especially
labor wanting to be employed at a wage
should employ it I guess expenses
despite the correctness of the paradigm
after all initial conditions matter of
how you got to do right if if Greece
left the euro okay and which went to the
back to the drachma
and was it currency issue were just like
Stephanie's talking about the fact their
initial conditions would matter a whole
heck of a lot for the other countries
but as far as India is concerned India
was not in a very good position but in a
decent position the 8485 but the new
prime minister claiming he was new he
tried to be miss Lottie
they largely many other things the
public sector things at the end India
ended up in 1980 crash like crisis they
did not have enough money to pay the 14
days of 400 that was because of the
incident like the yet denominated in
dollars or something well sure then
you're taking on remember I said if you
always have the ability to pay debt
denominated in the unit of account that
is you are crazy by addition to
attending you are not always be
everything in your currency so that
whatever secret means any half part of
the story at one point of time you
people be loose with your currency you
have to
sorry miss Scott is gonna talk enhancer
so many shows in the night next speaker
is Michael burner so just to take a few
minutes break with this
英語 (自動生成)
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