70/ Related to this, if you had a billion dollars and you were convinced that we were facing a climate catastrophe which might even be an extinction level event. Where would you put your money to try to save it (don’t say you’d give it away, because you didn’t become a billionaire by giving stuff away)?
https://social.vivaldi.net/@Patricia/112719504676456386
Patricia Aas (@[email protected])

When you quote me I hope you pick the best quotes: “And I posit that the NOK is weak because the planet is fucked and everybody knows it.” https://social.vivaldi.net/@Patricia/112719497998588756

Vivaldi Social
71/ Couldn’t get excited about chapter 4 and 5 seems so much more interesting because it is about trade.
72/ Finally had some time to continue and this chapter might take a while, and I might need to read it several times. Funnily it seems that she agrees that the dollar is special. I learned a thing, though, after the world abandoned the gold standard we kind of didn’t, we pegged the dollar to gold and a lot of the other currencies to the dollar. This was called the “Bretton Woods system”.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bretton_Woods_system
Bretton Woods system - Wikipedia

73/ Well there it is, I wasn’t off base after all. Because of the position of the dollar the Feds actions, aimed at the domestic economy, has a much larger international blast radius.
74/ Some Norwegians have recommended that we peg the NOK to the Euro, and I think that our feeling that Denmark is similar to us culturally distracts us from recognizing how fundamentally different our economies are. Most importantly the petroleum “enhanced” economy of Norway and the fact that Denmark is a member of the EU and we are not, even with our extensive trade agreement.

75/ Chapter 5: “‘Winning’ at trade” is interesting, but doesn’t really go into the depth I’d like (but I guess after reading 4 Econ books in a row I’m not the target readership). The chapter is very “political” and idealistic rather than descriptive, but that was a tendency we saw earlier too. The basic idea is that a trade deficit isn’t a bad thing. She goes on to envisage a world economy that is more… equitable? It argues for developing countries to focus more inward, and diversifying their economies, perhaps making them less vulnerable to the global markets. It argues against losing control over one’s own currency (its MMT, so obviously). It makes clear that the dollar gives the US an outsized influence and leverage over the rest of the world.

She criticizes both democrats and republicans, but seems to have a soft spot for Bernie Sanders. He hired her to work at the Capitol, so I guess that makes sense.

The MMT premise seems to be that you don’t have to “have the money” to fund guaranteed full employment or “entitlement programs”, because the control over the currency means that the government always “has the money” to pay.

76/ The “winning vs losing” at trade is explicitly directed at Donald Trump. But she spends a lot of time emphasizing that American workers have lost jobs (“well paid union jobs” comes up several times) when production moved offshore.

It feels to me like she is arguing for a midpoint, a more protectionist approach, but not measuring in trade deficit/surplus, but instead in… standard of living?

She gets slightly into the topics of “The Shock Doctrine” in that the international trade organizations and the world bank became dominated by extremist (my word) capitalist forces.

77/ What I appreciate:
1. She is clear that the challenges that face us in the years to come are global, and that we have to work together to solve them, as partners instead of competitors.
2. She is not proposing some sort of bloody global revolution.
3. She is slowly selling me on the idea that guaranteed employment, benefits and entitlement programs are a safeguard against radicalization. I have mostly thought of these things as the “right thing to do” rather than a way to maintain peace.
4. The ideology is inclusive instead of divisive, and therefore doesn’t rest on the boogeyman approach of both the fundamentalist left and right. She doesn’t use immigrants or poorly veiled antisemitic tropes (the evil rich man of various formats) to paint some other group as the enemy.
78/ I think 4 is essential for progress to be made, because the current right and left political movements are focusing on targeting hate and animosity towards another group of humans, rather than at an inequitable system. And that only perpetuates that system because that energy is wasted on being unproductive (and hateful, which sucks the soul out of everyone at a time when we need a surplus of generosity, in my view)

79/ But the book is supposed to not just be a work of ideology, but provide a way through this mess we’re in, in the aftermath 🤞of a global economy dominated by extremist capitalism.

And that premise is based on this currency “trick”, and there I am not yet convinced tbh.

80/ Chapter 6 is on entitlement programs, but I think I’m going to go back to chapter 4, which I skipped, hoping that might be a bit more illuminating on the MMT side.
81/ why are we humans so ready to blame all of our problems on “the other”. With all that we know about the consequences of this, we seem to fall for it every time. Why do we let them make us fight each other in some grotesque gladiator game? Is it our need for simple solutions? Do we need someone to hate?
That train of thought reminded me of this Norwegian song
https://youtu.be/9QxGKTTtYgM?si=G9in1FTPPu2q49_a
Noen å hate

YouTube
82/ Norwegian lyrics:
“Han der er ikke sånn som deg
Fort deg bort og ta han
Det er like godt som sex
Å banke en stakkars faen
Er det ikke deilig å ha noen å hate?
Føles det ikke godt å ha noen å hate?
Er det ikke herlig å slå dem flate?
Er det ikke deilig å ha noen å hate?
Hør lyden av nakker som knekker
Hør lyden av kjøtt som sprekker
Det er bare å følge fingeren som peker
Dit hvor de voksne leker
Er det ikke deilig å ha noen å hate?
Føles det ikke godt å ha noen å hate?
Er det ikke herlig å slå dem flate?
Er det ikke deilig å ha noen å hate?
Han der er ikke sånn som deg
Fort deg bort og ta han
Det er like godt som sex
Å banke gørra ut av en stakkars faen
Er det ikke deilig å ha noen å hate?
Føles det ikke godt å ha noen å hate?
Er det ikke herlig å slå dem flate?
Er det ikke deilig å ha noen å hate?
Er det ikke deilig å ha noen å hate?
Føles det ikke godt å ha noen å hate?
Er det ikke herlig å slå dem flate?
Er det ikke deilig å ha noen å hate?”
83/ Rudimentary English translation:
“He's not like you
Hurry over and get him
It's as good as sex
To beat a poor bastard
Isn't it nice to have someone to hate?
Doesn't it feel good to have someone to hate?
Isn't it great to knock them flat?
Isn't it nice to have someone to hate?
Hear the sound of necks snapping
Hear the sound of meat cracking
You just have to follow the pointing finger
Where the adults play
Isn't it nice to have someone to hate?
Doesn't it feel good to have someone to hate?
Isn't it great to knock them flat?
Isn't it nice to have someone to hate?
He's not like you
Hurry over and take him
It's as good as sex
Beating the crap out of a poor bastard
Isn't it nice to have someone to hate?
Doesn't it feel good to have someone to hate?
Isn't it great to knock them flat?
Isn't it nice to have someone to hate?
Isn't it nice to have someone to hate?
Doesn't it feel good to have someone to hate?
Isn't it great to knock them flat?
Isn't it nice to have someone to hate?”

84/ Ok, chapter 4 “Their red ink, is our black ink”. I think it was Keen in one of his podcast episodes who said something that I hadn’t considered. From memory: as a country’s economy grows, whatever that means, the money supply would need to grow too.

Looking at population growth alone that makes sense to me. And that means that my mental model of a fixed “amount of money we have” isn’t correct. It would, at least over longer periods of time, need to be elastic in some way. And I can’t see how that could be a global zero sum game either, since many countries that were poor a century ago, and are still poor today, often still have a “bigger” economy than they did a century earlier.

85/ So if “the amount of money” we have is flexible, and that the value of a currency is affected by similar forces as stocks and gold and whatever… that seems to support that money is “artificial”. And of course, economists would say “of course it is, we abandoned the gold standard ages ago”, but to me that hasn’t been obvious, because even if we don’t peg our currency to something tangible (directly or indirectly) that doesn’t mean that we can consciously “grow money” on a money tree.
86/ I can accept that the relationship with a currency is different when one has control of it, rather than being just a user of it. But it is nonobvious to me (still) that manipulating the money supply can be done largely with impunity. My brain (perhaps polluted by economics) feels that having more of something would make it less valuable. But maybe that’s not a universal law… maybe Maslow should have a say. If we take a consumable, perishable product that is a necessity through being food. Would having a lot of bread make it worthless? We still pay for bread, even when stores and bakeries throw away bread every day. So… maybe (bombshell 😂) the economic theory here is too simplistic? Maybe money doesn’t work the way we have been taught that it does?
87/ It’s funny because in my paper on Costa Rica (which I mentioned in another thread) one of the things that I argued was that what people believe (even if it is not currently true) is a driver for it to become true. So if a country started to print money at will, even if it might not matter (possibly 🤷🏻‍♀️) currency traders might believe that it does, and by the nature of their role, they might make it so it does matter, by weakening the currency through exchange rates.
88/ And as I mentioned earlier, maybe the dollar has some protection here. That through being a global “gold equivalent” everyone has a stake in it not tanking, even, I would guess, individual currency traders.
89/ Well, shit this is damning 😂
“Cases 5 and 6 underscore the lack of a causal relationship between rapid M2 growth [growth in money supply] and high inflation, because when we increase the threshold of nominal M2 growth to from 60 percent in five years to 200 percent in five years, it is followed by high inflation even less frequently than in Cases 3 and 4. This is, of course, the opposite of what one would expect if high M2 growth causes high inflation.”
(h/t @igimenezblb) https://www.ineteconomics.org/perspectives/blog/rapid-money-supply-growth-does-not-cause-inflation
Rapid Money Supply Growth Does Not Cause Inflation

Neither do rapid growth in government debt, declining interest rates, or rapid increases in a central bank’s balance sheet

Institute for New Economic Thinking
90/ I know after the rant I’ve been on the last few weeks that I shouldn’t be surprised that they just inferred from their damn models, with zero data to back it up… but shit I still am. Need to figure out if there has been discussions around this result.
91/ Oh here he goes into another side of this (very US centric): that the increase in household wealth as a result of deficits tends to be tied to real estate and stock values, and that results in wealth distribution inequality, because most poor people don’t own homes nor stocks.
https://youtu.be/wuonrlKefRM?si=7TUvGs-JeUI2AWW5
The Paradox of Debt | Richard Vague | TEDxCapeMay

YouTube

92/ As some folks have alluded at (where does the new money actually go) and based on something she says earlier in the book (that deficits have actually been too low) I started wondering. Imagine I have a truck full of dirt and I tell you I’m going to pour it out, you’d think it would create a pile of dirt, right? But what if I pour it into a hole. We don’t get a pile, we lose a hole…

The thing that I think MMT are arguing is that “debt” isn’t “debt” if it’s monopoly money you made up. To you as the money machine it behaves differently. And debt isn’t debt. It’s potentially pothole filling. But that means something is absorbing money, and don’t just say “rich people” because that is lazy. Are there holes? Where are they? What would be the effect of filling them? I’m assuming that filling different holes would have different effects. And maybe that’s MMTs thing: to fill the unemployment/underemployment hole? And from there achieve an effect?

93/ Even if we accept that money doesn’t work the way it works for us “money users”, for the “money creators”… and tbh that study was pretty darn convincing, I thought (I’d love to see an opposing view). Then… that doesn’t actually prove (in my mind) that all kinds of “holes” in the economy would behave the same when “filled”. Just because there isn’t a causal relationship between printing money and inflation, do we know what printing money actually does? And does it matter who gets it?

94/ Still in chapter 4. She was discussing another economist, Wynne Godley, and so I had to look him up and that opened another line on economic models: equilibrium models (the “mainstream economics” models) and a set of models referred to as “accounting models”.

Steve Keen, who a lot of folks have brought up (the guy with the podcast “Debunking Economics”) seems to be one of the people who are proponents of “accounting models”.

And it seems to me that MMT draws from the work of economists in this area.

Wynne Godley was credited for predicting the financial crisis based on his model.

This paper looks very interesting because it seems to contrast the two approaches. Which tends to be illuminating in my experience.

“No one saw this coming. Understanding financial crisis through accounting models”.
https://pure.rug.nl/ws/portalfiles/portal/2646456/09002_Bezemer.pdf

95/ so far my (quite shallow) understanding is that these “accounting models” model flows of money. With the basic premise that money has to come from somewhere and go somewhere. Or more accounting-wise that a subtraction one place has to lead to an addition of equal size (possibly the sum of multiple additions) somewhere else.

This relates to the idea that MMT presents, which Wynne Godley also seems to have supported and Richard Vague (above article and TED talk), that a deficit for the state necessitates a surplus somewhere else. Found this graph from Godley using his “sectoral financial balances” framework, depicting the US economy. This graph is very similar (perhaps identical?) to what Vague shows in his TED talk. They both show what seems to be an inverse relationship between a public deficit and a private surplus.

96/ I am worried that I’m finding this theory appealing just because the others are so terrible and so I’ve been primed to be positive to this one.
Which funnily enough is called “Anchoring effect” and features prominently in “behavioral economics”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anchoring_effect
Anchoring effect - Wikipedia

97/ Brains suck
98/ Ok, but if this is true, this seems to imply to me that austerity is counterproductive? That it would push an economy further into recession? Am I reading this wrong?
99/ my logic being that austerity means in effect a savings on the public side which would (in an accounting model) require “sucking” that money from other places in the economy, and that seems to mean mainly private sector. So to achieve plus on the public side using this mechanism would require minus on the private side.

100/ but hold up… I just argued that the size of the money supply was not fixed… but I guess that fits… because the public side can create money to cover it’s deficit, but private sector doesn’t have that option. So under austerity we create a zero sum game.

Am I even making sense anymore ?

101/ I’m sorry, but I have a lifetime of indoctrination to overcome here, and magic no consequences money tree seems a bit far fetched tbqh
102/ Ooh a rant against MMT by a Keynesian economist 🤓
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/25/opinion/running-on-mmt-wonkish.html
Opinion | Running on MMT (Wonkish)

Trying to get this debate beyond Calvinball.

The New York Times

103/ seems to me from reading this and some of the references that the disagreement seems to be “technical”. Krugman seems to agree that the fear of deficits is overblown, but seems to argue that interest rates are another tool to manage possible inflation. Tbh I haven’t gotten the opposite impression yet from the book, but maybe I missed it.

One thing I do wonder about is that if the deficit is in the form of bonds, won’t higher interest rates affect the cost of the accumulated deficit? Wouldn’t the public side now also have to pay more for the accumulated deficit? How does that work?

Maybe I don’t know how any of this works

104/ Also why reach immediately for interest rates? Is it because tax hikes are politically harder to pass? Interest rates seem to bring with them unintended consequences like increased profits for private sector banks and things like rent increases. In an inflationary economy I would think that the poor aren’t those “heating” things up.

105/ she is describing a model for interest rate that I think she is going to argue against. In it there seems to be a mechanism where one imagines that the private sector and public sector compete for loans in the same fixed sized market. And so the public sector deficits are in this model financed by loans in this market. And therefore the increased deficit would then be a significant increase in demand on a finite supply of money. And therefore drive the interest rate up.

But… that’s not how it works? In the real world? The banks increased their interest rates when the central bank did. So this model doesn’t make sense at all to me.

106/ Halfway through this but tbh this is a much more convincing argument for this phenomena than the pretentious colonial-envy drivel by Piketty. Young people are struggling because they are poorer than previous generations.
https://youtu.be/ZuXzvjBYW8A?si=g_1Z9XfgsTpioq2G
(h/t @Di4na)
Have the Boomers Pinched Their Children’s Futures? - with Lord David Willetts

YouTube
107/ I wonder if the distribution he is presenting is the same in other countries. Because according to him, boomers are consuming more than young people right now. And they are doing that from inside of their unmortgaged homes. Meanwhile young people get berated for being poor and are required to reduce their carbon footprint to a fraction (1/7?) of the boomers. Jeez.
108/ omg these numbers are mind blowing. Boomers are absolutely killing it. And young people are so screwed.
@Patricia that is a really distinctive drop at 75-79. What is the cause of that one?
@Patricia those would be people born just after the depression and hitting adulthood mid 1950s... Don't quite see how either of those would explain that massive drop
@http_error_418 I don’t know, might be related to the boomer period which had two massive peaks with a drop in between? I would have to watch it from the beginning 😅 but I recommend watching it and if you figure it out let me know
@Patricia @http_error_418 smaller cohort! (and keep in mind that it is compared to the previous cohort, so it is still being richer, just less than others, so it is the people that rode the peak)

@Di4na @Patricia so yeah he doesn't explicitly point out that dip and explain it, but what @Di4na says definitely fits.

Also he says toward the end that he's a conservative, and I was frankly gobsmacked because the whole talk felt like a massive collection of reasons not to be one

@Di4na @Patricia I would have said you could quite reasonably have titled the talk "How badly did boomers fuck Millennials and Gen Z? At least 6 ways from Sunday"

@http_error_418 @Patricia I mean people get totally gobsmacked when I point out I tend to label myself as neolib :D

The popular archetype/view of some economical and/or political label is usually not really aligned with the reality of what the people actually doing the work think.

And I could definitely say that some politicians labelling themselves as cons or neolibs are really far from these school of thought in their ideology. A label is a tool too.

@Patricia @http_error_418
Perhaps they "gave with warm hands"?