Macroeconomic Theory and Its Failings
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IN the CIRCUIT COURT of COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS COUNTY DEPARTMENT, CHANCERY DIVISION FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK of CHICAGO, Plaintiff
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS COUNTY DEPARTMENT, CHANCERY DIVISION FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK OF ) CHICAGO, ) Plaintiff, ) No. 10 CH 45033 ) v. ) CORRECTED AMENDED COMPLAINT ) FOR RESCISSION AND DAMAGES BANC OF AMERICA FUNDING ) CORPORATION; BANC OF AMERICA ) SECURITIES LLC; BANK OF AMERICA, ) JURY TRIAL DEMANDED NATIONAL ASSOCIATION; BANK OF ) AMERICA CORPORATION; ) SECURITIZED ASSET BACKED ) RECEIVABLES, LLC; BARCLAYS ) CAPITAL INC.; CITIGROUP MORTGAGE ) LOAN TRUST INC.; CITIGROUP ) GLOBAL MARKETS INC.; CITIGROUP ) FINANCIAL PRODUCTS, INC.; ) CITIGROUP INC.; COUNTRYWIDE ) SECURITIES CORPORATION; ) COUNTRYWIDE FINANCIAL ) CORPORATION; CREDIT SUISSE ) SECURITIES (USA) LLC F/K/A CREDIT ) SUISSE FIRST BOSTON LLC; FIRST ) HORIZON ASSET SECURITIES, INC.; ) FIRST TENNESSEE BANK, NATIONAL ) ASSOCIATION; RESIDENTIAL ASSET ) MORTGAGE PRODUCTS, INC.; ) RESIDENTIAL ASSET SECURITIES ) CORPORATION; RESIDENTIAL ) FUNDING MORTGAGE SECURITIES I, ) INC.; RESIDENTIAL FUNDING ) SECURITIES LLC F/K/A RESIDENTIAL ) FUNDING SECURITIES CORPORATION; ) RESIDENTIAL FUNDING ) CORPORATION; GMAC MORTGAGE ) GROUP LLC F/K/A GMAC MORTGAGE ) GROUP INC.; ALLY FINANCIAL INC. ) F/K/A GMAC INC.; GS MORTGAGE ) SECURITIES CORP.; GOLDMAN, SACHS ) & CO.; GOLDMAN SACHS MORTGAGE ) COMPANY; THE GOLDMAN SACHS ) GROUP INC.; FINANCIAL ASSET ) SECURITIES CORP.; RBS ACCEPTANCE ) INC. F/K/A GREENWICH CAPITAL ) ACCEPTANCE, INC.; RBS SECURITIES ) INC. F/K/A GREENWICH CAPITAL ) MARKETS, INC.; RBS HOLDINGS USA ) INC. F/K/A GREENWICH CAPITAL ) HOLDINGS, INC.; SAND CANYON ) ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION F/K/A ) OPTION ONE MORTGAGE ) ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION; ) AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT ) SERVICES, INC.; AMERIPRISE ) FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.; ) AMERIPRISE ADVISOR SERVICES, INC. ) F/K/A H&R BLOCK FINANCIAL ) ADVISORS, INC.; SAND CANYON ) CORPORATION F/K/A OPTION ONE ) MORTGAGE CORPORATION; H&R ) BLOCK, INC.; HSBC SECURITIES (USA) ) INC.; INDYMAC MBS, INC.; J.P. -
ACADEMY of BANKING STUDIES JOURNAL Kurt Jesswein Editor
Volume 10, Number 2 Printed ISSN: 1939-2230 PDF ISSN: 1939-2249 ACADEMY OF BANKING STUDIES JOURNAL Kurt Jesswein Editor Sam Houston State University The Academy of Banking Studies Journal is owned and published by the DreamCatchers Group, LLC. Editorial content is under the control of the Allied Academies, Inc., a non-profit association of scholars, whose purpose is to support and encourage research and the sharing and exchange of ideas and insights throughout the world. Page ii Authors execute a publication permission agreement and assume all liabilities. Neither the DreamCatchers Group nor Allied Academies is responsible for the content of the individual manuscripts. Any omissions or errors are the sole responsibility of the authors. The Editorial Board is responsible for the selection of manuscripts for publication from among those submitted for consideration. The Publishers accept final manuscripts in digital form and make adjustments solely for the purposes of pagination and organization. The Academy of Banking Studies Journal is owned and published by the DreamCatchers Group, LLC, PO Box 1708, Arden, NC 28704, USA. Those interested in communicating with the Journal, should contact the Executive Director of the Allied Academies at [email protected]. Copyright 2011 by the DreamCatchers Group, LLC, Arden NC, USA Academy of Banking Studies Journal, Volume 10, Number 2, 2011 Page iii EDITORIAL REVIEW BOARD Bora Aktan Tor Brodtkorb Yasar University American University of Sharjah Turkey United Arab Emirates Susan Coleman Richard -
Weimar Republic Hyperinflation Through a Modern Monetary Theory Lens Phil Armstrong and Warren Mosler 2020 Abstract
Weimar Republic Hyperinflation through a Modern Monetary Theory Lens Phil Armstrong and Warren Mosler 2020 Abstract The hyperinflation in Weimar Germany in 1922-23 has become the poster child of mainstream economists - and especially the monetarists- when presenting the benefits of constraining governments by the rules of ‘sound finance’. Their narrative presumes that governments are naturally inclined to spend beyond their means and that, if left to their profligate ways, inflation ‘gets out of hand’ and leads to hyperinflation in a continuous, accelerating, unstoppable catastrophic collapse of the value of the money. In contrast to this ubiquitous mainstream analysis, we recognize a fundamentally different origin of inflation, and argue that inflation requires sustained, proactive policy support. And, in the absence of such policies, inflation will rapidly subside. We replace the erroneous mainstream theory with the knowledge of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) identifying both the source of the price level and what makes it change. We are not Weimar scholars, and our aim is not to present a comprehensive historical analysis. We examine the traditionally reported causal forces behind the Weimar hyperinflation, along with the factors that contributed to the hyperinflation and to its abrupt end. The purpose of this paper is to present our view of the reported information from an MMT perspective. In that regard, we identify the cause of the inflation as the German government paying continuously higher prices for its purchases, particularly those of the foreign currencies the Allies demanded for the payment of reparations, and we identify the rise in the quantity of money and the printing of increasing quantities of banknotes as a consequence of the hyperinflation, rather than its cause. -
Reviewing the Deficit Myth
Reviewing The Deficit Myth Stephanie Kelton’s The Deficit Myth opens with the startling assertion that the only reason today’s fiat currencies have any value is because citizens need to acquire them to pay taxes. Without that requirement, there would be no need to hold dollars, euros or yen. I first heard this argument from Warren Mosler twenty five years ago when he was a partner in hedge fund Illinois Income Investors in West Palm Beach. I found this view quixotic at the time, although our meeting was too brief to fully refute it. Today Mosler is regarded as the father of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT), seized by progressive Democrats as evidence that the Federal government can pay for everything. To prove that tax liabilities are necessary to give money value, Kelton recounts a story I heard personally from Mosler in the 1990s. Suppose he assigned household chores to his children with payment promised in business cards. With little of value being offered in exchange for the work, the lawn would remain uncut and the car unwashed. But if Mosler the Dad then imposes a monthly tax of 30 business cards from each offspring, on pain of being grounded, they suddenly have value. The work gets done. From this follows the logic that the government needs to spend money in order to provide the means with which to pay taxes. The government, as the sole issuer of currency, can pay in regular green dollars, or in yellow interest-bearing dollars (i.e. they can borrow to pay their bills). -
Monetary Policy and the State of the Economy, Part Ii Hearing
MONETARY POLICY AND THE STATE OF THE ECONOMY, PART II HEARING BEFORE THE COMMITTEE ON FINANCIAL SERVICES U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ONE HUNDRED ELEVENTH CONGRESS FIRST SESSION FEBRUARY 26, 2009 Printed for the use of the Committee on Financial Services Serial No. 111-8 U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 48-679 PDF WASHINGTON : 2009 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Internet: bookstore.gpo.gov Phone: toll free (866) 512-1800; DC area (202) 512-1800 Fax: (202) 512-2104 Mail: Stop IDCC, Washington, DC 20402-0001 HOUSE COMMITTEE ON FINANCIAL SERVICES BARNEY FRANK, Massachusetts, Chairman PAUL E. KANJORSKI, Pennsylvania SPENCER BACHUS, Alabama MAXINE WATERS, California MICHAEL N. CASTLE, Delaware CAROLYN B. MALONEY, New York PETER T. KING, New York LUIS V. GUTIERREZ, Illinois EDWARD R. ROYCE, California NYDIA M. VELAZQUEZ, New York FRANK D. LUCAS, Oklahoma MELVIN L. WATT, North Carolina RON PAUL, Texas GARY L. ACKERMAN, New York DONALD A. MANZULLO, Illinois BRAD SHERMAN, California WALTER B. JONES, JR., North Carolina GREGORY W. MEEKS, New York JUDY BIGGERT, Illinois DENNIS MOORE, Kansas GARY G. MILLER, California MICHAEL E. CAPUANO, Massachusetts SHELLEY MOORE CAPITO, West Virginia RUBEN HINOJOSA, Texas JEB HENSARLING, Texas WM. LACY CLAY, Missouri SCOTT GARRETT, New Jersey CAROLYN MCCARTHY, New York J. GRESHAM BARRETT, South Carolina JOE BACA, California JIM GERLACH, Pennsylvania STEPHEN F. LYNCH, Massachusetts RANDY NEUGEBAUER, Texas BRAD MILLER, North Carolina TOM PRICE, Georgia DAVID SCOTT, Georgia PATRICK T. McHENRY, North Carolina AL GREEN, Texas JOHN CAMPBELL, California EMANUEL CLEAVER, Missouri ADAM PUTNAM, Florida MELISSA L. BEAN, Illinois MICHELE BACHMANN, Minnesota GWEN MOORE, Wisconsin KENNY MARCHANT, Texas PAUL W. -
The “Kansas City” Approach to Modern Money Theory
Working Paper No. 961 The “Kansas City” Approach to Modern Money Theory by L. Randall Wray Levy Economics Institute of Bard College July 2020 The Levy Economics Institute Working Paper Collection presents research in progress by Levy Institute scholars and conference participants. The purpose of the series is to disseminate ideas to and elicit comments from academics and professionals. Levy Economics Institute of Bard College, founded in 1986, is a nonprofit, nonpartisan, independently funded research organization devoted to public service. Through scholarship and economic research it generates viable, effective public policy responses to important economic problems that profoundly affect the quality of life in the United States and abroad. Levy Economics Institute P.O. Box 5000 Annandale-on-Hudson, NY 12504-5000 http://www.levyinstitute.org Copyright © Levy Economics Institute 2020 All rights reserved ISSN 1547-366X ABSTRACT Modern money theory (MMT) synthesizes several traditions from heterodox economics. Its focus is on describing monetary and fiscal operations in nations that issue a sovereign currency. As such, it applies Georg Friedrich Knapp’s state money approach (chartalism), also adopted by John Maynard Keynes in his Treatise on Money. MMT emphasizes the difference between a sovereign currency issuer and a sovereign currency user with respect to issues such as fiscal and monetary policy space, ability to make all payments as they come due, credit worthiness, and insolvency. Following A. Mitchell Innes, however, MMT acknowledges some similarities between sovereign and nonsovereign issues of liabilities, and hence integrates a credit theory of money (or, “endogenous money theory,” as it is usually termed by post-Keynesians) with state money theory. -
A Beginner's Guide To
A Beginner’s Guide to MMT Peter Coy, Katia Dmitrieva, and Matthew Boesler Bloomberg Businessweek, March 21, 2019 There’s a lot of debate swirling around Modern Monetary Theory—some strident. Its critics call it a hot mess. “MMT has constructed such a bizarre, illogical, convoluted way of thinking about macro that it’s almost impervious to attack,” Bentley University economist Scott Sumner claimed recently on his blog. MMT’s proponents say it’s the critics who are impervious to reason—“part of a degenerative paradigm that has lost credibility,” says Australian MMTer William Mitchell. Stephanie Kelton is an MMT proponent who was an economic adviser on Bernie Sanders’s 2016 presidential campaign. This state of confusion isn’t good because Modern Monetary Theory, once confined to blogs and a handful of colleges including the University of Missouri at Kansas City, suddenly matters. In the U.S., the left wing of the Democratic Party is citing MMT to make the case for massive federal government spending on a Green New Deal to wean the U.S. off fossil fuels and fund Medicare for All. It’s virtually certain that MMT will be dragged into the debates of the 2020 presidential race. So the time is right for a semi-deep dive into Modern Monetary Theory—what it is, where it comes from, its pros and its cons. 1 Fortunately, the first academic textbook based on the theory was published in February. The 573-page tome, titled simply Macroeconomics, is by Mitchell, an economist at the University of Newcastle in Australia; Randall Wray of Bard College in Annandale-on- Hudson, N.Y.; and Martin Watts, an emeritus professor at Newcastle. -
Modern Money Theory in the Tropics. Version Sent to JE
POLITICAL ECONOMY POLITICAL RESEARCH INSTITUTE Modern Money Theory (MMT) in the Tropics: Functional Finance in Developing Countries Matías Vernengo and Esteban Pérez Caldentey September 2019 WORKINGPAPER SERIES Number 495 Modern Money Theory (MMT) in the Tropics: Functional Finance in Developing Countries Matías Vernengo and Esteban Pérez Caldentey 1 Abstract: Functional finance is only one of the elements of Modern Money Theory (MMT). Chartal money, endogenous money and an Employer of Last Resort Program (ELR) or Job Guarantee (JG) are often the other elements. We are here interested fundamentally with the functional finance aspects which are central for any discussion of fiscal policy and have received more attention recently. We discuss both the limitations of functional finance for developing countries that have a sovereign currency, but are forced to borrow in foreign currency and that might face a balance of payments (BOP) constraint. We also analyze the limits to borrowing in its own currency, and does not formally face the possibility of default, since it can always print money or issue debt. We note that the balance of payments constraint might still be relevant and limit fiscal expansion. We note that flexible rates do not necessarily create more space for fiscal policy, and that should not be in general preferred to managed exchange rate regimes with capital controls. We suggest that MMT needs to be complemented with Structuralist ideas to provide a more coherent understanding of fiscal policy in developing countries. Key Words: Modern Money Theory, Developing Countries, Balance of Payments Constraint JEL Codes: 1 The authors are Full Professor, Bucknell University, USA and Chief, Financing for Development Unit, Economic Development Division, ECLAC, Santiago, Chile, respectively. -
Political Polarization
The Great Debasement Also by Craig R. Smith Rediscovering Gold in the 21st Century: The Complete Guide to the Next Gold Rush Black Gold Stranglehold: The Myth of Scarcity and the Politics of Oil (co-authored with Jerome R. Corsi) The Uses of Inflation: Monetary Policy and Governance in the 21st Century Crashing the Dollar: How to Survive a Global Currency Collapse (co-authored with Lowell Ponte) Re-Making Money: Ways to Restore America’s Optimistic Golden Age (co-authored with Lowell Ponte) The Inflation Deception: Six Ways Government Tricks Us...And Seven Ways to Stop It! (co-authored with Lowell Ponte) Also by Lowell Ponte The Cooling Crashing the Dollar: How to Survive a Global Currency Collapse (co-authored with Craig R. Smith) Re-Making Money: Ways to Restore America’s Optimistic Golden Age (co-authored with Craig R. Smith) The Inflation Deception: Six Ways Government Tricks Us...And Seven Ways to Stop It! (co-authored with Craig R. Smith) The Great Debasement The 100-Year Dying of the Dollar and How to Get America’s Money Back by Craig R. Smith and Lowell Ponte Foreword by Pat Boone Idea Factory Press Phoenix, Arizona The Great Debasement The 100-Year Dying of the Dollar and How to Get America’s Money Back Copyright © 2012 by Idea Factory Press All Rights Reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or parts thereof, in any form except for the inclusion of brief quotations in a review. Printed in the United States of America. For more information contact publisher. Cover art by Dustin D. -
Rather Than Increasing Public Support for Labor Immigration, Even If There
IMMIGRATION, EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS, AND THE STATE 157 Positive messages from [government] ministers on the economic benefits of labor migration were drowned by the negative messages on asylum. … The public did not, as the government had anticipat- ed, readily tell the difference between an asylum-seeker, a migrant worker or an international student in their neighborhood. (2007: 348, 359) Rather than increasing public support for labor immigration, even if there is a sound labor market policy case, the use of control signals can compound the political sensitivities of labor immigration policy (Anderson 2013). This indicates that employment relations scholarship needs to account for the external gover- nance dimensions of labor immigration policy relating to immigration control as well as the intrinsic connections with internal governance dimensions relating to migrant worker–employer relations. CONCLUSION In this chapter, we have examined the connection between employment relations and labor immigration, particularly in relation to the state, whose role in that area has been relatively underexamined within employment relations scholarship. States have many different functions in labor immigration policy. We have dis- tinguished between functions relating to internal governance, which includes regulatory activities that determine where migrants work, their conditions at work, and the terms of their engagement with employers, and those relating to external governance, which includes the many different factors determining states’ immigration selection and control activity. We noted two trends relating to these distinct dimensions of state activity. First, internal governance has increasingly been influenced by unitarist or neo- liberal ideas. This influence is reflected in labor immigration schemes allowing employers significant control over migrant workers without an equivalent level of countervailing power in the form of increased enforcement capacity by the state and/or worker organizations. -
4 Getting Our Priorities Right: What Does Justice Require That We Do? Part 2 1
Notes 4 Getting Our Priorities Right: What Does Justice Require That We Do? Part 2 1 . See generally Adam Smith, “Public Debt,” in The Wealth of Nations (New York: Modern Library, 2000 [1776]), Bk. 5, Ch. 3, pp. 981–1028; David Hume, “Of Public Credit,” in Hume: Political Essays (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994[1752]), pp. 166–178; J. S. Mill, “Of a National Debt,” in Principles of Political Economy (Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2004[1848]), Bk. 5, Ch. 7; Jean-Baptiste Say, “Of National Debt,” in A Treatise on Political Economy , trans. from the 4th edn. by C. R. Prinsep (Philadelphia, PA: Grigg & Elliot, 5th edn. 1832[1803]), Bk. 3, Ch. 9. 2 . See Walter F. Stettner, “Carl Dietzel, Public Expenditures and the Public Debt,” in Income, Employment and Public Policy: Essays in Honor of Alvin H. Hansen (New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1948), pp. 276–299. 3 . See Stettner, “Carl Dietzel, Public Expenditures and the Public Debt”; Jesse Burkhead, “The Balanced Budget,” Quarterly Journal of Economics 68 (1954): 191–216. 4 . See, e.g., Burkhead, “The Balanced Budget,” esp. 193–94; John Christian Laursen and Greg Coolidge, “David Hume and Public Debt: Crying Wolf?” Hume Studies 20 (1994): 143–150. 5 . See Alvin H. Hansen, Economic Policy and Full Employment (New York: McGraw- Hill, 1947), pp. 4–5. 6 . See David Ricardo, The Principles of Political Economy and Taxation (London: J.M. Dent & Sons, 1911), pp. 244–249 and “The Funding System” [1820] in The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 1V Pamphlets and Papers 1815– 1823 (Indianapolis, IN: Liberty Fund); Robert J. -
The Lender of Last Resort: a Critical Analysis of the Federal Reserve’S Unprecedented Intervention After 2007
THE LENDER OF LAST RESORT: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE’S UNPRECEDENTED INTERVENTION AFTER 2007 April 2013 ® Preface and Acknowledgements “Never waste a crisis.” Those words were often invoked by reformers who wanted to tighten regulations and financial supervision in the aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) that began in late 2007.2 Many of them have been disappointed because the relatively weak reforms adopted (for example in Dodd-Frank) appear to have fallen far short of what is needed. But the same words can be and should have been invoked in reference to the policy response to the crisis—that is, to the rescue of the financial system. To date, the crisis was also wasted in that area, too. If anything, the crisis response largely restored the financial system that existed in 2007 on the eve of the crisis. But it may not be too late to use the crisis and the response itself to formulate a different approach to dealing with the next financial crisis. If we are correct in our analysis, because the response last time simply propped up a deeply flawed financial structure and because financial system reform will do little to prevent financial institutions from continuing risky practices, another crisis is inevitable—and indeed will likely occur far sooner than most analysts expect. In any event, we recall Hyman Minsky’s belief that “stability is destabilizing”—implying that even if we had successfully stabilized the financial system, that would change behavior in a manner to make another crisis more likely. So no matter what one believes about the previous response and the reforms now in place, policymakers of the future will have to deal with another financial crisis.