Diru Modernoa Australia

(Modern Money Australia)

Bideo batzuk:

(a) Will Australia ever run out of money?

(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uEqucQNLIko)

(b) Introduction to MMT

(i) Introduction to MMT (Modern Monetary Theory) Part 1

Modern monetary theory, or MMT for short, is a superior framework for understanding how our monetary system functions today. It has been developed since the 1990s by Professor Bill Mitchell, alongside American academics like Professor Randall Wray, Professor Stephanie Kelton, and investment banker and fund manager Warren Mosler. MMT builds on the ideas of a previous generation of economists, such as Hyman Minsky, Wynne Godley and Abba Lerner.

Thanks to Dr. Steven Hail, Prof. Bill Mitchell, Warren Mosler, Patricia Pino & Christian Reily (at The MMT Podcast) for providing the inspiration and feedback for this video. (…)

(ii) Introduction to MMT (Modern Monetary Theory) Part 2

(c) MMT and the media: Taking charge of the narrative

https://modernmoneyaustralia.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/luke-and-bill.jpg

EXTRA! Bill Mitchell & Luke McGregor: MMT and the media – Taking charge of the narrative

(https://pileusmmt.libsyn.com/extra-bill-mitchell-luke-mcgregor-mmt-and-the-media-taking-charge-of-the-narrative)

Jayne Flanagan and Dallas Lewis of Modern Money Australia host a conversation between comedian and actor Luke McGregor and Professor Bill Mitchell about all things MMT, their experience in the media, and how MMT advocates might best take charge of the media narrative.

MMT and the media: Taking charge of the narrative

In households across Australia we see a startling increase in the incidence of ‘shouting-at-the-telly’. Experts say there’s a strong correlation between ‘shouting-at-the-telly’ and the rise in the understanding of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). Monitoring the hoarse throats of “telly-shouters” experts note that the telly brims full of talking heads fear-mongering about ‘tax-payers money’, ‘the debt burden on future generations’ and ‘the government going broke’. Very concerning.

But seriously, a free and independent media is a bulwark of a healthy, functioning democracy. Increasing attention is being paid to MMT in the media, particularly since the onset of this Covid era. Yet questions about media ‘group think’ and independence are being brought to the fore by a stubborn bias towards the false, orthodox, neoliberal economic narrative of ‘sound finance’ and fiscal austerity. A bias that is to the detriment (and ire) of us all.

Our guest, Luke McGregor, actor and writer on the highly acclaimed comedy, Rosehaven, and comedian well-known on the stand-up circuit, has fortunately become a champion of MMT in the media. His Lukenomics segment, ‘Will Australia Ever Run Out of Money?’ on Charlie Pickering’s The Weekly and his recent appearance on ABC’s Q&A program being wonderful examples of his efforts.

In this webinar, Luke McGregor and Professor Bill Mitchell, founding MMT scholar, economist, academic, author, prolific blogger and founder of MMTeD, will have a conversation about all things MMT, their experience in the media and how we might best take charge of the media narrative.”

Entzun, inside the bideoa: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=830e8n7vNXQ

Iruzkinak (2)

  • joseba

    Using a regional lens reveals the uneven impact of the COVID employment crash

    (http://bilbo.economicoutlook.net/blog/?p=46861)

    Today, we have a guest blogger in the guise of Professor Scott Baum from Griffith University who has been one of my regular research colleagues over a long period of time. Today he is writing about the uneven impact of the COVID employment crash. This theme – the spatial unevenness of fluctuations in aggregate economic activity – is one we often explore (in our past research together) because understanding these patterns is essential for designing appropriate policy interventions. It is one of the reasons we both favour employment creation programs that respond to local conditions, like the Job Guarantee. It is also the topic a new large grant application that we are currently putting in (as part of the annual funding circus in Australia). Anyway, while I am tied up today it is over to Scott …
    Using a regional lens reveals the uneven impact of the COVID employment crash

    It’s research grant writing season for many research focused academics here in Australia and so I have spent some time thinking about how the economic slowdown associated with COVID has impacted on the economic performance of regions across Australia.

    As a precursor to distilling my understanding and ideas I have been reading some literature about regional economic change, and in particular a collection of material that emerged internationally following the GFC looking at regional transitions following significant economic shocks.

    I have also started looking at the Australian Bureau of Statistics Payroll Jobs data which has been released regularly since the start of the economic slowdown in 2020 and is available at a couple of different aggregate regional levels.

    The overall focus of the research proposal we are putting together is to identify the different patterns and trajectories of employment in regions as a result of an economic shock. The COVID-19 induced economic slowdown therefore provides the perfect backdrop for the Australian context.

    It is certainly the case that the impact of the COVID-19 economic slowdown has not been regional neutral (i.e. all regions have been impacted the same).

    The hypotheses we will want to be testing revolves around the extent to which Australian regions might follow one of several paths:

    regional economic rebound, a period or periods of decline followed by a movement back to a previous (pre-covid) path;
    negative regional economic hysteresis, a period or periods of decline followed by a lower than expected rebound;
    positive regional economic hysteresis, a period or periods of decline followed by a higher than expected rebound.

    We will, all things going to plan (that is, our proposal is funded), be modelling employment changes across regional Australia to test these hypotheses in the current context.

    In the meantime, we can begin to understand some of the potential by considering the Australian Bureau of Statistics Payroll jobs index aggregated to the Statistical Area 3 level, and adding in some selected independent variables taken from the most recent census.

    The methodological details of the index can be found here -Weekly Payroll Jobs Australia Methodology- and for context Statistical Area 3 (SA3) represent:

    … the functional areas of regional towns and cities with a population in excess of 20,000 or clusters of related suburbs around urban commercial and transport hubs within the major urban areas.

    Bill has already discussed payroll jobs index in a number of past blog entries. See for example:

    1. Australian labour market continues to go backwards as government sits idly by (October 20, 2020).

    2. Worst is over for Australian workers but a long tail of woe is likely due to policy failure (June 16, 2020).

    The first graph combines data for the top 10% and bottom 10% of regions according to median household income with the payroll data.

    The lines are the average payroll jobs index for the respective groups of regions (high and low median income) with the index for Australia included as a reference.

    The series is indexed to the week ending 14th of March 2020, the week in which Australia recorded its 100th confirmed coronavirus case and is up to the first week of 2021.

    Each line follows roughly similar trajectories across the period.

    The most significant changes are clearly at the beginning of the series, which is the impact of the COVID-19 economic slowdown (or shutdown) when we saw considerable job losses across the board.

    The second significant fall is during the period at the end of the series following Christmas and the New Year.

    You can find the data for this graph at – Source.

    The Australian Bureau of Statistics tells us that:

    The movement in the Weekly Payroll Jobs and Wages series observed between late November 2020 and early January 2021, is consistent with labour market seasonality at year-end. Estimates may also be affected by modified business reporting of STP data over this period. The underlying movement at year-end in both payroll jobs and wages, will be somewhat hidden by these effects until ‘normal’ business reporting resumes.

    And that

    The Australian labour market has a period of pronounced seasonality from December through to January due to:

    increases in labour market activity before Christmas; and
    a combination of public holidays, school holidays and lower business activity (in many industries) in the period after Christmas.

    Estimates currently presented in the Weekly Payroll Jobs and Wages in Australia release are an ‘original’ data series and are not yet able to be produced with seasonal impacts removed (i.e. seasonally adjusted).

    What is telling about the comparison between low- and high-income regions is the magnitude of the changes in jobs between the two groups.

    If the impact on employment of the slowdown was regional neutral, then we wouldn’t expect to see a difference.

    But, as we can see low-income regions, on average, saw more jobs disappear in the initial fall and this gap has continued throughout the series.

    This is likely to be a function of the labour market characteristics of these regions, where the lower income regions are more likely to be characterised by less secure, precarious forms of employment, the very type that were most impacted by the slowdown, a point aptly illustrated by considering the association between regional level part-time employment and household income.

    We also note that jobs rebounded in both groups, although by not enough, following the introduction the federal government’s Jobkeeper (wage subsidy) support packages, but with a clear gap continuing between both groups across time.

    Eyeballing the data, there are two conclusions I would make.

    The first more general one is that the government’s packages have not been adequate to cover all job losses as a result of the imposed shutdown.

    If they had been, then the payroll jobs index would be heading back to its initial base for all regions and the government could really be trumpeting the success of its program (this is putting aside what was happening to jobs prior to the slowdown, which raises a whole set of other issues).

    The second, and in some ways more concerning conclusion is that the government’s interventions have not been evenly shared across the nation and have generally failed people and communities in the lowest income regions of the country.

    We could reasonably expect that if the government’s interventions had been (a) well targeted and (b) larger in magnitude of total support, then all things considered, the gap between the regions would have narrowed.

    So higher income regions appear to have been somewhat shielded from the full extent of the jobs wreckage as the government’s interventions appear to have been more favourable to these regions.

    Once again, we are all in this together according to the Prime Minister – except when we are not.

    The second graph is similar to the first, except it represents the top and bottom 10% of regions according to the pre-pandemic unemployment rate. Again, the lines represent the average payroll jobs index for the respective groups of regions (higher and lower unemployment) with the index for Australia included as a reference.

    Different data, similar outcome.

    The data is available at – Source.

    Again, we see the impact of the initial economic shock and what is interesting is that the magnitude of the impact is largely consistent across the two groups of regions. This is where the similarity ends.

    While the regions with lower pre-pandemic unemployment (and therefore presumably stronger performing labour markets) experienced an initial drop in employment, subsequent periods have seen a bounce back in these regions, on average, to pre-pandemic employment levels.

    A scan of the raw data suggests that some of this is driven by what might be considered regional outliers (some of the islands that make up Australian territory) where the payroll jobs index bounced back considerably presumably because these places were much less impacted being completed separate from the mainland).

    Removing these outliers (I haven’t included the graph) changes the magnitude of the difference between the two groups, but not the overall pattern.

    The story for the higher unemployment regions is commensurate to the low-income regions above.

    Regions with higher levels of pre-pandemic unemployment saw an initial fall in jobs as the economy headed to a standstill and have, on average failed to claw back much ground in the interim, and at least to a casual glance, actually fallen further behind.

    So once again, we are all in this together, except when we are not! More disadvantaged regions in term of pre-pandemic labour market conditions were hammered and the government’s job keeper interventions do not seem to have only made limited inroads in these regions.

    I could consider other data, but the pictures would be very similar.

    The take home message is clear and painful.

    As always, those who are in most need are the ones that miss out and it seems that the government imposed (not real) limits on help is making that issue worse.

    When we use a regional lens to consider economic outcomes we are faced with another picture of social and economic winners and losers, that is sometimes lost when national or state scale data is considered.

    Moreover, these patterns have always been there, they are once again highlighted by the COVID induce economic slowdown.

    So as I have written about before, the accumulated social wreckage that is a feature of the failed neoliberal experiment is once again brought into sharp relief. A regional lens highlights this even further.

    Using a regional lens also highlights the issue of the potential for regional effects to impact on individual outcomes.

    Although there is always talk about Australia bouncing back and the nation’s stella performance, the truth is, and many of us know this, where you live makes a huge difference to your opportunities.

    Bill and I have researched this in a number of academic papers in the past.

    For example, this peer-reviewed article in Geographical Research (July 2009) – People, Space and Place: a Multidimensional Analysis of Unemployment in Metropolitan Labour Markets – identified that regardless of your individual characteristics (level of education, family background etc), the type of regional labour market you live in has a significant impact on your employment opportunities.

    That seems like a no brainer, but is often overlooked when policy is being considered and when politicians talk about how robust the Australian labour market is.

    And a regional lens introduces even more issues.

    We know from research that if you live in a disadvantaged region or community you are likely to have poorer access to services, less positive role models, less opportunities, all of which in many cases add to the already dire position that people find themselves in.

    It can be no accident that time and time again, when statistics are released about regional disadvantage that it is usually the same places that pop up again and again.

    In my 2005 book – Fault Lines Exposed – for example, we identified those regions that were the most disadvantaged across a large number of social and economic variables, and often these were the same places we identified in our earlier publication – Australia’s regional cities and towns: Modelling community opportunity and vulnerability.

    They were also very highly correlated with the many distressed places that Bill and I identified in our – Index of Prosperity and distress

    These enduring patterns reflect the general failure of government to address any of these issues is a sustainable way.

    The failure is a reflection of the government’s inadequate level of intervention, which Bill has often talked about.

    But as we have seen here the government’s actions also often fail as they fail to grasp that interventions are not regionally neutral.

    Scholars who refer to themselves as ‘Regional Scientists’ would argue that this is a failure of policy interventions to be sufficiently place-based and being instead too place-neutral.

    Reading some of the research literature available on-line, for example this 2012 article in the Journal of Regional Science – The Case for Regional Development Intervention: Place-based versus Place-neutral Approaches – we learn that (page 140):

    … geographical context really matters, whereby context here is understood in terms of its social, cultural, and institutional characteristics. As such, a space-neutral approach is regarded as inappropriate; what are apparently space-neutral policies will always have explicit spatial effects, many of which will undermine the aims of the policy itself unless its spatial effects are explicitly taken into consideration.

    From this we might take that a general wide spread policy such as Jobkeeper will result in uneven regional outcomes (as we have seen) because it does not reasonably account for the potential contextual differences between places where the intervention is pursued.
    Conclusion

    The project grant that we are currently writing will address some of these issues.

    Hopefully some funding rolls our way and we can get down to some interesting and fun analysis.

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