Warren Mosler: prezio maila eta inflazioa

(https://twitter.com/MMTpodcast/status/1471159591396421636)

MMT Podcast (Christian Reilly)@MMTpodcast

Out today!

MMT Podcast ep 123: Understanding The Price Level And Inflation

@PatriciaNPino and Christian talk to Warren Mosler (@wbmosler) about his recent paper on inflation, his proposals for overhauling banking, and simplifying the tax system.

https://pileusmmt.libsyn.com/123-warren-mosler-understanding-the-price-level-and-inflation

2021 abe. 15

[Transcript] Opening monologue for episode 123 – Warren Mosler: A Framework for the Analysis of the Price Level and Inflation | The MMT Podcast en Patreon

[Transcript] Opening monologue for episode 123 – Warren Mosler: A Framework for the Analysis of the Price Level and Inflation

At the beginning there, you heard our guest this week, MMT founder Warren Mosler, and in a moment we’re going to be talking to him about his recent paper on inflation, his proposals for overhauling the banking system, and his ideas about simplifying the tax system.

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Governments with modern money systems like these [the UK, the US, Japan, Canada, or Australia] spend by changing numbers on a spreadsheet at their central banks using keystrokes. When they spend, they revise bank balances upward, and when they tax, they revise bank balances downward.

And, as our guest, Warren, likes to say, when you spend by changing numbers on a spreadsheet, the idea of running out of money is completely inapplicable – and so, even though when you say it out loud, it sounds like a tautology, it really is the case that currency-issuing governments can never run out of their own currency.

And we think that’s quite an important insight for those of us with a vote and a voice in political discourse – that our governments’ most commonly-used justification for the politics of austerity stems from a – let’s be generous – misunderstanding of how the monetary system works. So to be clear, as former US Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke once told the viewers of 60 minutes, the central bank spends by using a computer to mark up bank balances – and so, as an even earlier Fed Chair, Beardlsey Ruml, wrote in 1946, “Taxes for revenue are obsolete”.

So if taxes for revenue are obsolete, what are they for? If the dollars, pounds or yen needed for payment of taxes are issued by the government in the first place, why does the government even bother collecting them?

It’s because taxation is there to solve a more elementary problem for the government. Namely: Why would anybody work for intrinsically-worthless, government-issued pieces of paper, (or more accurately, entries on a spreadsheet)? How does the government, which needs to be able to spend something to hire people and buy things to carry out the policies it was put in charge of enacting, how does the government ensure that people will accept its currency in exchange for goods and services?

And the answer is that the government creates a permanent demand for its currency by issuing tax liabilities1,or tax bills, denominated in its chosen unit of account. And because it’s preferable to have spending limited by the will of the people rather than the availability of a precious metal, these days states tend to choose a money of account, a token, that they can issue without limit. In the UK we call these tokens pounds. The government’s pound-denominated tax bills create people needing to do things, to earn pounds to settle those tax bills, allowing the government, the issuer of currency, to spend its money into existence to provision itself. And so the government doesn’t tax you because it needs your money, it taxes you because it needs you to need its money.

So taxes primarily drive currency from inception, and after that they perform other more familiar functions: they remove currency from the system, which regulates the spending power of the private sector – and they can also be used to influence behaviour, by giving tax breaks to activity we’d like to see more of, and imposing punitive taxes on things we’d like to see less of.

So, to circle back to where we started: taxation is the mechanism by which governments are able to spend, but that spending is not revenue-constrained, because taxes for revenue are obsolete.

One last thing to bear in mind for the conversation you’re about to hear is in that money system I just described, the thing needed to pay taxes is issued by a sole issuer (the government) – and so the national currency is a public monopoly. You can think of currency users, you and me and the rest of the private sector as buyers of currency and we have to buy that currency (because of taxation), and we have to buy it with something that’s not that currency – namely, our time and labour, or things we produce with that time and labour. And when there’s a single seller of something, a monopolist, that monopolist gets to set the price of the thing that it sells. And in this case the currency monopolist, the government, sets the value of its currency by saying what the rest of us have to do to earn it.

Every time the government spends on something, it’s communicating a piece of information about the value of its currency. So for instance, to the UK government, an essential worker like, say, a central banker is worth £500,000 a year but a less important worker, like a nurse, is worth £22,000 a year. So the government is saying the value of a pound is 5.7 minutes of nursing or 14.9 seconds of central banking. These absolute values, along with all the other prices government pays when it spends, feed into our decisions about the relative values of other things, when the rest of us currency users buy and sell things with each other in the market – and this is what Warren means when he says that the government, whether it likes it or not, is the source of the price level – that the price level is a function of prices government pays when it spends, or collateral demanded when it lends. Just a footnote – I assumed a forty hour week for a central banker, there – which is probably about as accurate as one of their forecasts.

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We will be taking a break until January, although we’ll still be doing patron-only episodes, but until then, from me and Patricia, have a great holiday season, thanks as ever for your support – and thanks for the time you put into understanding MMT. Let’s dive in!

#123 Warren Mosler: Understanding The Price Level And Inflation

Entzun hemen: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEp_nGVTuMfBun2wiG-c0Ew/videos

Gehigarria:

A Framework for the Analysis of the Price Level and Inflation by Warren Mosler:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1sySbx6EHOAYpAjE4FGnYApdZNyY6rh79KzajZxSU884/edit


Tax liabilities, and not tax revenues per se, function to create sellers of goods and services in exchange for the state’s currency, which the state can then buy (in http://www.collectedworksofwarrenmosler.com/).

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