Macro n Cheese Podcast #MMT@CheeseMacro
Why aren’t working-class issues prioritized? @sdgrumbine and Bill Mitchell have answers. Listen to the latest episode!
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Macro n Cheese Podcast #MMT@CheeseMacro
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Episode 308 – Working Class MMT with Bill Mitchell
(https://realprogressives.org/mnc-podcast-ep/episode-308-working-class-mmt-with-bill-mitchell/)
Economist Bill Mitchell talks with Steve about MMT and the importance of understanding the power mechanisms of class.
Ep 308 – Working Class MMT with Bill Mitchell
Episode 308 • 21st December 2024 • Macro N Cheese • Steven D Grumbine
Notes:
What’s the point of understanding money if we don’t look at the power relations controlling its distribution?
Bill Mitchell, a key figure in the development of modern monetary theory, is back for his twelfth appearance on the podcast, beginning with Episode One, Putting the T in MMT.
As a key figure in the development of MMT, Bill articulates how this theory fundamentally challenges conventional economic wisdom by asserting that governments, as currency issuers, are not financially constrained in the same manner as households or businesses.
This critical insight dispels the prevailing narrative that insists the government cannot afford to invest in social programs. This forces us to look not only at political choices, but the class power behind those choices.
The conversation delves into the dynamics of class conflict, inflation, and the role of private banks in shaping the financial landscape. Economic austerity, rising costs, and stagnant wages force the working class to take on more and more private debt.
Bill Mitchell is Professor of Economics and Director of the Centre of Full Employment and Equity (CofFEE) at the University of Newcastle, NSW Australia. He is also the Docent Professor of Global Political Economy at the University of Helsinki, Finland, and Guest International Professor at Kyoto University, Japan.
Bill is a professional musician and plays guitar with the Melbourne Reggae-Dub band – Pressure Drop.
Bideoa: https://youtu.be/aWcziy5V7ZA
Transkripzioa:
00:00:42.620 – 00:01:50.892
All right, folks, this is Steve with Macro N Cheese. I have been definitely hitting them out of the park the last couple weeks.
I’ve been really, really thrilled with some of the guests that we’ve had on. The topics we’ve had on have been timely. This is no different.
I am super excited to have my friend, genius, one of the best economists I’ve ever spoken to in my life, Professor Bill Mitchell joining me again today.
For those of you who do not know, Professor William Mitchell holds the Chair in Economics and is the Director of the Center of Full Employment and Equity {CofFEE), the official research center at the University of Newcastle, Australia. He also is the Docent professor in Global Political Economy at the University of Helsinki.
He is also a JSPS International Fellow at Kyoto University in Japan. He is one of the founders of modern monetary theory, and his blog is one of the leading economics blogs in the world.
With that, my guest, Bill Mitchell. Welcome to the show, sir.
Bill Mitchell
00:01:51.036 – 00:01:54.560
Yeah, thanks, Steve. I’m glad to be here, and thanks for the invitation.
Steve Grumbine
00:01:54.980 – 00:05:00.190
You better believe it. I mean, our last episode was really fantastic. It got a lot of listens, and I think people genuinely enjoy hearing from you.
Today is going to be no different, because I think that after 300, I don’t know what it’ll be by the time this is released, but as of this recording, we’ve got 304 podcasts of Macro N Cheese out the door. And you, sir, have done it multiple times, but you have the distinction of being podcast number one, and that is “Putting the T in MMT.”
And we talked about theory, we talked about understanding what a theory was, and it was one of our best episodes ever, folks. Most every one of our episodes, we try very hard to make them evergreen.
And that one, go back, listen to episode number one of Macro N Cheese, and you will learn so much. But today, what we’re hopefully going to be talking about in some detail is, you know, we’ve grown here at Macro N Cheese.
We’ve grown quite a bit, actually. And it’s been nice as we’ve tried desperately to incorporate a class awareness, class consciousness into our discussion points.
And so as a result of that, what we have done is we have approached each and every one of these episodes with the intention of changing the focus, changing the lens so that the focus is no longer on the investor grade people, the investors, the PMC [professional managerial class]. We’re looking at the working class. And the majority of the people around the world make up the working class.
It’s a very, very small group of people that don’t make up the working class. And they’re often the least talked about and talked to.
And they have very few people that speak for them or even try to translate the information we hear so that it’s meant for them.
So what I’ve asked Bill to do today is to kind of take us through a trip on modern monetary theory [MMT] with a focus on the working class and really get a feel for some of the things that, you know, I know a lot of socialists have come to Bill and said, hey, that’s not, you know, that’s not right, or hey, you know. And Bill is one of the guys that really does get class.
Last time we talked, he talked about straight up that his background came from Marx and Michał Kalecki and so many other voices from the left. And Bill wrote many great books. One of them in particular is called Reclaiming the State, a very important book.
If you haven’t read it recently, he co-wrote it with Thomas Fazi as well, please go out and get that book. But for this conversation, it’s going to be bringing it back to basics.
So, Bill, you know, I’ve been trying my best to come up with a different way of saying this stuff over and over and over the last decade. Sometimes I get it right, sometimes I get it wrong. How would you describe modern monetary theory to someone from the working class?
In this era of Trump, in this era where the working class is repeatedly ignored, how would you define and describe modern monetary theory?
Bill Mitchell
00:05:00.610 – 00:18:08.800
You know, the way I see the world is that there’s these complex layers of power relations, and these are sort of political lobbying. They’re essentially class layers.
And what I mean by class, of course, and I’m not talking here about middle class or upper class or lower class, I’m talking about economic class in the way in which Karl Marx originally conceived the concept, the breakdown of society.
Breaking it down into classes, not breaking it up, is that our starting point to understand how the system works, the power relations within the system, should be to understand that one sector in the economy, in our society. Now, society and economy aren’t equivalent. One segment is owning what we call a material means of production, that is capital.
Now, in the industrial area that was productive capital, machinery and equipment and assembly lines, and even back earlier, spinning jennies in factories. And it’s become more complex because we’ve now got this sort of whole overlay of finance capital, which is another sort of power line.
So one section owns the material means of production.
And in other words, they don’t have to work personally to generate income, but what they have to do is hire the other broad economic class, the working class, to work with that capital.
And the way in which the capital owning class makes a living through the industrial relations of our economy is to force the working class to work for more hours in a day and produce more things in a day than the workers strictly need to fulfill what we think of as their subsistence needs. In other words, subsistence doesn’t mean bare existence, it means what we need to survive in this society.
Food, shelter, clothing, entertainment, whatever. And so by being able to coerce, coerced doesn’t necessarily mean with a whip.
It means using power relations in the economy by coercing those workers and forcing them to work longer than they strictly need to to cover their own subsistence. The capital owning class then can expropriate what we call the surplus value produced.
And as long as they can realize that surplus value as profit by selling it into the goods market for a profit, in other words, price above cost, then they generate an income without having to work. And the big distinction is that the working class accept that coercion, albeit reluctantly, because they’ve got no choice.
They have to work to survive, to get an income, because they don’t own capital independently. Now that’s the raw bones of the power relationship.
And it gets much more complex then when we add layers, like the middle class and the professional managerial class. You know, I’m in the professional managerial class as a professor, but of course I’m still part of the working class because I don’t have capital.
But there’s much more complicated dynamics then.
But the essential point, the starting point that I have of understanding the power relations in the economy is that those two broad economic classes are in conflict with each other. And the nature of the conflict can be summarized in the most simple way.
That the owners of capital want the working class to work as long as possible and pay them as little as possible, because that way they can maximize the surplus value each day that they get out of each worker.
Whereas the alternative ambition for the working class is that they want to work for as short a time possible, with less intensity, and get paid the most. So you juxtapose those two positions and you can easily see that there’s a conflict.
Now, once you start understanding that, starting from that point, then you can understand the dynamics of organizations, the control and supervision structures of management, the complex divide and conquer strategies that capital employ to ensure that the working class doesn’t unite as a whole. And so some of the strategies are to exploit identity, gender, race, poverty.
All of these types of things are used to create the impression that there isn’t an homogenous working class. So that’s the first element in the way I understand the world. Then we come to the monetary system, which is an aspect of the economic system.
And this is where modern monetary theory comes in.
Because to understand what we call a fiat currency system now, that just means that the monetary system is introduced as a legislative fiat by the government, the currency issuing government.
And the distinction you make is that in former eras we had examples of commodity monetary systems which were like gold or silver coins, for example, and the currency had intrinsic value because of the value of the commodity, the metal in that case.
Whereas the distinction with the fiat currency system is that the fiat currency are just worthless tokens until they are brought into use by government through the imposition of an exclusive imposition of a tax liability that has to be relinquished through that currency. And that’s what gives this worthless token value, because we then have to get it, and we don’t have it until the government spends it.
Now, a lot of people, almost everybody, has been led to believe that the government, like the US Government, spends taxpayer’s money1. Now the reality is that how can that possibly be so? Because the US Government is the one that issues the currency, it’s their currency.
And the US taxpayers don’t have that currency until the government spends it. Just a logical temporal set of reasoning. You can’t get the currency until it’s been spent.
And that should militate against thinking that the taxpayers are funding the government spending.
Now, modern monetary theory is a way, a superior way, of understanding the operations of the fiat monetary system and the capacities of the currency issuing government and the consequences of using that capacity.
So juxtapose that with, say, mainstream monetary theory, which starts with the presumption that a government is financially constrained like a household, and therefore has to seek sources of revenue in order to spend.
And then there’s a whole narrative built on the evils of taxation and the evils of issuing government debt and the inflationary consequences of spending in excess of those sources of revenue.
And you juxtapose that with MMT that says, well look, the US government can’t possibly be financially constrained unless it voluntarily brings in rules to constrain itself [e.g. the debt ceiling]. It can’t intrinsically be financially constrained.
And so therefore you’ve got to investigate, well, what’s the role of taxation, why do such governments issue debt? And questions like that.
And what you find once you start teasing those questions out is that modern monetary theory provides a totally at odds explanation and understanding of the way in which the monetary system operates, the way in which the institutions like the banking sector operates, the capacities available to government, and the consequences of using those capacities. Now then, put those two things that I’ve just discussed briefly, the power relations together with the monetary understanding.
And this is the last point I’m making as my first response to you is a lot of people get confused when they first confront modern monetary theory and say, oh well, if we don’t like it, you know, it’ll be dangerous, et cetera, et cetera.
And others perhaps with a more progressive bent or saying, oh God, we love this, you know, we can have hospitals and public schools and we can look after the environment and we can have transport systems and all the rest of it. And of course they’re both wrong because that understanding of the monetary system doesn’t really have any policy structures. And go back to that.
The people who think it’s a regime, it’s neither left nor right, so it’s neither progressive or any ideological position on the continuum. And a lot of people really get this wrong.
They sometimes hear me talk and I’m on the left and they say, oh well, the MMT must be left, whereas it’s not.
But the point I make is that, you know, I’m looking at my computer screen now with my glasses on because otherwise I can’t see very well, given my aging eyes.
And MMT is a set of lenses to allow us to really investigate and drill into the monetary system and understand the sort of dynamics of those institutions and the way it works.
That understanding gives us a much better feel for what would happen if governments did A or B and cures us of the fictional blinders that mainstream theory, which really doesn’t give us any understanding. Now to activate that understanding into a policy space, you need to impose your set of values, your ideology.
Now, a person on the extreme right could have exactly the same understanding of the monetary system as me.
In other words, that they would use that understanding to advocate for free market policies, you know, corporate handouts, whatever, whereas a person on the left would use that understanding to say, well, we can have better schools, better public transport and those sort of things. And they both share the understanding but have polar opposite policy spaces.
And that’s the point, that it’s not a ideology or a regime that you move into or you can move out of.
It describes the currency systems that we have in place today in your country, the US in my country at the moment, Australia, in Japan, in all over the place. Now then, the last step of the question is to form an understanding of why the government uses its currency capacity in particular ways.
In other words, what influences the government’s decisions? And that’s why you need a class analysis.
Because unless you can understand the context, the power context in which governments are embedded and influenced by, you can’t really get a feel for the likelihood of one policy set after another.
So I think that the complete picture for a person wanting to understand how the economy works is to have a good class analysis basis, a good understanding of class which leads you to interrogate power relationships and all of the obfuscating layers that those power relations trigger to hide them, make them less transparent to everybody.
And you also need to have a very solid understanding of modern monetary theory so that you can then understand the consequences of governments using different policy tools that have been driven by the way in which the power relations drive it. So that’s sort of big picture, nothing particularly specific, but that’s the way I think of the economy. Now, many MMT-ers don’t think like that.
They don’t include the class and the power element in a broad explanation.
You don’t need the class element to understand the mechanics of MMT, but you need the class element to understand how the government is manipulated into doing one thing or the other.
Steve Grumbine
00:18:09.660 – 00:18:35.840
That’s very, very well said.
And one of the things that was intriguing to me, and now mind you, this has been said by several people, so I don’t know who to give credit or blame to. Okay, but one of the things that has often been said is that money does not exist within the government sector.
That money only exists once it’s spent into the economy and the private sector. When I think about that, first of all, let me ask you, is that a true statement?
Bill Mitchell
00:18:36.140 – 00:18:44.960
Well, I mean, what’s the point of the statement? That’s the question I would have. What’s trying to be elucidated by saying something like that?
Steve Grumbine
00:18:45.260 – 00:19:05.398
Well, I guess the point of it is that once it leaves government, it’s no longer neutral. It’s now been spent on something that had a political or a class angle, a class interest, a policy because government spends money into existence.
Bill Mitchell
00:19:05.454 – 00:19:08.850
There’s no problem with that. But what problem are you thinking about here?
Steve Grumbine
00:19:09.150 – 00:19:43.522
Well, I think I’m looking at it from a standpoint of when we talk about MMT in the theoretical framework, in its very academic sense, it oftentimes leaves people wondering.
Well, hold on, if it’s neutral, then how come once it’s spent into the economy, it stopped being neutral the minute that Congress passed a law, the minute that Parliament passed a law, the minute whoever it was that via whatever legal framework they have to get it out there, someone’s class interests are immediately dealt with once it is out of the government sector.
Bill Mitchell
00:19:43.626 – 00:19:46.590
Of course there’s no problem with that.
Steve Grumbine
00:19:47.050 – 00:21:01.520
So from a person on the left, and I’m trying to be representative of some of the questions that come my way in this space, they don’t understand that you’ve basically framed it in the first answer. But within this commentary here, right, it’s like, well, MMT, once you spend it, we stopped just dealing with the base case.
Now we’re talking about the values. We’ve entered the values almost immediately.
Once money came to be, when a leftist or when a working class individual, maybe it’s not a leftist, maybe it’s just a regular working class person that doesn’t have a developed theory of values from a standpoint of a sophisticated school of thought.
Maybe they’re just a rank and file human being that sits there, goes to work nine to five, comes home, eats dinner with the family maybe and turns on the TV and starts hearing the news, which tells them all kinds of lies nonstop. I guess that’s first problem right there. But when they hear this stuff from an MMT perspective, where does the class kick in?
When should someone’s ears perk up that understand the government as the currency issuer, when should they start really paying attention to the values?
Bill Mitchell
00:21:01.680 – 00:26:06.130
Yeah, fine, I sort of get where you’re going. I mean, anything the government does is ideological and political, obviously, because they’re politicians and that’s their business.
So take two really quite extremely different examples. Yeah, you can be controversial here. Think about the current terrible state in Gaza and the US government’s involvement in that.
Now I’m on the public record of saying that the key to that conflict is the US Government because it could force the Israelis into a negotiating position by stopping funding their slaughter. So that’s quite clear.
You know, it’s hard to get your head around how the billions2 of dollars that are flying into Gaza from rockets and weapons every hour of every day, the billions of US dollars that are just flying through the sky and destroying communities and killing people.
Now from an MMT perspective, the insight you get is that, okay, the US can obviously never run out of the US dollars to fund the military industrial complex to produce these weapons and generate profit through procurement contracts, can never run out of the US dollars. And there’s no question about that.
So the Gaza issue becomes not a, from an MMT economist perspective isn’t about how do you pay for all of that, isn’t about the government will run out of money if it’s doing that. The question then is, well, is that the best use of the currency issuing capacity of the US government?
Now obviously the dominant majority thinks it is because it’s happening. That’s the political aspect, the power aspect, the lobbying aspect. Whereas I think it’s the worst use of US dollars that you could ever imagine.
Now then, take another example.
And we might think of it as improving poverty in some of the ghettos in Los Angeles or in Baltimore, some American cities that cease to work as a healthy environment for people to live in. There’s all sorts of things that social welfare and urban designers would advocate to improve housing.
And you could ally this with environmental sustainability ambitions.
You know, improve the quality of housing so that they’re more energy efficient and sustainable, provide better community facilities so that children don’t grow up with a sense of hopelessness, provide guaranteed employment to kids who are falling out of the education and training system and you know, all the things that would improve the health and welfare of those very disadvantaged communities. And why isn’t it being done?
Well, mostly it’s not being done because the government has been lobbied to tell citizens that, oh, we can’t have everything because we don’t have enough money. And if we tried to do that, there’d be inflation or there’d be higher taxes and we’d run out of money.
Now what an MMT economist immediately says, well, in the same way you can never run out of spending money on military equipment, you can’t run out of money on helping poor communities improve their material circumstances a little bit, can never run out of their money.
And so the question as to why you’re not doing it is because your ideology doesn’t want you to do it, not because you don’t have the financial capacity. The reason you’re facilitating the bombing of Gaza and not improving the drug-addled areas in Baltimore is because you’ve chosen to do that.
And I think that’s the juxtaposition that citizens need to start thinking about. They should never buy the argument, oh, the governments can’t afford this.
Well, it might be that at certain points in history you couldn’t afford to do anything like improve housing in Baltimore, for example, because there wouldn’t be enough carpenters available, in which case you’d have to take a longer term perspective. That would be the constraint.
But the message of MMT is that all of those diversions about how to pay for something and the government will run out of money and that we can’t afford it, they’re all diversions to hide an ideological commitment to something that is likely to be unpalatable to many people.
And so I think the working class of America should get their heads around the fact that they’re being kept in an increasingly impoverished state with failed communities and intergenerational disadvantage being inherited, while the US government has all the resources it needs to reverse those things. But it’s choosing not to do that.
And it’s also choosing to use some of its infinite financial resources to kill the most disadvantaged people in Gaza. I think they’re the sort of juxtapositions that people should get their heads around.
Steve Grumbine
00:26:06.670 – 00:26:27.206
That’s perfect. I was trying to drive towards that once government spends this stuff into existence, whether you like it or not, it’s never an issue of solvency.
No, it’s always an issue of priority. It’s always your values coming into play once it leaves the government sector, once they spend it into existence.
Someone’s values were represented right there.
Bill Mitchell
00:26:27.278 – 00:26:27.958
Absolutely.
Steve Grumbine
00:26:28.054 – 00:27:43.378
And those values frequently, if not almost always, are not in favor of the working class. In fact, the working class is led to believe every election cycle that these politicians are going to do something wonderful for them.
And they didn’t even try to do that this past election. That’s how bad it’s got. They didn’t even try to sell anybody anything. It was just, hey, you know, you don’t want this guy over there or whatever.
And we witnessed the genocide that you were addressing there. And there was a lot of reasons why people swung a certain way in the election. Most of them economic.
And you know, as I think to myself, when I started paying attention to MMT, I did not come to MMT because, oh, isn’t this just something neat? Cause I just love math and I liked formulas and I liked, you know, economics. In fact, I did okay.
I got through grad school, but I wasn’t an all star at this stuff and I learned all the wrong stuff. It was when my values kicked in and I immediately saw that I was fighting stupid battles. I was fighting battles that weren’t real.
And that really irritated me. And I think that’s what’s kept me going for 15 years. I’ve been doing this stuff since 2007. So I guess 17 years.
Bill Mitchell
00:27:43.514 – 00:27:44.550
Amazing.
Steve Grumbine
00:27:45.290 – 00:29:32.332
Just a dork doing it for 17 years. What is wrong with me? But for 17 years it’s been in my craw. And for 17 years, my purpose was my values first.
I led with my values and I saw this as a tool. I saw this as a framework for taking the things I valued and bringing them to fruition and helping others see that they were possible.
And I don’t know what it is, but at some point it just hit me like a ton of bricks and I haven’t been able to get off the horse since.
But with what you’re saying here, you know, there’s a lot of things that come up in the news that people hear and like most people that are not well informed, they just run with whatever the narrative is. And I want to throw a few very important narratives out there right now that kind of play into the base of MMT and also from a class perspective.
You know, we talk about how they cry poor mouth when it comes to helping the poor, when it comes to making the environment better, when it comes to structural changes that would literally free the working class of the burden of the sack, as they say, you know, the freedom of the fears of being laid off. But that fear is a ideological desire to train the working class how to be.
And so as I think to myself about bonds, for example, you know, they’re always talking about, well, what if they lose faith in the dollar? What if they stop buying your bonds, Then what? And I laugh and I think, well, Japan sure likes to buy their bonds.
The US likes to buy their own bonds too. Almost every government around the world buys their own bonds up when they’re not purchased by someone else.
Help me understand the role of bonds in the MMT lens. Bonds, gilts, whatever you want to call them.
Bill Mitchell
00:29:32.516 – 00:33:53.020
Well, I mean, the first point to understand is that once you accept the notion that the currency issuing government, like the US government, has no financial constraint, then the concept of having to get its own currency from the non-government sector by selling debt instruments–bonds–just becomes absurd. So the mainstream theory says, oh well, the government’s got a financial constraint, therefore it’s got to raise money by tax.
And if it wants to spend more than it raises money from tax, it really has to then go into debt. Now that perfectly describes a household like you and me that if we want to spend, we have to find a source of income.
And if we want to spend more than our current earned income from our work, then we can run down prior savings or we can sell assets on ebay, or if we want to buy big things like a house, we have to go to a bank and get a mortgage. So it’s quite clear that that’s the behavior and the financial constraints on a household.
But then trying to suggest that those constraints carry over to the government that has its own currency and issues it, is one of the greatest con jobs in history of the academy. It’s just totally untrue and improbable if you think about it. So then you think about, well, why does the government issue debt?
Why is it borrowing money from the non government sector if it doesn’t need that money in order to spend? And the answer is varied. The essential point that I want to make is that it doesn’t need that currency in order to spend.
That’s the first point to really get clear. Warren Mosler and myself started all this. We’ve advocated that the government just should stop issuing debt altogether.
There’s no value function in it. But when you think about, well, what happens when it issues debt?
Well, it’s providing a risk free asset to the non-government sector to park some of their savings, some of their wealth they’ve built up in a risk-free asset. Whereas all financial assets that are issued by non-government bodies like banks, corporations, you know, whatever, they’re all risky.
But the debt that’s issued by the US government, for example, or any currency issuing government has no risk, no financial or credit risk. There’s no reasonable prospect to assume that such a government would ever default on its liabilities. Why?
Because it can always fund its liabilities because it’s got its own currency. So then the question is, what are the consequences of it issuing debt? And we’re back into the value territory.
And the question is, well, whose ambitions does it serve for the government to be issuing debt? Well, the answer is quite clear, that it serves the corporate interests. I call it corporate welfare.
And the reason I say that is because it provides the speculators in the financial markets who add no substantive value to the wellbeing of our communities. They’re the most unproductive sector in the economy.
It provides them with a risk free benchmark upon which they can price their other more risky financial assets. So as a benchmark. And it also gives them a safe haven when the speculative environment becomes very uncertain.
And so when you have financial turmoil and it’s not clear, that there’s companies going broke and the corporate bills are defaulting.
For example, the existence of government bonds provides a safe haven for corporate speculators to shift their funds into a risk free asset which might have a lower return, but is risk free. It’s safe away from higher, riskier assets that are very uncertain. And the speculators form the view that they may well lose their funds.
So it’s just corporate welfare and totally unnecessary. Governments around the world should just stop issuing debt.
Intermission
00:33:54.000 – 00:34:17.372
You are listening to Macro N Cheese, a podcast by Real Progressives. We are a 501c3 nonprofit organization. All donations are tax deductible.
Please consider becoming a monthly donor on Patreon, Substack, or our website realprogressives.org. Now back to the podcast.
Steve Grumbine
00:34:17.396 – 00:34:43.212
So when you think about the money that’s paid on the interest, most working class people are saying, hey, that’s my hard earned tax dollars going to give those people that money that I have to pay off that debt. And in reality that’s not true at all. That’s actually new money being spent based on a value system.
The interest on that stuff is new money spent into the economy, spent into their bank accounts. Is that correct?
Bill Mitchell
00:34:43.276 – 00:36:58.890
Yeah. I mean the government is providing an income source for those who hold financial assets.
Now the ideological perspective or aspect of that statement is to ask, well, what’s the distributional implications of that? Who’s getting this income? There’s no question the government can fund that income at any point in time.
The question that should be asked is, well, who’s benefiting from that whole system? Now in the sense that I call it corporate welfare, I’m immediately telling you who’s benefiting. It’s not the working class because they tend not to hold those sort of assets.
Now it gets complicated and remember, go back to the beginning of today by these multiple layers erected on top of the pure class layer.
So you know, the middle class who are part of the working funnel have been extracted more through mass education, et cetera, into the professional managerial class.
They become a sort of schizophrenic class because they’re part of the working class, but they serve the interests of management above the pure interests of the poor and the unskilled workers. And that complication then says that they have pension funds. You call them in America, we call them superannuation funds, but the same thing.
And those superannuation funds extract savings from workers which they then invest in government bonds through various regulations on safety of their pension funds. So they also buy bonds. Now if we scrap bonds, what would be the consequences for the workers who have invested in those, the middle class workers?
Well, there would have to be some other safe asset. Now my response to that as a member of the working class is that the government should, and always can, set up national pension funds.
We don’t have to have private for profit speculative pension funds. We can have government provided pension funds which benefit everybody and which could never go broke.
You don’t then, in other words, have to have a debt issuing machinery to provide that sort of safe asset for workers savings.
Steve Grumbine
00:36:59.390 – 00:39:27.182
And there you go.
I mean, we have in the US Social Security and many people end up living on Social Security and they have been convinced that because government can go broke, because the trust fund can go broke, et cetera, that they should privatize this. And now with this new regime coming through, Trump and his friends Musk and Ramaswamy, they’re looking to take a scalpel out and cut everything off.
I mean, forget a scalpel, they’re looking for a chainsaw. They’re ready to take huge agencies and just throw them into the dustbin.
And maybe that’s good in some cases, but it’s not in the interest of the working class in particular.
But because the working class has been so duped into believing that government is broke and it’s their tax dollars being wasted on these stupid agencies, not realizing once again it’s an ideological thing, the government has chosen to fund those things up to this point. And that is new money. That’s not tax money.
That is new money being spent by the government on those things, which provides many, many families, children, you name it, lots of benefits, lots of good quality of life, et cetera. But because they have been convinced that Social Security can go broke, they want to privatize it.
Because they convinced that these agencies are sucking away taxpayer dollars and your hard earned tax dollars getting wasted on government largesse. They have been convinced of this. So they’re out there ignorantly bleeding and begging for this.
And as a working class individual, I’m horrified that this is what we’re up against, to get our own people to have the values that they think they have, but really the right values because they understand how the system works.
When you say that government could provide debt free pensions where they don’t have to sit there and worry about bondholders and this, and they could just simply fund whatever age they want to pick, they could say from cradle to grave, or they could say from 50 to 100, whatever, but that again is a value that’s not a financial constraint. That’s not an issue that the currency issuing government could not achieve.
So they are diminished by this lie that is perpetuated by both Democrats and Republicans in the United States, Tories and Labour in the UK and I’m sure all the Greens and everyone else in Australia, I don’t think any of them get it right, do they?
Bill Mitchell
00:39:27.366 – 00:42:02.690
Well, look, you know, in Australia, for example, we have a broad aged pension system that’s just totally funded by government.
Now if you’re in the higher income groups and you are members of private pension funds or superannuation funds, well then it may be that you generate too much income potential to receive the government pension. And that’s certainly the case.
There’s no question that the Australian government as the currency issuer can always provide an aged pension at a reasonable rate. It’s not too bad actually in material terms, there’s no question about it. So our system is somewhat different to the US system.
But yeah, I mean the US Social Security trust fund issue has been around for years and there’s been a whole conga line of economists predicting it’ll go broke.
And you know, every few years you’ll get them coming out and as new graduates get their PhDs, they get the media voice and they predict it’ll go broke too. It can never go broke unless the government allows it to. It certainly could go broke if it becomes privatized.
We’ve seen the folly of privatised enterprises since the mid-80s. They sometimes go broke and they need rebalance from government again. But the U.S. Social Security system can never go broke.
And the only question that people should ask of that is not their dollars aren’t funding it, it’s the US government’s dollars that are funding the government’s contribution that can never run out of money. The only question is, is it generous enough?
Is it providing necessary material support for people who own either too old to work, too infirm to work, or otherwise disabled? And that’s the only questions people should ask. Is it serving that purpose? The purpose of the trust fund is that.
But the debate in America is diverted into these ridiculous questions. Oh, it’s going to run out of money.
And you get these economists who pretend they’re very erudite and produce graphs showing when it’s going to intersect the solvency threshold. It’s just a lot of nonsense.
I never see any of these economists saying, well, when’s the government going to run out of money to fund Israeli Defence Forces?
I never see them say that yet the scale of the investment in that venture, that disgusting venture, is massive compared to the sort of scraps they hand out to disadvantaged communities.
Steve Grumbine
00:42:03.750 – 00:44:10.370
So the thing that always comes up at this point in time and even when you go to AI and you say AI, tell me what MMT is, right, it does pull some of you guys’s brain trust, but it pulls a lot of nonsense in there too. And at the end it says things to worry about with MMT.
And this is, well, if the government spends too much money, you could have spiraling inflation, okay? And I laugh to myself because this is the kind of fear porn that is sold to the working class. So they’re afraid to ask for anything.
They’re terrified that their taxes will go up to pay for it. They’re terrified that if the government spends money into the economy, which does every stinking second, that it’s going to create inflation.
And I know MMT has always centered inflation as a real legitimate constraint.
But you know, what we experienced here recently during COVID and currently now coming out of it is people are still suffering majorly from inflation here in the United States because wages did not go up with the cost of living. And as a result of that, you know, one man’s spending is another man’s income. The working class is getting gouged again.
And we’re finding through various people’s work that it is not just some fact of the government choosing to pay higher prices. There were signals sent to industry that the government’s spending money and they responded by hiking up prices.
And there were some businesses that were seen to have gouged up to a thousand percent profit over that period of time.
And so they, rather than asking their government to do price controls or have anti-gouging laws or go after the smoky rooms where those people are incentivized to maximize shareholder value instead to maximize the well being of the working class or well being of the entire country or anything. So you never think about that. So Bill, from an MMT perspective, can you define what inflation is and isn’t and how it comes to be?
Bill Mitchell
00:44:10.750 – 00:50:39.820
Well, look, that’s a difficult question, but the most basic understanding is that all spending in the economy carries an inflation risk.
Whether it be household consumption spending, whether it be business investment on machinery and equipment or infrastructure, whether it be export sales, which is foreign spending coming into your economy, or government spending. There’s nothing exclusive about government spending in this context.
And what that risk is, it applies to all spending components, is that if the nominal spending, that’s the dollar value of the spending grows in excess of the capacity of the supply side of the economy, that’s the productive side to respond by producing goods and services in response to that spending. Then you’ll start getting inflationary pressures, which we attribute to being excessive demand, excessive spending.
Now, the problem is that that’s a relatively simplistic view of the inflationary process because once you start thinking in class terms, then you start to understand that inflation can also emerge out of the intrinsic class conflict between labor and capital.
And you know, the classic example is the 1970s when as a consequence of the Saudi response to the Yom Kippur War, which was again, the Israelis sort of trying to illegally take land off the Palestinians and were being supported financially and militarily by the US Government, the oil producers decided to punish the US by increasing the price of oil, dramatic doubled overnight, almost October 1973. And if you then think about, well, what does that mean?
Well, it means that all oil dependent countries were immediately faced with a massive increase in imported raw material costs. Raw materials that are dependent upon oil to run their economies.
And the question then for the economy is, well, in terms of how much you’re producing any particular time, is that in real terms now you’ve got less income to distribute domestically because an increasing proportion of the income you’re producing has to go to the rest of the world to fund the higher price for the imported raw material, in this case oil. And so once you start asking the question, well, how is that real income loss going to be redistributed? Who’s going to take the real income loss?
Well, then you’ve got class dynamics.
So are the workers going to take it in the form of lower real wages, lower purchasing power, or are the bosses going to take it in the form of lower real profit margins, or are they going to share it or what?
And what we saw in the 1970s is that trade unions at that stage were much stronger than they are now and had the capacity to resist the real wage cuts coming from the higher prices as the raw material price escalation was being passed on.
And the corporations have price setting power, obviously, because it’s not a free market out there. They’ve got power to manipulate and set prices.
And so you had a distributional battle where the working class would push up nominal wage demands as the prices were rising in order to maintain some real wage target. And the owners of capital were trying to maintain a real target rate of profit, a margin, in other words.
And so they would retaliate if there was industrial action trying to push higher money wages to get this real wage target. And the price setters in the corporations would then push the prices up because their cost structure had now risen.
And so you had an inflationary spiral emerging out of a distributional struggle, a conflict over who was going to take the losses of the raw material price rises.
Now to some extent, COVID was a replay of that with a major difference as the supply constraints were emerging and people were ill, and factories were being closed and shipping was being disrupted and governments were forcing people to stay at home because they hadn’t quite worked out how we’re going to deal with this unknown threat. The question then was, well, who was going to take the losses?
And the corporations soon worked out that their trade unions were now so weak that they weren’t going to resist.
And so the price inflation that emerged from that supply side constraints drove the real wages of the workers down systematically because they couldn’t resist them anymore. And then of course, many corporations who had price setting power worked out, well, you know, we’ve got a party on here.
We can really take advantage of this power imbalance and not only defend the margins from the increased costs of production from the supply constraints, but expand our margins and therefore expand our real profit margin. And that’s what they did.
The inflation persisted and amplified by the fact that corporations all around the world, not just in the US, in Australia, not everywhere, most places, took advantage of their price setting power, their lack of competitiveness within their segment, the productive segment, took advantage of that and went crazy. And the way in which the policymakers responded was to assume it was just a simple excess demand case, the case I made in the beginning.
And that’s why they started to push interest rates up. That was their avowed justification.
But really the problem was the transitory constraints from the supply side or from the productive side arising from COVID and then Ukraine and OPEC [Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries].
But on top of that, this price gouging you mentioned, because the imbalance between unions and corporations and all of those things were really not sensitive to interest rate changes, which meant the monetary policy changes that occurred were a total farce.
Steve Grumbine
00:50:40.880 – 00:53:03.710
I want to take us down two quick paths before we close out Bill. And by the way, thank you so much for your time. The last one I guess is a two parter, so we’ll make it one here.
You know, people are looking around for ways of surviving this.
My family, we have a special needs child, and we’re watching the government threaten to strip away services for special needs kids, and services across the board.
And so people are looking into different asset classes to try to gamble what little savings they may have, to try to get ahead of it to protect their families. And so you’ve got the rise of crypto[currency] and people see this as hey…
In fact, some of the comments we get back to some of our substack posts about MMT are this is an old thinking, this is old money thinking, this isn’t real, this is old money. You’ve been bypassed by crypto, guys, you’re crazy.
And so the vast majority of working class people, those who do have some money and those who don’t have some money, are looking at crypto as a way out and they’re thinking that this will kill the monetary system. And the second part to that is the role of private banks in terms of how people see money.
The combination of going in debt by taking out loans as opposed to buying this crypto. Two questions, one theme. They’re scrambled and they’re trying to find a way out, either via loans or via speculative assets like crypto.
I guess question number one is, is that just because crypto is something that people invest in, doesn’t mean that it makes the old monetary system null and void. In fact, I would suggest that it’s built on top of it.
And the other thing is that the idea of private banks creating all this money, this is typically thrown at us in the same way. And they use this as their reason why they’re buying crypto, because after all, they’re diluting the value of the dollar and so forth.
But the role of private banks in lending, I mean, this is a policy, this is once again a value discussion. Am I correct in that?
I mean, the reason for private banks, as opposed to just having everything centralized through the government, is a policy decision. It’s a value system that they would rather do.
And so when you take out private debt, that’s real debt, you gotta pay back when the government spends it on you. That’s not the same thing. Can you elucidate on both of those points?
Bill Mitchell
00:53:04.010 – 00:58:18.466
Well, look, I think there’s been overblown ambitions for cryptocurrencies. They’re never going to replace the currency of the state. They’ve made some people very well off and they’ve made many others desperately not well off.
And I guess what I would say is that the vast majority of the working class in America are not in a financial position to speculate in financial markets per se, and certainly not in cryptocurrency markets. The data suggests that they don’t even have very good pension entitlement buildups and savings. The vast majority of Americans don’t have any savings.
And certainly the hollowing out of the middle class over the last 30 years has meant that more and more Americans are in the lower income category with very constrained financial asset holdings. Now, many of those people voted for Donald Trump. And I think that most voting is on emotion.
And when you then add an economic component to it, it’s also built around the mainstream fictions that we’ve talked about. And going back to earlier on in our discussion, that’s one of the reasons why I think modern monetary theory is valuable.
In my view, it will provide an increased quality to our democracies because the sort of questions we’ll ask politicians and the sort of answers we’ll be prepared to accept change dramatically. An MMT framework leads a person to reject outright statements like we can’t afford that because we’ll run out of money or you’ll have to pay higher taxes. It forces us to change our focus to real resource availability.
And then that says, well, how are we going to generate skills in the future when we need investment in training systems? Not that we can’t afford them, but we need them.
So there’s all these different questions and answers come up which would improve the way in which we interact with our political class. But a lot of the voters who voted for Donald Trump rejected the Democrats quest for joy. Kamala kept saying, let’s restore joy.
Well, it’s very hard to be joyful when you’re living at the bones, living on the margin of personal insolvency, forced by cost to living pressures and low stagnant income, wage growth and declining services. You’re forced to a very mediocre life and a very high pressured life. So they bought the Trump message.
So I’m not sure they’re the ones you’re referring to that are scrambling to look after their future in the face of what Elon Musk and his mates might do to the bureaucracy.
My feeling is that they still live in hope that Donald Trump will restore the industrial heartlands in the [Great] Lakes District, et cetera, and will get rid of illegal entrants to the country who are deleting the welfare system or whatever. You know, all of those narratives, right?
But I think what is very scary, and this is taking an MMT perspective, is yes, you might argue and hold the view that the spending on the Department of Environment [EPA] and the spending on the Department of Education, all those salaries, are just a total waste of money. But in saying that you will say that you prefer that spending to be elsewhere.
Because if you then say, oh, we can do without all of that government spending, then you’ve got a problem with what’s going to replace it.
Because if you don’t replace it, then the level of economic activity and employment levels will fall and unemployment will rise and poverty will rise.
So even if you don’t like what the government’s spending its money on currently, it is spending that money into the economy and that’s producing jobs.
Now, you might not want those jobs to be where they are, but I see nothing in what Musk and those characters are sort of intimating to suggest that they’ve got the slightest macroeconomic understanding. Spending equals income. And if you cut that spending, well, then what are you going to replace it with?
Because if you don’t replace it with something else more to your ideological preference, then you’re going to have a massive recession. And I think that’s the missing part of the debate at the moment. Yeah, I can accept that.
A lot of Americans think that the Department of Education and the Department of Environment programs are a waste of money and they don’t like them and they would prefer them not to be there. But they’ve got to have something to replace them, otherwise you have a spending collapse. And that’s the missing link in the debate at the moment.
That’s what I think is scary that those guys don’t really have a clue about macroeconomics, and they’re going to feel very warm and fuzzy as they carve up the public sector and get rid of workers in the Bureau of Labor Statistics and Department of Employment and all of those other things that they hate. But I don’t see that they’ve got a plan to replace it other than to continue to feed their mates in the military industrial complex.
That’s my observation.
Steve Grumbine
00:58:18.618 – 00:59:06.510
Well, I think that this kind of ties into the second part of that question about private banks, because when there is, if you look at the sectoral balances and we. I don’t want to dive too far down that runway, but the reality is, is that that money’s got to come from somewhere.
And I guess they’re looking over there at disposable income and they’re saying, hey, good way to get rid of all that excess cash in people’s pockets is to make them go into private debt. And the private banks are there to accommodate that. You know, that is one way.
You know, you got federal spending, you’ve got imports or exports, I should say, as another means of bringing cash into the equation. And then you got private banks, people taking out loans to fill the void that neoliberalism or this slash and burn approach puts them into.
Bill Mitchell
00:59:06.810 – 01:02:16.670
One of the successes of the neoliberal era, which really became apparent as we entered the global financial crisis, was that the first strategy was to suppress the ability of workers to enjoy wages growth in line with productivity growth.
Now, during the 1960s and 70s, in almost every country, the real wage, the purchasing power of the workers wage, grew in proportion with productivity growth, productivity being the grossing output per unit of input. In other words, we’re able to get much more output for a given level of input than we could 20 years prior.
Now, the reason why real wages have to grow in proportion to productivity growth, which they really haven’t since the 1980s, is because of a realization issue that if you’re producing more and more stuff, then how are you going to consume it and sell it and make profit from it? So the first part of the story was to suppress real wages growth and redistribute more cash to profits. That was the first part.
But then you had to work out, well, if you’re going to do that, how are you going to ensure that those redistributed profits are actually realized through sales of goods and services? Because ultimately the capitalist class has to sell stuff to make profits from the services, otherwise they don’t.
And the characteristic innovation of the neoliberal period was to solve that problem by deregulating financial markets and abandoning financial oversight of the financial sector and letting the greed run wild. And so they worked out that, well, we don’t have to pay the workers to consume, we can enslave them in debt and make money off them two ways.
One, by suppressing their wages growth and then making money off interest rates on debt we push onto them. And so, you know, in Australia in the 1980s, you just get this massive invasion in the Daily Mail.
Credit cards being issued to 4 year olds and 10 year olds. You know, their banks went crazy under deregulation.
And what you saw in Australia was household debt as a percentage of disposable income in the 1990s was about 60%, approximately. Now it’s close to 200%.
And that was perfect because the capitalists could suppress your wages growth, but then still sell all the stuff through credit.
Now the only problem with that strategy, which the GFC [Global Financial Crisis] exposed, is that it’s finite because while the government can have as much debt as it ever wants, it issues the currency, the non government sector can’t. And the non government sector will eventually get to a point where it’s too precarious to keep borrowing, and so then they’ll stop spending.
At that point, you have financial recession, bankruptcies, and all sorts of chaos.
So, yeah, for a short time, you can fund growth through private debt increases, but that’s finite and is unsustainable and leads like the GFC to crisis.
Steve Grumbine
01:02:17.060 – 01:02:22.412
I think that’s what we saw in the Bill Clinton era as he slashed and burned the government.
Bill Mitchell
01:02:22.596 – 01:02:23.372
Absolutely.
Steve Grumbine
01:02:23.436 – 01:02:29.708
They had the “Goldilocks economy” because everybody was deep in debt and they were all loving it until the bubble burst.
Bill Mitchell
01:02:29.804 – 01:02:32.428
Absolutely. All around the world it happened.
Steve Grumbine
01:02:32.524 – 01:02:47.636
Absolutely. Well, Bill, I want to thank you for taking us through this. I hope that my questions didn’t come off as stupid.
I was trying really hard to ask what I thought were good questions. Is there anything that I missed that you think would be pertinent to this conversation?
Bill Mitchell
01:02:47.788 – 01:03:05.316
We could go on all day talking about this stuff, but in the interest of brevity, I think we’ll call it quits. I think that the sort of issues you articulate are the issues that people are talking about, and I hope I provided some perspective on them for you.
Thanks very much.
Steve Grumbine
01:03:05.388 – 01:04:08.170
Absolutely. All right, folks, my guest, Bill Mitchell. Friend, thank you so much. I appreciate you, sir. My name’s Steve Grumbine. I’m the host of Macro N Cheese.
We are a very small nonprofit. We need your help. It is a 501c3 in the United States, and that means your donations are tax deductible.
Please consider becoming a donor if you find the material that we produce worthwhile. And with that, like to thank my guest one more time, Bill Mitchell. On behalf of Macro N Cheese and Real Progressives, we are out of here.
oooooo
1 Kasurako Elon Musk, in GAZA: hiltzaileen eta esperantzaren artean (8):
@tobararbulu # mmt@tobararbulu
No idea at all!
ooo
Elon Musk@elonmusk
Exactly right. ALL government spending is taxation. The government either taxes you directly or, by increasing the money supply, taxes you through inflation. That means the spending bill IS the taxation bill. Very important concept to understand. @RepThomasMassie x.com/chesschick01/s…
2 Amerikar bilioi bat = mila milioi europar.
oooooo
@tobararbulu # mmt@tobararbulu
Working Class MMT w/ Bill Mitchell https://youtu.be/S5OLxWhtGgQ?si=0r1qRDdHCcXffa-V
youtube.com
ooo
Working Class MMT w/ Bill Mitchell
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5OLxWhtGgQ)
What’s the point of understanding money if we don’t look at the power relations controlling its distribution?
Bill Mitchell, a key figure in the development of modern monetary theory, is back for his twelfth appearance on the podcast, beginning with Episode One, Putting the T in MMT.
As a key figure in the development of MMT, Bill articulates how this theory fundamentally challenges conventional economic wisdom by asserting that governments, as currency issuers, are not financially constrained in the same manner as households or businesses.
This critical insight dispels the prevailing narrative that insists the government cannot afford to invest in social programs. This forces us to look not only at political choices, but the class power behind those choices.
The conversation delves into the dynamics of class conflict, inflation, and the role of private banks in shaping the financial landscape. Economic austerity, rising costs, and stagnant wages force the working class to take on more and more private debt.
Bill Mitchell is Professor of Economics and Director of the Centre of Full Employment and Equity (CofFEE) at the University of Newcastle, NSW Australia. He is also the Docent Professor of Global Political Economy at the University of Helsinki, Finland, and Guest International Professor at Kyoto University, Japan.
Bill is a professional musician and plays guitar with the Melbourne Reggae-Dub band – Pressure Drop.
Transkripzioa:
0:00
[Music]
0:10
[Music]
0:17
[Music] all right folks this is Steve with macro
0:23
and cheese I have been definitely hitting them out of the park the last couple weeks I’ve been really really
0:29
thrilled with some of the guests that we’ve had on the topics we’ve had on have been timely this is no different I
0:36
am super excited to have my friend genius one of the best economists I’ve
0:42
ever spoken to in my life Professor Bill Mitchell joining me again today for
0:49
those of you who do not know Professor William Mitchell holds the chair and economics and is the director of the
0:55
center of Full Employment and Equity coffee and official Research Center at the University of Newcastle Australia he
1:04
also is the dosent professor in global political economy at the University of
1:09
Helsinki he is also a jsps international fellow at Kyoto University in Japan he
1:17
is one of the founders of modern monetary Theory and his blog is one of the leading economics blogs in the world
1:24
with that my guest Bill Mitchell welcome to the show sir yeah thanks s I’m glad
1:30
to be here and thanks for the invitation you better believe it I mean our last episode was really fantastic it
1:36
got a lot of listens and I think people genuinely enjoy hearing from you today
1:43
is going to be no different cuz I think that after 300 I don’t know what it’ll be by the time this is released but as
1:50
of this recording we’ve got 304 podcasts of macaron cheese out the door
1:57
and you sir have done it multiple times but you have the distinction of being podcast number one and that is putting
2:05
the te in mmt and we talked about Theory we talked about understanding what a theory was and it was one of our best
2:13
episodes ever folks most every one of our episodes we try very hard to make
2:18
them Evergreen and that one go back listen to episode number one of macaron
2:23
cheese and you will learn so much but today what we’re hopefully going to be
2:28
talking about in some detail is you know we’ve grown here at macaran we’ve grown quite a bit actually and it’s been nice
2:35
as we’ve tried desperately to incorporate a class awareness class Consciousness into our discussion points
2:43
and so as a result of that what we have done is we have approached each and
2:49
every one of these episodes with the intention of changing the Focus changing
2:54
the lens so that the focus is no longer on the investor grade people the investors the the pmc’s we’re looking at
3:02
the working class and the majority of the people around the world make up the working class it’s a very very small
3:09
group of people that don’t make up the working class and they’re often the least talked about and talked to and
3:16
they have very few people that speak for them or or even try to translate the
3:21
information we hear so that it’s meant for them so what I’ve asked Bill to do today is to kind of take us through a
3:28
trip on monetary Theory with they focus on the working class and really get a
3:34
feel for some of the things that you know I know a lot of socialists have come to Bill and said hey that’s not you
3:41
know that’s not right or hey you know and Bill is one of the guys that really does get class last time we talked he
3:48
talked about straight up that his background came from Marx and Michael keski and so many other voices from the
3:55
left and Bill wrote many great books one of them in particular is called reclaiming the state a very important
4:02
book if you haven’t read it recently co-wrote it with Thomas fzy as well please go out and get that book but for
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this conversation it’s going to be bringing it back to basics so Bill you know I’ve been trying my best to come up
4:15
with a different way of saying this stuff over and over and over over the last decade sometimes I get it right
4:21
sometimes I get it wrong how would you describe modern monetary Theory to
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someone from the working class in this era of Trump in this era where the working class is repeatedly ignored how
4:34
would you define and describe modern monetary Theory you know the way I see
4:39
the world is that there’s these complex layers of power relations and these are sort of
4:46
political lobbying they’re essentially class layers and what I mean by class of
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course and I’m not talking here about middle class or upper class or lower class I’m talking about economic class
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in the way in which karks originally conceived the concept the breakdown of
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society breaking it down into classes not breaking it up is that our starting
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point to understand how the system works the power relations within the system
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should be to understand that one sector in the economy in our society now
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society and economy AR equivalent one segment is only what we call material
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means of production that is capital now in the industrial area that was productive Capital machinery and
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equipment and assembly lines and even back earlier spinning jennies in
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factories and it’s become more complex because we’ve now got this sort of whole overlay of Finance Capital which is UN
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sort of power line so one section owns the material means of production and in
6:00
other words they don’t have to work personally to generate income but what
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they have to do is hire the other broad economic class the working class to work
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with that capital and the way in which the capital iring class makes a living
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through the industrial relations of our economy is to force the working class to
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work for more hours in a day and produce more things in a day than the workers
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strictly need to fulfill what we think of as their subsistence needs in other
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words subsistence doesn’t mean be existence it means what we need to
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survive in the society food shelter clothing entertainment
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whatever and so by being able to coers that coers doesn’t necessarily me with a
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whip it means using the power relations in the economy by coercing those workers
7:05
and forcing them to work longer than they strictly need to to cover their own
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subsistence the capital earning class then can expropriate what we call the Surplus value produced and as long as
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they can realize that Surplus value as profit by selling it into the goods
7:23
market for a profit in other words price above cost then they generate a income
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without having to work and the big distinction is that the working class
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accept that coercion Al be reluctantly because they’ve got no
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choice they have to work to survive to get an income because they don’t own
7:46
Capital independently now that’s the raw bones of the power relationship and it gets much more
7:53
complexing when we had liers like the middle class the professional managerial
7:58
class I’m in the professional managerial class as a professor but of course I’m
8:04
still part of the working class because I don’t have Capital but there’s much more complicated Dynamics then but the
8:11
essential point the starting point that I have of understanding the PA of
8:17
relations in the economy is that those two broad economic classes are in
8:23
conflict with each other and that the nature of the conflict can be summarized in the most simple way
8:30
that the owners of capital want the working class to work as long as possible and pay them as little as
8:37
possible because that way they can maximize the Surplus value each day that they get out of each worker whereas the
8:44
alternative ambition for the working class is that they want to work for as
8:49
shorter time possible with less intensity and get paid the most so you
8:55
just toose those two positions and you can easily see that there’s a conflict
9:01
now once you start understanding that starting from that point then you can understand the Dynamics of organizations
9:08
the control and supervision structures of management the complex divide and
9:14
conquer strategies that Capital employ to ensure that the working class doesn’t
9:20
unite as a whole and so some strategies are to exploit identity uh gender race
9:28
poverty all of these types of things are used to create the impression that there
9:34
isn’t in homogeneous working class so that’s the first element in the why I
9:39
understand the world then we come to the monetary system which is an aspect of
9:46
the economic system and this is where Modern Monet Theory comes in because to
9:53
understand what we call a fat currency system now that just means that the monetary system is introduced as a
10:02
legislative theat by the government the current isue government and the
10:08
distinction you make is that in former eras we had examples of commodity Monet
10:15
systems which were like gold or silver coins for example and the currency had
10:22
intrinsic value because of the value of the commodity the metal
10:27
that whereas the distinction with a fat currency system is that the F currency
10:33
are just worthless tokens until they are brought in to use by government through
10:40
the imposition of an exclusive imposition of a tax liability that has
10:45
to be relinquished through that currency and that’s what gives this worthless
10:51
token value because we then have to get it and we don’t have it until the
10:57
government spends it now a lot of people almost everybody has been led to believe
11:04
that the government like the US government spends taxpayers money now
11:10
the reality is that how can it possibly be so because the US government is the
11:16
one that issues the currency it’s their currency and the US taxpayers don’t have
11:22
that currency until the government spends it just a logical temporal set of reasoning you can’t get the currency
11:29
until it’s been spent and that should militate against thinking that the
11:34
taxpayers are funding the government spending now non monetary theory is a
11:40
way a superior way of understanding the operations of fat monetary system and
11:48
the capacities of the currency issuing government and the consequences of using
11:53
that capacity so ju toos that with say mainstream monetary Theory which starts
11:59
with the presumption that a government is financially constrained like a household and therefore has to seek
12:06
sources of revenue in order to spend and then there’s a whole narrative built on
12:12
the eil of Taxation and the eils of issuing government debt and the
12:18
inflationary consequences of spending in excess of those sources of revenue and
12:25
you J that with mmt that says well look the government can’t possibly be
12:30
financially constrained unless it voluntarily brings in rules to constrain itself it can’t intrinsically be
12:37
financially constrained and so therefore we’ve got to investigate what’s the role of Taxation why do such governments
12:44
issue de and questions like that and what you find once you start teasing
12:50
those questions out is that modern monitory Theory provides a totally add
12:55
ODS explanation and understanding of the way in which the monetary system
13:01
operates the way in which the institutions like the banking sector operates the capacities available to
13:08
government and the consequences of using those capacities now then put those two
13:14
things that are just discussed briefly the power relations together with the monetary understanding and this is the
13:22
last point I’m making as my first response to is a lot of people get
13:27
confused when they first front modern monetary Theory and say oh well if we
13:33
don’t like it you know it would be dangerous etc etc and others perhaps
13:40
with a more Progressive bent or saying oh God we love this you know we can have
13:45
hospitals and and public schools and we can look after the environment and we can have transort systems and all the
13:51
rest of it and of course they’re both wrong because that understanding of the
13:57
monetary system doesn’t really have any policy structures and go back to that
14:04
the people think it’s a rim it’s neither left nor right so it’s neither
14:09
Progressive or any ideological position on the Continuum and a lot of people
14:15
really get this wrong they sometimes hear me talk and I’m on the left and they say oh mmt must be left whereas
14:23
it’s not but the point I make is that you know I’m looking at my computer screen now with my glasses on because
14:29
otherwise I can’t see very well given my aging eyes and mmt is a set of lenses to
14:37
allow us to really investigate and drill into the monetary system and understand
14:43
the sort of dynamics of those institutions and the way it works that
14:48
understanding gives us a much better feel for what would happen if government did A or B and H isus of the fictional
14:57
blinders that mainstream Theory which really doesn’t give us any understanding
15:03
now to activate that understanding into a policy space you need to impose your
15:09
set of values your ideology [Music]
15:29
now a person on the extreme right could have exactly the same understanding of the monitary system as me in other words
15:36
being an mmt that they would use that understanding to advocate for free
15:41
market policies you know corporate handouts whatever whereas a person on
15:47
the left would use that understanding to say well we can have better schools
15:52
better public transport and those sort of things and they both share the
15:57
understanding but have or opposite policy spaces and that’s the point that
16:03
it’s not a ideology or a regime that you move into or you can move out of it
16:09
describes the currency systems that we have in place today in your country the
16:14
US in my country at the moment Australia in Japan in all over the place now then
16:21
the last step of the question is to form an understanding of why the government
16:26
uses its currency capacity in particular lines in other words what influences the
16:33
government’s decisions and that’s why you need class analysis Because unless you can
16:40
understand the context the power context in which governments are embedded and
16:45
influenced by you can’t really get a feel for the likelihood of one policy
16:51
set up another so I think that the complete picture for a person wanting to
16:57
understand how the economy work works is to have a good class analysis basis good
17:03
understanding of class which leads you to interrogate power relationships and
17:08
all of the obsa layers that those power relations trigger to hide them make them
17:16
less transparent to everybody and you also need to have a
17:21
very solid understanding of modern monetary Theory so that you can then
17:26
understand the consequences of government’s using in different policy tools that have been driven by the way
17:32
in which the power relations drive it so that’s sort of big picture nothing
17:38
particularly specific but that’s the way I think of the economy now many mmts
17:44
don’t think like that they don’t include the class and the power element in a broad explanation you don’t need the
17:51
class element to understand the mechanics of mmt but you need the class element to understand how the government
17:58
is manipulated into doing one thing or the other that’s very very well said and one
18:06
of the things that was intriguing to me and now mind you this has been said by several people so I don’t know who to
18:11
give credit or blame to okay but one of the things that has often been said is
18:17
that money does not exist within the government sector that money only exists
18:22
once it’s spent into the economy and the private sector when I think about that
18:27
first of all let me ask you is that a true statement well I mean what’s the point of the statement that’s the
18:33
question I would have what’s trying to be elucidated by saying something like
18:38
that well I guess like the point of it is is that once it leaves government
18:43
it’s no longer neutral it’s now been spent on something that had a political
18:50
or a class angle a class interest you know a policy because government spends
18:55
money into existence there there not with that but what problem are you
19:01
thinking about here well I think I’m looking at it from a standpoint of when
19:06
we talk about mmt in the theoretical framework in its very academic sense it
19:12
often times leaves people wondering well hold on if it’s neutral then how come
19:18
once it’s spent into the economy it sto being neutral the minute that Congress passed the law the minute that
19:25
parliament passed the law the minute whoever it was that via whatever legal framework they have to get it out there
19:32
someone’s class interests are immediately dealt with once it is out of the government sector of course it’s not
19:39
problem with that so from a person on the left and I’m trying to be representative of some of the questions
19:46
that come my way in the space they don’t understand that you’ve basically framed it the first answer but within this
19:53
commentary here right it’s like well mmt once you spend it we stop just dealing
19:59
with the base casee now we’re talking about the values we’ve entered the values almost immediately once money
20:06
came to be when a leftist or when a workingclass individual maybe it’s not a leftist maybe it’s just a a regular
20:13
workingclass person that doesn’t have a a developed theory of values from a
20:19
standpoint of a sophisticated school of thought maybe they’re just rank and file
20:25
human being that sits there goes to work 9 to5 comes home eats dinner with the
20:30
family maybe and turns on the TV and starts hearing the news which tells them all kinds of Lies nonstop I guess it’s
20:37
first problem right there but when they hear this stuff from an mmt perspective
20:43
where does the class kick in when should someone’s ears perk up that understand
20:48
the government as the currency issuer when should they start really paying
20:53
attention to the values yeah fine I sort of get where you go I mean that anything
20:59
the government does is ideological and political obviously because they’re politicians and that’s their business so
21:07
take two really quite extremely different examples you it can be
21:12
controversial here think about the current terrible state in Gaza
21:18
and the US government’s involvement in that now I’m on the public record of saying that the key to that conflict is
21:25
the US government because it could force the Israelis into a negotiating position
21:30
by stopping funding their Slaughter so that’s quite clear you know
21:36
it’s hard to get your head around how the billions of dollars that are flying into Gaza from rockets and weapons every
21:46
hour of every day the billions of US dollars that are just flying through the
21:51
sky and destroying communities and killing people now from an mmt
21:57
perspective the insult you get is that okay the US can obviously never run out
22:02
of the US dollars to fund the military industrial complex to produce these
22:08
weapons and generate profit through procurement contracts can never run out
22:14
of the US dos and there’s no question about that so the gazer issue becomes
22:20
not a from an mmt economist perspective isn’t about how do you pay for all that
22:27
isn’t about the government will run out of money if it’s doing that the question then is well is that the best use of the
22:34
currency issuing capacity of the US government now obviously the dominant majority thinks it is because it’s
22:41
happening that’s the political aspect the power aspect the lobbying aspect
22:46
whereas I think it’s the worst use of US dollars that you could ever
22:51
imagine now then take another example and we might think of it as you know
22:57
improving poverty in some of the ghettos in Los Angeles or in
23:02
Baltimore some American city that cease to work as a healthy environment for
23:07
people to live in there’s all sorts of things that social welfare and urban
23:13
designers would Advocate to improve housing and you could ally this with environmental sustainability Ambitions
23:20
you know improve the quality of housing so that they’re more energy efficient and sustainable provide Better Community
23:27
facilities so children don’t grow up with a sense of hopelessness provide guaranteed
23:33
employment to kids who are falling out of the Education and Training System and
23:38
you know all the things that would improve the Health and Welfare of those
23:44
very disadvantaged communities and why isn’t it being done well mostly it’s not
23:49
being done because the government is being lobbied to tell citizens that oh
23:55
we can’t have everything because we don’t have enough money in if if we tried to do that there’d be inflation or
24:00
there’d be higher taxes and we’d run out of money yeah what an mmt economist
24:06
immediately says well in the same way you can never run out of spending money on military equipment you can’t run out
24:14
of money on helping poor communities improve their material circumstances a
24:20
little bit can never run out at that money and so the question as to why you’re not doing it is because your
24:28
ideology doesn’t want you to do it not because you don’t have the financial capacity the reason you’re facilitating
24:35
the bombing of gas are not improving drug addled areas in Boldore is because
24:41
you chosen to do that and I think that’s the J position that Citizens need to
24:47
start thinking about they should never buy the argument oh the government’s
24:52
can’t afford this well it might be that at certain points in history you couldn’t afford to do like improve
24:59
housing in bemore for example because there wouldn’t be enough Carpenters available in which case you’d have to
25:05
take a longer term perspective that would be the constraint but the message of mmt is that all of those diversions
25:13
about how to P to something and the government will run out of money and that we can’t afford it they all
25:18
diversions to hide an ideological commitment to something that is likely to be unpalatable to many people and so
25:26
I think the working class of America should get get their heads around the fact that they’re being kept in an increasingly impoverished state with f
25:34
communities and intergenerational disadvantage being inherited while the US government has
25:41
all the resources it needs to reverse those things but it’s choosing not to do
25:47
that and it’s also choosing to use some of its infinite Financial Resources to
25:52
kill the most disadvantaged people in Gaza they the sort of Jer positions that
25:58
people should get their heads around that’s perfect I was trying to drive towards that once government spends this
26:05
stuff into existence whether you like it or not it’s never an issue of solvency no it’s always an issue of priority it’s
26:12
always your values coming into play once it leaves the government sector once they spend it into existence someone’s
26:19
values were represented right there absolutely and those values frequently
26:24
if not almost always are not in favor of the working class in fact the working
26:30
class is led to believe every election cycle that these politicians are going
26:35
to do something wonderful for them and they didn’t even try to do that this
26:40
past election that’s how bad it’s G they didn’t even try to sell anybody anything
26:46
it was just hey you know you don’t want this guy over there or whatever and we witnessed the genocide that you were
26:52
addressing there and there was a lot of reasons why people swung a certain way
26:57
in the election most of them economic and know as I think to myself when I started paying
27:03
attention to mmt I did not come to mmt because oh isn’t this just something
27:09
neat cuz I just love math and I liked formulas and I liked you know economics
27:14
in fact I did okay I got through grad school but I wasn’t an Allstar at this stuff and I learned all the wrong stuff
27:20
it was when my values kicked in and I immediately saw that I was fighting stupid battles I was fighting battles
27:27
that weren’t real and that really irritated me and I think that’s what’s kept me going for 15 years
27:33
I’ve been doing this stuff since 2007 so I guess 17 years
27:38
amazing I just Ador doing it for 17 years what is wrong with me but for 17
27:44
years it’s been in my craw and for 17 years my purpose was my values first I
27:50
led with my values and I saw this as a tool I saw this as a framework for
27:56
taking the things I valued and bringing them to fruition and helping others see that they were
28:02
possible and I don’t know what it is but at some point it just hit me like a ton of bricks and I haven’t been able to get
28:09
off the horse since but with what you’re saying here you know there’s a lot of things that come up in the news that
28:16
people hear and like most people that are not well informed they just run with whatever the narrative is and I want to
28:23
throw a few very important narratives out there right now that kind of play into the base of mmt and also from a
28:30
class perspective you know we talk about how they cry poor mouth when it comes to helping the poor when it comes to making
28:37
the environment better when it comes to structural changes that would literally free the working class of the burden of
28:46
the sack as they say you know the freedom of the fears of being laid off
28:51
but that fear is a ideological desire to train the working class how to be
29:03
[Music]
29:12
and so as I think to myself about bonds for example you know they’re always talk about well what if they lose faith in
29:18
the dollar what if they stop buying your bonds then what and I laugh and I think well Japan sure likes to buy their bonds
29:25
the US likes to buy their own bonds too almost every government around the world
29:30
buys their own bonds up when they’re not purchased by someone else help me understand the role of bonds in the mmt
29:38
lens bonds guilts whatever you want to call them well I mean the first point to
29:43
understand is that once you accept the notion that the currency issuing
29:49
government like the US government has no photage constraint then the concept of
29:55
having to get its own currency from the non-government sector by selling debt
30:01
instruments bonds just becomes absurd so the main stream Theory says or the
30:08
government’s got a financial constraint therefore it’s got to raise money by tax
30:14
and if it wants to spend more than it raises money from tax it really has to
30:19
then go into debt now that perfectly describes a household like you and me
30:26
that if we want to spend we have to find a source of income and if we want to
30:31
spend more than our current earned income from our work then we can run
30:36
down prior savings or we can sell assets on eBay or if we want to buy big things
30:42
like a house we have to go to a bank and get a mortgage so it’s quite clear that
30:49
that’s the behavior in the financial constraints on the household but then try to suggests that those constraints
30:57
carry over to the government that has its own currency and issues it is one of
31:03
the greatest con jobs in history of the academy it’s just totally untrue and
31:09
improbable to think about so then you think about well why does the government
31:14
issue debt why is it borrowing money from the non-government sector if it doesn’t need that money in order to
31:21
spend and the answer is veryy the central point that I want to make is
31:27
that it doesn’t need that currency in order to spend that’s the first point to
31:32
really get clear Warren Mosel and myself started all this we have advocated that
31:39
the government just should stop issuing debt Al together there’s no value function init but when you think about
31:46
well what happens when it issues debt well it’s providing a risk-free answer to the non-government sector to park
31:54
some of their saving some of their wealth that built up in a risk-free asset where all Financial
32:02
assets that are issued by non-government bodies like Banks corporations you know
32:07
whatever they’re all risky but the debt that’s issued by the US government for example or any currency issu government
32:14
has no risk no Financial or credit risk there’s no reasonable Prospect to assume
32:20
that such a government would ever defold on its liabilities why because it can
32:26
always fund its liabilities because it’s got its own currency so then the question is what are the consequences of
32:32
it issuing debt and we’re back into the value territory and the question is well
32:38
whose Ambitions does it Su for the government to be Shing debt well the answer is quite clear that it serves the
32:45
corporate interests I call corporate welfare and the reason I say that is
32:50
because it provides the speculators in the financial markets who add no substantive value to the well-being of
32:57
our communities they’re the most unproductive sector in the economy it
33:02
provides them with a risk-free Ben upon which they can press their other more
33:08
risky Financial assets so as a benchmark and it also gives them a safe haven when
33:16
the speculative environment becomes very uncertain and so when you have Financial
33:22
turmoil and it’s not clear that yeah there companies com broke and their corporate bills are defaulting for
33:29
example the existence of government bonds provides a safe haven for
33:34
corporate speculators to shift their funds into a risk-free asset which might have a lower return but is risk-free it
33:43
safe away from higher riskier assets that are very uncertain and the
33:49
speculators form the view that they may well lose their funds so it’s just
33:54
corporate welfare and totally unnecessary government surer World should just stop issuing dat so when you
34:02
think about the money that’s paid on the interest most workingclass people are saying hey that’s my hard-earned tax
34:09
dollars going to give those people that money that I have to pay off that debt and in reality that’s not true at all
34:16
that’s actually new money being spent based on a value system yeah the
34:22
interest on that stuff is new money spent into the economy spent into their bank accounts is that correct yeah I
34:29
mean the government is providing an income source for those who hold Financial Assets Now the ideological
34:36
perspective or aspect of that statement is to ask for what’s the distributional
34:43
implications of that who’s getting this income there’s no question The Government Can fund that income at any
34:49
point in time the question that should be asked is well who’s benefiting from
34:54
that whole system now in the sense that I call it corporate welfare I’m immediately telling you who’s benefiting
35:01
it’s not the working class because they tend not to hold those sort of Assets
35:06
Now it gets complicated and remember to go back to the beginning of today by these multiple layers erected on top of
35:14
the pure class liar so you know the middle class who are part of the working
35:20
class but have been extracted more through Mass education ET into the
35:25
professional managerial class they become a sort of schizophrenic clients because they’re part of the working
35:32
class but they serve the interests of management above the pure interests of
35:37
the poor and the unskilled workers and that complication then says that they
35:43
have Pension funds you call them in America we call them superannuation funds but the same thing and those
35:50
superannuation funds extract savings from workers which they then invest in
35:55
Govern of bonds through various regulations on safety of their Pension
36:01
funds so they also buy bonds now if we scrap bonds what would be the
36:06
consequences for the workers who have invested in those the middle class workers well there would have to be some
36:13
other safe asset now my response to that as a member of the working class is that
36:18
the government should and always can set up national Pension funds we don’t have
36:24
to have private for profit speculative pension funds we can have government provided Pension funds which uh benefit
36:32
everybody and which could never go broke you don’t then in other words have to
36:38
have a dead issu Machinery to provide that sort of safe asset for workers
36:43
savings and there you go I mean we have in the US Social Security and many
36:49
people end up living on Social Security and they have been convinced that because government can go broke because
36:56
the trust fund can go broke Etc that they should privatize this and now with
37:01
this new regime coming through Trump and his friends musk and
37:06
ramaswami they’re looking to take a scalpel out and cut everything off I mean forget a scalpel they’re looking
37:12
for a chainsaw they’re ready to take huge agencies and just throw them into the the dust bin and maybe that’s good
37:18
in some cases but it’s not in the interest of the working class in particular but because the working class
37:25
has been so duped into belie leing that government is broke and it’s their tax dollars being wasted on these stupid
37:32
agencies not realizing once again it’s an ideological thing the government has
37:37
chosen to fund those things up to this point and that is new money that’s not tax money that is new money being spent
37:44
by the government on those things which provides many many families children you
37:49
name it lots of benefits lots of good quality of life Etc but because they
37:55
have been convinced that Social Security can go broke they they they want to privatize it because they convinced that
38:02
these agencies are sucking away taxpayer dollars and your hard-earned tax dollars
38:08
getting wasted on government largess they have been convinced of this so they’re out there ignorantly bleeding
38:15
and begging for this and as a you know workingclass individual I’m horrified that this is what we’re up against to
38:21
get our own people to have the values that they think they have but really the
38:27
right values because they understand how the system works when you say that government could provide debt-free
38:34
pensions where they don’t have to sit there and worry about Bond holders and this thing they could just simply fund
38:41
whatever age they want to pick they could say from Gradle to grave or they could say from 50 to 100 whatever but
38:48
that again is a value that’s not a financial constraint that’s not an issue that the currency issuing government
38:54
could not achieve so they are diminished by this lie that is perpetuated by both
39:00
Democrats and Republicans in the United States Tories and labor and the UK and
39:06
I’m sure all the greens and everyone else in Australia I don’t think any of them get it right do they well look you
39:12
know in Australia for example we have a broad AG pension
39:18
system that’s just totally funded by government now if you’re in the higher
39:23
income groups and you are members of private Pension funds or superannuation funds well then it may be that you
39:30
generate too much uh income potential to receive the government pension and
39:35
that’s certainly the case uh there’s no question that the Australian government as the currency issuer can always
39:43
provide an age pension at a reasonable rate it’s not too bad actually in
39:48
material terms there’s no question about it so our system is somewhat different
39:53
to the US system but yeah I mean the US social security trust fund issue has
39:59
been around for years and there’s been a whole conquer line of economists predicting it’ll go broke and you know
40:07
every few years you’ll get them coming out and as new graduates get their phds
40:12
they get the media voice and they predict it will go broke too it can never go broken unless the government
40:18
allows it to it certainly could go broke if it becomes privatized we’ve seen the
40:23
Folly of trist Enterprises since and mid 8s they sometimes go broke and then need
40:30
be B from government again but the US social security system can never go brow
40:36
and the only question that people should ask of that is not their dollars aren’t
40:42
funding it the US government’s dollars that are funding the government’s contribution that can never run out of
40:48
money the only question is is it generous enough is it providing
40:54
necessary material support for people who are either too old to work too
41:00
infirm to work or otherwise disabled and that’s the only questions people should ask is it serving that purpose the
41:06
purpose of the trust fund is that but the debate in America is diverted into
41:12
these ridiculous question all it’s going to run out of money and get these economists who pretend they’re very
41:19
aerod and produce graphs showing it when it’s going to intersect the solvency
41:24
threshold it’s just a lot of nonsense I never see any of these economists saying
41:30
well when’s the government going to run out of money to fund Israeli Defense Forces I never see them say that yet the
41:36
scale of the investment in that Venture that disgusting Venture is massive
41:43
compared to the sort of scraps they hand out to disadvantage communities so the thing that always
41:49
comes up at this point in time and it even when you go to Ai and you say AI tell me what mmt is right it does pulls
41:57
some of you guys’ brain trust but it pulls a lot of nonsense in there too and
42:03
at the end it says things to worry about with mmt and it says well if the government spends too much money that
42:09
you could have spiraling inflation okay and I laugh to myself because this is
42:15
the kind of fear porn that is sold to the working class so they’re afraid to ask for anything they’re terrified that
42:22
their taxes will go up to pay for it they’re terrified that if the government spends money into the economy which does
42:28
every stinking second that it’s going to create inflation and I know mmt has
42:34
always centered inflation as a real legitimate constraint but you know what
42:40
we experienced here recently during covid and currently now coming out of it
42:45
is people are still suffering majorly from inflation here in the United States because wages did not go up with the
42:53
cost of living and as a result of that you know one man’s spendings another man’s income the working class is
42:59
getting gouged again and we’re finding through various people’s work that it is
43:05
not just some fact of the government choosing to pay higher prices there were
43:10
signals sent to Industry that the government spending money and they responded by hiking up prices and there
43:17
were some businesses that were seen to have gouged up to a th% profit over that
43:22
period of time and so they rather than asking their government to do price
43:27
controls or have anti- gouging laws or go after the uh Smokey rooms where those
43:34
people are incentivize to maximize shareholder value instead to maximize
43:40
the well-being of the working class or wellbeing of the entire country or anything so they never think about that
43:47
so Bill from an mmt perspective can you define what inflation is and isn’t and
43:53
how it comes to be well look that’s a te got question but the most basic
43:59
understanding is that all spending in the economy carries an inflation risk
44:06
whether it be household consumption spending whether it be business
44:11
investment on machinery and equipment or infrastructure whether it be export
44:17
sales which is foreign spending coming into your economy all government spending there’s
44:24
nothing exclusive about government spending in this context and what that risk is it applies to all spending
44:31
components is that if the nominal spending that’s the dollar value of the spending grows in excess of the capacity
44:39
of the supply side of the economy that’s the productive s to respond by producing
44:46
goods and services in response to that spending then you’ll start getting inflationary pressures which we
44:52
attribute to being excessive demand excessive spending now the problem is that that’s a
45:00
relatively simplistic view of the inflationary process because once you
45:06
start thinking in class terms then you start to understand that inflation can
45:12
also emerge out of the intrinsic class conflict between labor and
45:18
capital and you know the classic example is the 1970s when as a consequence of
45:25
the Saudi response to the Y Kiper which was again the Israelis sort of try to
45:32
illegally take land off the Palestinians and were being supported
45:37
financially and militarily by the US government the oil producers decided to
45:42
punish the US by increasing the price of oil dramatic doubled up night almost
45:49
October 933 and if you then think about well what does that mean well it means that
45:55
all oil depend countries were immediately faced with a massive increase in imported raw material costs
46:03
raw material L dependent upon oil to run their economies and the question then for the
46:09
economy is well in terms of how much you producing any particular tour is that in
46:16
real terms now you’ve got less income to distribute domestically because an
46:21
increasing proportion of the income you’re producing has to go to the rest of the world to fund the higher price
46:28
for the imported raw material in this Cas oil and so once you start asking the
46:34
question or how is that real income loss going to be redistributed who’s going to
46:39
take the real income [Music]
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loss well then class Dynamics so are the workers going to take it in the form of
47:01
lower real wages lower purchasing power or are the bosses going to take it in
47:06
the form of lower real profit margins or are they going to share it or what and
47:13
what we saw in the 1970s is that trade unions at that stage were much stronger
47:18
than they are now and had their capacity to resist the real wage Cuts coming from
47:24
the high prices as the raw material price escalation would being passed on
47:31
and the corporations have price setting power obviously because they it’s sort of free market out there they’ got
47:37
powered and manipulate and set prices and so you had a distributional
47:42
battle where the working class would push out ninal wage demands as the
47:48
prices were rising in order to maintain some real wage Target and the owners of
47:54
capital will try to maintain a real Target rate of profit margin in other
48:00
words and so they would retaliate if there was industrial action trying to push higher money wages to get this real
48:06
wage Target and the price seters in the corporations would then push the prices
48:13
uper because their cost structure Nar risen and so had an inflationist Forum
48:18
emerging out of a distributional struggle or conflict over who was going to take the losses of the raw material
48:25
price r now to some extent Co was a replay of that with a major difference
48:32
as the supply constraints were emerging and people were ill and the factories
48:38
were being closed and shipping was being disrupted and governments were forcing people to stay at home because they
48:45
hadn’t quite worked out you know how are we’re going to deal with this unknown threat the question then was well who
48:51
was going to take the losses and the corporation soon worked out that they’re
48:56
trade unions were now so weak that they weren’t going to resist and so the price
49:02
inflation that emerged from that supply side constraints drve the real wages of
49:07
the workers down systematically because they couldn’t resist them anymore and then of course many corporations who
49:14
have price setting power worked out well you know we’ve got a party on here we
49:19
can really take advantage of this PA imbalance and not only defend the
49:24
margins from The increased costs of production from the supply constraints but expand their margins and therefore
49:31
expand our real profit margin and that’s what they did the inflation persisted
49:37
and Amplified by the fact that corporations all around the world not just in the US in Australia not
49:44
everywhere most places took advantage of their price setting power their lack of
49:49
competitiveness within their segment the productive segment took advantage of
49:55
that and went crazy and the way in which the policy makers responded was to
50:00
assume it was just a simple excess demand case the case I made in the beginning and that’s why they started to
50:07
push interest rates that was their a Ved justification that really the problem
50:13
was the transitory constraints from the supply side or from the productive side
50:19
arising from Co and then you cim and O it but on top of that this PR Scout Jor
50:26
mentioned because the imbalance between unions and corporations and all of those
50:32
things were really not sensitive to interest rate changes which me the monitary policy changes that occurred
50:38
toled fast I want to take us down two quick paths before we close out Bill and by
50:44
the way thank you so much for your time the last one I guess is a two-parter so we’ll make it one here you know people
50:52
are looking around for ways of surviving this my family we have a special needs
50:58
child and we’re watching the government threaten to strip away services for
51:04
special needs kids and services across the board and so people are looking into different asset classes to try to gamble
51:12
what little savings they may have to try to get ahead of it to protect their families and so you’ve got the rise of
51:19
crypto and people see this as hey in fact some of the comments we get back to
51:25
some of our substack posts about mmt are this isn’t old thinking this is old money thinking this isn’t real this is
51:32
old money you’ve been bypassed by crypto guys you’re crazy and so the vast
51:37
majority of workingclass people those who do have some money and those who don’t have some money are looking at
51:44
crypto as a way out and they’re thinking that this will kill the monetary system and the second part to that is the role
51:51
of private banks in terms of how people see money the combination of going in
51:56
debt by taking out loans as opposed to buying this crypto two questions one
52:03
theme they’re scramble and they’re trying to find a way out either via loans or via speculative assets like
52:10
crypto I guess question number one is is that just because crypto is something
52:15
that people invest in doesn’t mean that it makes the old monetary system null and void in fact I would suggest that
52:22
it’s built on top of it and the other thing is is that the idea of private Banks creating all this money this is
52:28
typically thrown at us in the same way and they use us as their reason why they’re buying crypto because after all
52:34
they’re deluding the value of the dollar and so forth but the role of private banks in lending I mean this is a policy
52:40
this is once again a value discussion am I correct in that I mean the reason for
52:45
private Banks as opposed to just having everything centralized through the government is a policy decision it’s a
52:51
value system that they would rather do and so when you take out private debt that’s real debt you got to pay back
52:57
when the government spends it on you that’s not the same thing can you can you elucidate on both of those points
53:04
well I think there’s been overblown Ambitions for cryptocurrencies they’re never going to
53:10
replace the currency of the state they’ve made some people very well of
53:15
and they’ve made many others desperately not well of and I guess what I would say
53:21
is that the vast majority of the working class in America not in a financial
53:27
position to speculate in financial markets per se and certainly not in cryptocurrency markets the data suggests
53:36
that they don’t even have very good pension enement buildups and savings the
53:42
V majority of Americans don’t have any savings and certainly the holling out of
53:47
the middle class over the last 30 years has meant that more and more Americans
53:52
are in the lower income category with very strain financial asset Holdings now
54:00
many of those people voted for Donald Trump and I think that most voting is on
54:05
our motion and when you then add an economic component to it it’s also built
54:11
around the mainstream fictions that we’ve talked about and going back to earlier on in our discussion one of the
54:18
reasons why I think mod monetary theory is valuable in my view it will provide
54:24
an increased quality to our democ racies because the sort of questions will ask
54:29
politicians and the sort of answers will’ll be prepared to accept change dramatically an M framework leads a
54:37
person to reject outright statements like we can’t afford that because we’ll
54:42
run out of money or you’ll have to pay higher taxes it forces us to change our
54:48
Focus to real resource availability and then that says well how are we going to
54:54
generate skills in the future F we need investment in Training Systems not that we can’t afford them but we need them so
55:01
there’s all these different questions and answers come up which would improve the way in which we interact with our
55:08
political CL but a lot of the voters who voted for Donal Trump rejected the
55:14
Democrats Quest For Joy caros kept saying let’s restore Joy well it’s very
55:20
hard to be joyful when you’re living at the bones living on the margin of
55:25
personal insol say you know forced by cost of living pressures and low
55:30
stagnant income wage growth and declining Services you forced to a very
55:36
media line and a very high pressured line so they bought the Trump message so
55:43
I’m not sure they’re the ones you’re referring to that are scrambling to look after their future in the face of what
55:49
Elon Musk and his mates might do to the bureaucracy my feeling is that they
55:55
still live in hope that Donald Trump will restore the industrial heartlands in The Lakes District Etc and will get
56:03
rid of illegal entrance to the country who are beding the Warfare system or
56:08
whatever you know all of those narratives right but I think what is very scary and this is taking an MNT
56:17
perspective is yes you might argue and hold the view that the spending on the
56:24
department of environment and spending on the Department of Education or those salaries are just total waste of money
56:32
but in saying that you will say that you prefer that spending to be elsewhere
56:37
because if you then say Oh we can do without all of that government spending then you’ve got a problem with what’s
56:44
going to replace it because if you don’t replace it then the level of economic activity and employment levels will fall
56:51
and unemployment will rise and property will rise so even if you don’t like what the government’s spending its money on
56:58
currently it is spending that money into the economy and that’s producing jobs now you might want those jobs to be
57:05
where they are but I see nothing in what musk and those characters are sort of
57:10
intimated to suggest that they’ve got the slightest macroeconomic understanding spending equals income and
57:17
if you cut that spending well then what are you going to replace it with because if you don’t replace it with something else more to your ideological preference
57:25
then you’re going to have a massive recession and I think that’s the missing part of the debate at the moment yeah I
57:31
can accept that a lot of Americans think that the Department of Education and the department of environment programs are a
57:38
waste of money and they don’t like them and they would prefer them not to be there but they’ve got to have something
57:43
to replace them otherwise you have a spending collapse and that’s the missing
57:48
link in the debate at the moment that’s what I think scary that those guys don’t really have a clue about macroeconomics
57:55
and is they’re going to feel very warm and fuzzy as they car up the public
58:00
sector and get rid of workers in the Bureau of Labor Statistics and Department of Employment and all of
58:07
those other things that they ha but I don’t see that they’ve got a plan to replace it other than to continue to fee
58:14
their mates in the military industrial conflict that’s my observation well I think that this kind of ties into the
58:21
second part of that question about private Banks because when there is if you look at the sectoral balances and we
58:27
I don’t want to dive too far down that Runway but the reality is is that that money’s got to come from somewhere and I
58:35
guess they’re looking over there at disposable income and they’re saying hey good way to get rid of all that excess
58:41
cash in people’s pockets is to make them go into private debt and the private banks are there to accommodate that you
58:48
know that is one way you know you got federal spending you’ve got Imports or exports I should say is another means of
58:55
of bringing cash into the equation and then you got private Banks people taking out loans to fill the void that
59:02
neoliberalism or the slash and burn approach puts them into one of the
59:07
successes of the neoliberal era which really became apparent as we entered the
59:12
global financial crisis was that the first strategy was to suppress the
59:18
ability of workers to enjoy wages growth in line with productivity growth now
59:24
during the 1960s and70s in almost every country the real wage the purchasing
59:29
power of the workers’s wage grew in proportion with productivity growths and productivity being the growth in output
59:36
per unit of input in other words we’re able to get much more output for a given
59:42
level of import that we could 20 years PR now the reason why real wages have to
59:47
grow in proportion to productivity growth which they really haven’t since the 1980s is because of realization
59:56
issues that if you’re producing more and more stuff then how are you going to
1:00:01
consume it and sell it and make profit from it so the first part of the story
1:00:06
was to suppress real wages growth and redistribute more cash to profits that
1:00:12
was the first part but then you had to work out well if you’re going to do that how are you going to ensure that those
1:00:18
redistributed profits are actually realized through sales of goods and services because ultimately the
1:00:24
capitalist class has to sell to make profits from the cplus any you otherwise they don’t and the characteristic
1:00:32
innovation of the neon liberal period was to solve that problem by
1:00:38
deregulating financial markets and abandoning Financial oversight of the
1:00:44
financial sector and letting the greed run wild and so they worked out that
1:00:49
well we don’t have to pay the workers to consume we can enslave them in debt and
1:00:54
make money off the two one by suppressing their wages growth and then
1:01:00
making money of interest rates on debt we push onto them and so you know in Australia in the
1:01:06
1980s you just get this massive invasion in the Daily Mail credit cards being
1:01:12
issued to foury olds and 10 year olds you know their Banks went crazy under D
1:01:17
regulation and what you saw in Australia was household debt as a percentage of disposable income in the 1990s was about
1:01:25
60% % approximately now it’s close to 200% and that was perfect because you
1:01:31
know the capitalists could suppress your wages growth but then still sell all the stuff through credit now the only
1:01:38
problem of that strategy which the GFC exposed is that it’s finite because
1:01:44
while the government can have as much debt as they ever wants it issues the currency the non-government sector can’t
1:01:50
and the non-government sector will eventually get to a point where it’s too precarious to keep borrowing and so then
1:01:56
I’ll stop spending at that point you have Financial recession bankruptcies
1:02:02
and all sorts of chaos so yeah for a short time you can fund growth through
1:02:09
private debt increases but that’s finite and is unsustainable and leads like the
1:02:15
GFC to crisis I think that’s what we saw in the Bill Clinton era as he slashed
1:02:20
and burned the government absolutely they had the goldilox economy because everybody was deep in debt and they were
1:02:27
all loving it until the bubble burst absolutely all around the world it happened absolutely well bill I want to
1:02:34
thank you for taking us through this I hope that my questions didn’t come off as stupid I was trying really hard to
1:02:41
ask what I thought were good questions is there anything that I missed that you think would be pertinent to this
1:02:46
conversation we could go WR die talk about this stuff but in interest of
1:02:52
brevity I think we’ll call it quits I think that the sort of issues you articulate are the issues that people
1:02:58
are talking about and I hope I provided some perspective on them for you thanks
1:03:04
very much absolutely all right folks my guest Bill Mitchell friend thank you so
1:03:10
much I appreciate you sir my name is Steve grumbine I’m the host of macro and cheese we are a very small nonprofit We
1:03:18
need your help it is a 501c3 in the United States and that means your
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donations are tax deductible please consider becoming a donor if you find the material that we produce worthwhile
1:03:30
and with that like to thank my guest one more time Bill Mitchell on behalf of macaron cheese and real progressives we
1:03:37
are out of
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