Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Modern Money & Public Purpose 2: Governments Are Not Households — Warren Mosler and Stephanie Kelton



Modern Money & Public Purpose 2: Governments Are Not Households

Warren Mosler and Stephanie Kelton

11 comments:

PeterP said...

I have been there but i rewatched, very good stuff.

Matt Franko said...

Somebody has got to be more selective on which video frame is chosen for the title view on these videos.... this is not exactly a flattering image of Ms Kelton here... c'mon folks .. rsp,

Anonymous said...
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Geoff said...

Warren can be a little brief on his blog, but he certainly didn't hold back here! Well done.

Matt Franko said...

I would point out that what Warren and Stephanie point out here directly contradicts a major part of the platforms of the 2 current major party candidates for US President (one of which is the current US President)

In case anyone didn't notice ;)

rsp,

wilwon32 said...

Stephanie and Warren did an excellent job wrt examples offered; the q&a session seemed to indicate that some attendees got it.

paul meli said...

Just ran across this:

http://www.multiplier-effect.org/?p=6018

More kvetching over inter-generational debt.

"We're leaving a massive debt burden to our grandchildren".

Nick Rowe is beside himself with frustration that we ordinary folks don't get his brilliant mind. He settled this question ages ago!!! dammit.

Only funerals can save us.

Anonymous said...

Paul, I think this is an intereting comment by Brad DeLong (in response to Nick Rowe):

"Seems to me it would be much more productive right now to worry about how do we maintain normal levels of net investment in a high government debt post-interest rate normalization environment than to propose sending the economy back into recession in order to reduce government debt accumulation. Recession and high unemployment in the short- and medium-run are problems. Low investment in the medium- and long-run are problems. Government debt is a tool to avoid the first and a source of risk of the second. But it is better to keep your mind focused on the things that are real problems".

http://delong.typepad.com/sdj/2012/10/the-intergenerational-burden-of-the-debt-nick-rowe-tempts-fate-weblogging.html

geerussell said...

Unrelated but speaking of presentations... any MMT'ers out there working in a high school or with high school aged kids? Would be awesome to see team MMT make some noise in this thing.

High School Fed Challenge

paul meli said...

"any MMT'ers out there working in a high school or with high school aged kids? Would be awesome to see team MMT make some noise in this thing."

Young people are where the opportunities lie.

My stepson is 27, and seemed to get the MMT ideas right away when I ran it by him. He's on board. It may have helped that I used a hand-drawn diagram to get the point across as I explained what was going on..

When he tried to explain it to his Dad, a life-long liberal, they almost came to blows.

Matt Franko said...

"Recession and high unemployment in the short- and medium-run are problems. Low investment in the medium- and long-run are problems. Government debt is a tool to avoid the first and a source of risk of the second."

What is this "crowding out"?