Monday, May 6, 2013

Randy Wray — By Jove, He’s Got It: Krugman (Finally) Adopts MMT (And so does Summers)


Victory lap.

Economonitor — Great Leap Forward
By Jove, He’s Got It: Krugman (Finally) Adopts MMT (And so does Summers)
L. Randall Wray | Professor of Economics, UMKC

6 comments:

paul meli said...

He's got it except for the mutually-exclusive thoughts still in his head with "it".

Tom Hickey said...

He has the essence of it. Now he needs to read Scott's paper, "Interest rates and fiscal sustainability." He is still hung up in monetarism.

The Rombach Report said...

"The sticking point has been “crowding out”—the idea that once we get beyond the liquidity trap and return to a more “normal” ISLM world, government deficits will push up interest rates. And that will then reduce private investment, which tends to lower economic growth. Higher interest rates plus lower growth means the government’s deficit and debt ratios grow beyond “sustainable” levels."

01/11/11 Ballooning Deficit May Not Be A Concern for Bonds: Rombach….. http://reut.rs/p24lML

Tom Hickey said...

The interest rates argument is silly as anything but a teaching aid about a possible but non-existent and over-simplified case. To argue from interest rates alone is just silly.

paul meli said...

Let's see...deficits fund profits...which is the prime motivation for investment...and this discourages investment. Wonderful logic.

Then, to make matters worse, in the real world deficits drive interest rates down (see past 30 years...and MMT).

Fail. We really are screwed.

Peter Drubetskoy said...

Krugman's sleek conversion to MMT is almost complete. Here he is today:
"This is not good news — or not unambiguously good news, at any rate. A deficit falling to probably less than 5 percent of GDP this year and well below that next year is MUCH TOO LOW for an economy whose private sector is still engaged in a vicious circle of deleveraging."