Wednesday, June 3, 2020

Comments On John Quiggin's "Motte and Bailey" Complaint — Brian Romanchuk

 Brian writes: The rest of the John Quiggin article discusses how MMT is a continuation of existing Keynesian theory (at least Old and Post-Keynesian theory). Note that this is actually what MMTers themselves have said.
I think it is necessary to emphasize here that "continuation" doesn't mean just "repetition," lest anyone miss it. MMT economists have observed the principle, "Imitate and innovate." MMT is not just a rehash.

While MMT economists draw on the past and develop their position based on it, at last to some extent, MMT economists would also point to other influences such as institutionalism and a great deal of MMT has to do with understanding institutional arrangements that affect economics, money & banking, and finance. This is a contribution, even though it has been mentioned in the past by others, James Tobin and Hyman Minsky come to mind, but not in the same comprehensive way as the basis for a macroeconomic theory.

Not only have MMT economists brought new material to the discussion but also elaborated a synthesis of old and new that provides a new lens through which to view economics and finance, which are joined at the hip according to MMT. The juncture between economics and finance is accounting and money & banking. Even if one argues that there is nothing "new" in MMT, the synthesis they elaborate and the lens it makes available are significant innovations.

Warren Mosler would observe further that he was the first to point out that currency sovereigns have a monopoly on the currency in a floating rate system, which enables them to set the "own rate" (policy rate) and to set the value of the currency through the prices they pay in the marketplace. 

For example, a job guarantee that sets the compensation for an hour of unskilled labor would establish a real anchor for the currency in terms of units of labor time (hourly rate) and labor power (unskilled).

I also think that John Quiggin "doth protest too much" about "vulgar MMT." (I have concerns here, too, and try to make corrections from time to time on social media, but that hole is just too big to plug. Also considerable background is needed to capture the nuance.)

But kudos for John Quiggin for acknowledging MMT economists actual contributions. Another sign of progress.

2 comments:

Matt Franko said...

"Mosler would observe further that he was the first to point out that currency sovereigns have a monopoly on the currency in a floating rate system, which enables them to set the "own rate" (policy rate) and to set the value of the currency through the prices they pay in the marketplace. "

He says its more than that... (he says) it includes govt subordination of said price setting authority to the govt fiscal agent in the regulated Depository system ...

he says "all prices are a function of what government pays for things and what govt lets their banks lend against things..."

The price that banks can assign to their (risk assets + non-risk assets) is a government dictated fixed ratio against bank retained earnings aka Bank Capital....

Matt Franko said...

“James Tobin and Hyman Minsky “

They are both dead... nothing will come of MMT until the originators are dead...

survivors will synthesize MMT into a new Theory...

This is the way the methodology they are using works...

Scientific method doesn’t work that way...

What appears as the free will choice is:

1 adjust method to science and perhaps get somewhere

or

2 wait to die and have survivors synthesize your stuff into a new Theory which will still come up short because part of the existing crap will still be in there...