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Sunday, December 22, 2024

Stable Coins

 

STEM Tech bros figuring out a way to safely bypass the current Art degree administered inefficient and sometimes treacherous banking system…







Reserves in SLR

 

Have to watch to see if banking lobby again approaches a now new GOP government with this regulatory modification request… last time in 2021 nutty Pocahontas led Dems wouldn’t agree with it so we’ve remained susceptible to  the financial asset volatility Art degree monetarists can cause when they “inject some pumped in money!” in their characterizing deranged way they think Accounting abstractions are REAL…




If we can get this then there will be A LOT of reduction in realized volatility going forward while most participants will be still be paying the historic volatility prices…  

🤔


Saturday, December 21, 2024

Trade deficit

 

Good point by Setzer … if they stick Trump with the “debt ceiling!” he could end up going after all these foreign USD savings to fund his agenda…




Friday, December 20, 2024

Bond market now pricing in one 25 bps rate cut by Fed in 2025

 

Trump is never going to stand for this and will go to war with the Democrat Fed monetarist morons… 




Monday, December 16, 2024

Trade Isn't Money for Nothing — Stephanie Kelton

In MMT terms, imports are a real gain and exports are real loss, where "real" means "stuff" in the sense of resources used in production including and the labor that gets embedded. T

The importing country is getting commodities that the members of society in the exporting country are not able to enjoy in spite of having produced them, while the members of society of the importing country are enjoying those commodities instead of the actual producers. 

So, from a real point of view rather than a financial one, importers are getting a better deal in exchanging currency for actual goods — almost. Imports mean that the importer is receiving embedded labor as part of the deal which may affect employment in the importing country negatively Exporting has the opposite effect on labor by creating jobs. But these jobs are producing goods for others rather than the producer country.

Focusing on the financial aspect of the exchange obscures this. The Trump team seems to be overly focused on the financial aspect of international transactions.

On the other hand, unlike the US which is a net importer, China is a net exporter. The reason is that China's domestic demand is insufficient to absorb its productive potential resulting from it policy toward primary investment in productive capital. 

The export market serves to provide employment where the domestic market is lacking in demand to do so. Addressing this is is a current topic in China now, and the leadership is working on policy planning to reverse this condition by increasing domestic demand and thereby domestic consumption as a percentage of the economy. The goal is to do this without increasing moral hazard resulting from "easy money" and "hand outs" in form of "helicopter money."

Leaving out a lot of detail, China is a large and diverse country, so increasing demand domestically across the board in an equitable fashion is challenging. The conclusion is that this eludes central planning and policy that acts directly. The currency planning debate is focused on doing increasing domestic demand regionally and locally to take diversity and equity into account in a socialistic environment., e.g, without overly increasing inequality. China wants to avoid what has been happening in the West, with the top of the town profiting inordinately from policy.

The Lens
Trade Isn't Money for Nothing
Stephanie Kelton | Professor of Public Policy and Economics at Stony Brook University, formerly Democrats' chief economist on the staff of the U.S. Senate Budget Committee, and an economic adviser to the 2016 presidential campaign of Senator Bernie Sanders

Sunday, December 15, 2024

The Tyranny Of The Myths — NeilW

Economics is often described as the dismal science, but it’s more apt to call it the mystical science. For generations, the field has been ruled by aphorisms that sound profound but crumble under scrutiny. These sayings, like “tighten your belt in tough times” or “the market knows best,” are not neutral observations. They are myths crafted to justify particular views of how society should be run—views that often prioritise the interests of the few over the many.

Take monetarists, for example, with their obsession with controlling inflation through tight monetary policies. Their aphorisms reinforce the “sound money” myth, which ultimately serves financiers by ensuring that debt repayments hold more value than wages. Similarly, New Keynesians push the myth of the impartial, unelected central bank—a supposedly noble institution that must remain insulated from democratic accountability to protect us from our worst instincts. But making “correct decisions” for whom? These systems, by design, elevate the interests of those who already hold power and wealth.
A New Compass for a Modern Economy

In contrast, a more honest approach to economics would start from the premise that democracy can be trusted—that the people of a nation have the agency to shape its future via the ballot box. This is the bedrock of what I see as modern economic thought, encapsulated by a simple aphorism:

It is better to give poor people a job than rich people a bung...
New Wayland
The Tyranny Of The Myths
NeilW

See also

Keeper Keynes quote if you don't have it on file already.

Lars P. Syll’s Blog
Economics — a pseudo-analogy with physics
Lars P. Syll | Professor, Malmo University

Friday, December 13, 2024

Episode 9 (S2) of the Smith Family Manga is now available – the Prime Minister embarrasses himself —Bill Mitchell


Today (December 13, 2024), MMTed releases Episode 9 in the Second Season of our Manga series – The Smith Family and their Adventures with Money. Have a bit of fun with it while learning Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) and circulate it to those who you think will benefit.
William Mitchell — Modern Monetary Theory
Episode 9 (S2) of the Smith Family Manga is now available – the Prime Minister embarrasses himself
Bill Mitchell | Professor in Economics and Director of the Centre of Full Employment and Equity (CofFEE), at University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Argentina ends deficit for first time in 123 years…

 

Dour looking group taking a victory lap:



Their equity market index responding favorably….



But they have been drastically reducing their risk free rate at the same time:







Thursday, December 5, 2024

"The First Cause of Stability of Our Currency is the Concentration Camp": Central Banker Solidarity on the Road to Hitler's Czechoslovakian Gold — Pavlos Roufos

This is an article on the history and politics of central banking. As such it is important for understanding the details of MMT institutional analysis regarding banking in historical context.

There is also some fascinating information about Reichsbank President Hjalmar Schacht.

It also provides insight into how central bankers still think and operate. It's a club.

Notes on the Crisis
"The First Cause of Stability of Our Currency is the Concentration Camp" [Adolf Hitler]:
Central Banker Solidarity on the Road to Hitler's Czechoslovakian Gold

Pavlos Roufos

See also:

"The powers of financial capitalism had (a) far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent meetings and conferences. The apex of the systems was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world's central banks which were themselves private corporations. Each central bank... sought to dominate its government by its ability to control Treasury loans, to manipulate foreign exchanges, to influence the level of economic activity in the country, and to influence cooperative politicians by subsequent economic rewards in the business world." 
    
Carroll Quigley, Tragedy and Hope: A History of the World in Our Time. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1966, VII, page 324.

Carroll Quigley (1910-1977) | Professor of History at Georgetown University, member of the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), mentor to Bill Clinton.

Monday, December 2, 2024

Can BRICS Create a Multipolar World? — Fadhel Kaboub (MMT economist)

Decolonize to Dedollarize!

I’m often asked whether BRICS is going to be the game-changer that will disrupt the current geopolitical hierarchy, dedollarize the system, and create a new multipolar word. My position has always been that we can’t dedollarize a system that hasn’t been structurally decolonized yet, and that no new multipolar world can be born without Africa and the rest of the Global South being repositioned away from the bottom of the global hierarchy and at the center of a New International Economic Order.…
Global South Perspectives—Reflections & Analysis by Fadhel Kaboub
Can BRICS Create a Multipolar World?
Fadhel Kaboub, Associate Professor of economics at Denison University (on leave) and President of the Global Institute for Sustainable Prosperity. He currently serves as the Under-Secretary-General for Financing for Development at the Organisation of Educational Cooperation in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.He also held a number of research affiliations with the Levy Economics Institute, the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, the Economic Research Forum (Cairo), Power Shift Africa (Nairobi), and the Center for Strategic Studies on the Maghreb (Tunis). Fadhel is Tunisian-American MMT economist. Ph.D. in Economics & Social Science Consortium, 2006, University of Missouri - Kansas City. M.A. in Economics, May 2001, University of Missouri - Kansas City. B.S. in Economics, June 1999, with Distinction

Austerity cultist Kenneth Rogoff continues to bore us with his broken record — Bill Mitchell

His latest intervention (November 28, 2024) –
Europe’s Economy Is Stalling Out – was published by Project Syndicate, which regularly gives space to these nonsensical mainstream articles.

The simple proposition that Rogoff offers is:

"As Germany and France head into another year of near-zero growth, it is clear that Keynesian stimulus alone cannot pull them out of their current malaise. To regain the dynamism and flexibility needed to weather US President-elect Donald Trump’s tariffs, Europe’s largest economies must pursue far-reaching structural reforms."

And those structural reforms have to tackle the:
"… bloated and sclerotic welfare states to blame?"

Apparently, those that hold to the most basic macroeconomic rule that spending equals output and income and drives employment growth are “detached from reality”....
William Mitchell — Modern Monetary Theory
Austerity cultist Kenneth Rogoff continues to bore us with his broken record
Bill Mitchell | Professor in Economics and Director of the Centre of Full Employment and Equity (CofFEE), at University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia

Yes, Banknotes Are A Central Bank Liability — Brian Romanchuk

David Bholat recently wrote “How to Modernise Central Bank Balance Sheets: No Notes.” It is partly in response to this article. The idea is that banknotes (“dollar bills”/”pound notes” etc. issued by the government should not be classified as a liability, rather as some form of capital or possibly taken off the balance sheet. I have run into variants of this idea in the past (the stronger version being that all forms of the monetary base are not liabilities), and the root idea is that “monetary issue is good for the economy, so how can it be a liability?” Such a redefinition or removal of banknotes is either misleading or wrong.
Bond Economics
Brian Romanchuk

What Trump's Pick for Treasury Secretary Gets Right (and Wrong) about MMT — Stephanie Kelton

Scott Bessent is aware of MMT but he has a faulty understanding of what MMT says, Kelton argues. On the positive side, he is not clueless, like most others. For example, he gets that high rates are may be stimulative and low rates contractive, based on policy outcomes of the Bank of Japan.

The Lens
What Trump's Pick for Treasury Secretary Gets Right (and Wrong) about MMT
Stephanie Kelton | Professor of Public Policy and Economics at Stony Brook University, formerly Democrats' chief economist on the staff of the U.S. Senate Budget Committee, and an economic adviser to the 2016 presidential campaign of Senator Bernie Sanders