Showing posts with label external balance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label external balance. Show all posts

Monday, January 25, 2016

Bill Mitchell — Exchange rate movements and exports

There was an article a few weeks ago purporting to show that public deficit expansion (increased net public spending) has never worked. I won’t link to the article because I would not want the magazine to get any advertising revenue via my blog and also because, frankly, the article is one of those reinvent history efforts – along the lines of when the facts do not align with theory the way forward is to just make up some new facts and deny what actually happened. But one of the examples use to justify the claim “Keynesian deficit spending … over and over again … has not worked” is the Ireland and Denmark experience in the 1980s when these nations “reduced their government budget deficits, which according to Keynesian theory should have depressed the economy. But on the contrary, the economies did particularly well”. This example is often used these days to justify the claim that deficit spending does not promote growth and fiscal austerity does not damage growth. However, no ‘Keynesian’ theory I know suggests that cutting the fiscal deficit will ‘depress’ the economy. It all depends … and that is what this article (like all the others that use this example) fails to recognise or admit. It bears also on current events in Canada and Argentina, which are demonstrating some other interesting facets of macroeconomics.…
Bill Mitchell – billy blog
Exchange rate movements and exports
Bill Mitchell | Professor in Economics and Director of the Centre of Full Employment and Equity (CofFEE), at University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia

Friday, January 31, 2014

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Ramanan — The Monetary Economics Of Sovereign Government Rating


In this post, I will attempt to describe the dynamics of defaults and restructurings by going through some monetary economics of open economies.
Read it at The Case of Concerted Action
The Monetary Economics Of Sovereign Government Rating
by Ramanan

Ramanan does publish comments at his place, and this is really a seminal post, so have it here.