Showing posts with label financial illiteracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label financial illiteracy. Show all posts

Thursday, December 6, 2018

UK Labour’s Fiscal Credibility Rule: Neoliberal Orthodoxy Dies Hard — Joe Emersberger interviews Bill Mitchell


MMT!

The problem is that when you just define these fiscal aggregates within their own financial terms you’re really losing the purpose and meaning of fiscal policy. The purpose of fiscal policy isn’t to achieve any particular fiscal outcome whether it be a balanced fiscal position, or a deficit of whatever percent or even a surplus of whatever percent. The purpose of fiscal policy as a tool is to advance wellbeing in the economy, to engage in government spending programs which are consistent with its electoral remit, and taxation to manage total expenditure in the non-government sector so that there is space – and what I mean by “space” is real resource space – for the government to basically buy those resources and conduct its programs. Taxation creates that space by depriving the non-government sector of the use of resources...
This is the purpose of fiscal policy. In a cyclical sense – in other words in the variation of economic activity – fiscal policy should play a very important role in being able to offset any fluctuations in non-government spending that would either cause unemployment if it were not offset, or would drive inflation if it were not offset. Fiscal policy has to be flexible enough to allow the government to meet that purpose. If you start imposing rules that are independent of purpose then you are likely to end up not meeting that purpose but also failing to meet your rules....
Excellent!

Counterpunch
UK Labour’s Fiscal Credibility Rule: Neoliberal Orthodoxy Dies Hard
Joe Emersberger interviews economics professor Bill Mitchell about the British Labour party’s fiscal credibility rule

See also

More MMT.

Arcade
The Unheard-of Center: Critique after Modern Monetary Theory
Scott Ferguson | Associate Professor and co-director of the Film & New Media Studies Track in the Department of Humanities & Cultural Studies at the University of South Florida. a Research Scholar at the Global Institute for Sustainable Prosperity), co-founder of the Modern Money Network: Humanities Division), and co-host of the Money on the Left podcast