An economics, investment, trading and policy blog with a focus on Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). We seek the truth, avoid the mainstream and are virulently anti-neoliberalism.
The graphic which shows private real economy debt going away ( slope negative slanted downwards to the right ) with the government debt going up ( same slope but positive slanted upwards to right ) ...
the government spending is the means by which private debt has been reduced.
everything else is mumbo jumbo you are turning Japanese and all that.
Bernanke is smarter than this guy, though is a hotter seat.
They just need to bail to a different tune and not allow the double dip or quadruple dip.
Googleheim, Your claim that “government spending is the means by which private debt has been reduced” is not quite right – the word “the” should be replaced with “a”. In other words govt spending (i.e. vertical money or central bank money) does reduce private sector debts, but also the private sector creates its own debt and it’s own money (horizontal money or commercial bank created money), which incidentally nets to nothing. I assume it’s the latter to which Steve Keen refers, so I think he’s got a point.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThe graphic which shows private real economy debt going away ( slope negative slanted downwards to the right ) with the government debt going up ( same slope but positive slanted upwards to right ) ...
ReplyDeletethe government spending is the means by which private debt has been reduced.
everything else is mumbo jumbo you are turning Japanese and all that.
Bernanke is smarter than this guy, though is a hotter seat.
They just need to bail to a different tune and not allow the double dip or quadruple dip.
give me a break
Googleheim, Your claim that “government spending is the means by which private debt has been reduced” is not quite right – the word “the” should be replaced with “a”. In other words govt spending (i.e. vertical money or central bank money) does reduce private sector debts, but also the private sector creates its own debt and it’s own money (horizontal money or commercial bank created money), which incidentally nets to nothing. I assume it’s the latter to which Steve Keen refers, so I think he’s got a point.
ReplyDeleteHi Musgrave,
ReplyDeleteyou said :
"I assume it’s the latter to which Steve Keen refers, so I think he’s got a point."
Who is "he" that has a point ?
Keen or me ?
I am well pointless of course.