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.
did she mention sectoral balances? "the government can't run out of money" just isn't effective with most people. Everyone understands the govt can print money.
People need to understand that it's simply impossible to for everyone to earn more than they spend simultaneously.
She and other will occasionally mention the sectoral balances and how one person's surplus is another deficit. But they never seem to really stress it.
It's near universally accepted that a government surplus is a good thing. Only a handful of people understand that government sustained govt surpluses would bankrupt the private sector.
The first principle in interviews is to talk about what's actually important rather than respond to the what interviewer thinks is important because interviewers are seldom able to distinguish the real priorities. And you need canned answers that you repeat over and over. It's called messaging.
Why do these left-wing people keep using less than flattering title frame images of Stephanie in their videos they post?
ReplyDeleteHey left-wing morons from Detroit here: fyi you get to select which specific frame is depicted as the title image...
did she mention sectoral balances? "the government can't run out of money" just isn't effective with most people. Everyone understands the govt can print money.
ReplyDeletePeople need to understand that it's simply impossible to for everyone to earn more than they spend simultaneously.
She and other will occasionally mention the sectoral balances and how one person's surplus is another deficit. But they never seem to really stress it.
It's near universally accepted that a government surplus is a good thing. Only a handful of people understand that government sustained govt surpluses would bankrupt the private sector.
The first principle in interviews is to talk about what's actually important rather than respond to the what interviewer thinks is important because interviewers are seldom able to distinguish the real priorities. And you need canned answers that you repeat over and over. It's called messaging.
ReplyDelete