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Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) (Read 136014 times)
thegreatdivide
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Re: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
Reply #1215 - Sep 1st, 2025 at 11:50am
 
Steve Keen's latest video (mainstream economists beware....):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AkhzpHZM7Sc

Main points.

Traditional economic models have failed to predict or explain major financial crises. While I have, I challenge this mainstream view by focusing on the role of debt and money creation in driving economic instability.

Debt drives economic cycles - Private debt accumulation fuels booms and busts, not just government spending (alone).

Money is created by banks - Banks don’t just lend existing money; they create new money through credit.

Ignoring debt leads to blind spots - Overlooking private debt growth causes economists to miss warning signs of crises.


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Daves2017
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Re: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
Reply #1216 - Sep 2nd, 2025 at 8:18pm
 
thegreatdivide wrote on Sep 1st, 2025 at 11:50am:
Steve Keen's latest video (mainstream economists beware....):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AkhzpHZM7Sc

Main points.

Traditional economic models have failed to predict or explain major financial crises. While I have, I challenge this mainstream view by focusing on the role of debt and money creation in driving economic instability.

Debt drives economic cycles - Private debt accumulation fuels booms and busts, not just government spending (alone).

Money is created by banks - Banks don’t just lend existing money; they create new money through credit.

Ignoring debt leads to blind spots - Overlooking private debt growth causes economists to miss warning signs of crises.




Very interesting!

I’m really on a learning curve so enjoying everything I can soak up.

It was explained to me that with inflation sitting around 2 to 3  and bank earnings around 4 after you pay tax on your return the only people making money are the banks and government!

Is this really true?


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I don’t care about Australians who are living in poverty or their businesses have gone bankrupt or those working hard and still struggling to survive.

BAN THE BURKA!

That’s fair more important!

Ffs
 
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Daves2017
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Re: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
Reply #1217 - Sep 3rd, 2025 at 1:13pm
 
My bitcoin wallet has just recovered all loses  ( 13%) and enjoyed an 80%  increase on my investment .
Overnight.

Interesting times!
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I don’t care about Australians who are living in poverty or their businesses have gone bankrupt or those working hard and still struggling to survive.

BAN THE BURKA!

That’s fair more important!

Ffs
 
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thegreatdivide
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Re: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
Reply #1218 - Sep 3rd, 2025 at 1:48pm
 
Daves2017 wrote on Sep 2nd, 2025 at 8:18pm:
thegreatdivide wrote on Sep 1st, 2025 at 11:50am:
Steve Keen's latest video (mainstream economists beware....):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AkhzpHZM7Sc

Main points.

Traditional economic models have failed to predict or explain major financial crises. While I have, I challenge this mainstream view by focusing on the role of debt and money creation in driving economic instability.

Debt drives economic cycles - Private debt accumulation fuels booms and busts, not just government spending (alone).

Money is created by banks - Banks don’t just lend existing money; they create new money through credit.

Ignoring debt leads to blind spots - Overlooking private debt growth causes economists to miss warning signs of crises.




Very interesting!

I’m really on a learning curve so enjoying everything I can soak up.

It was explained to me that with inflation sitting around 2 to 3  and bank earnings around 4 after you pay tax on your return the only people making money are the banks and government!

Is this really true?


(google)

Banks typically profit more in a high interest rate environment because they can earn a wider net interest margin, which is the difference between the higher interest they receive on loans and the interest they pay on deposits. Conversely, in a low interest rate environment, banks' profit margins generally narrow, potentially reducing profitability. However, other factors like the volume of loans and deposits, and the rate at which banks pass on costs to customers, can also influence bank profitability.

So banks ALWAYS make money,  whereas their customers'  savings may go backwards in real terms , eg,  if term deposit rates are lower than the inflation rate.   

As for a currency-issuing government, it doesn't NEED to make money - which is the topic of this site.

See the next post re the madness of "governments making money".


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thegreatdivide
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Re: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
Reply #1219 - Sep 3rd, 2025 at 2:18pm
 
On the madness of forcing currency-issuing governments to borrow money from banks, bond traders and rich people.

https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/australia/fears-uk-is-heading-for-economic-oblivi...

(Daily Mail)

Fears UK is heading for 'economic oblivion' as government borrowing costs soar to 27-YEAR high

UK borrowing costs spiralled to a 27-year high today amid warnings that Labour is pushing Britain towards 'economic oblivion'.

Yields on 30-year UK bonds, known as gilts, leapt to just below 5.7 per cent, the highest level since 1998 in the wake of a reshuffle seen as sidelining Rachel Reeves.

Higher yields mean investors are charging more money to lend to the UK – adding to the Chancellor's Budget headache.

Markets are increasingly worried about Ms Reeves' ability to balance the books with some estimating the black hole could be as big as £50billion. Investors are betting that more bonds will need to be issued to finance further borrowing.

They are also alarmed about inflation running at an 18-month high and expected to climb towards 4 per cent.

A reshuffle bringing Left-wing economic advisers into the heart of Keir Starmer's Downing Street operation has fuelled fears of tax hikes.

Tory frontbencher Andrew Griffith said: 'Labour are leading us towards economic oblivion.'

Conservative MP Tom Tugendhat posted on X: 'We're broke. And if we don't decide how to tighten our belts it will be decided for us by those who refuse to lend us the money.'

'The moron premium (!) is definitely evident as the spread between thirty year gilt yields and bond yields of peers widened to a record,' said Mr Wilson.

Jane Foley, head of FX strategy at Rabobank, said: 'The UK is going to be vulnerable to fiscal risks as the Autumn budget approaches, which is likely to remain a headwind for sterling.'

Ms Reeves faces a perfect storm at the Budget, with a clamour for more spending from Labour MPs even as the economy slows down and interest rates on the UK's debt rise.


.....

As we can see, mainstream economics has led to economic dysfunction - and the associated political dysfunction which is ravaging the whole world at present....as the 'Left' wants more government spending and the Right wants lower taxes.

Tugendhat of course (he's in fact the "moron"), while claiming "the government is broke",  is no doubt comfortably ensconsed in a nice house on his MP's fat income, so reducing government spending won't bother him much.

How bad must the current economic and political dysfunction we are witnessing  all around the world become, before the penny drops:

Currency-issuing governments need to manage inflation, not "make money". 


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thegreatdivide
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Re: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
Reply #1220 - Sep 4th, 2025 at 10:21am
 
And bond markets are part of the mainstream 'taxpayer money' madness:

(Reuters)

Global bond markets stabilize, for now, as fiscal storm looms

LONDON/TOKYO/NEW YORK (Reuters) -A sense of calm settled on the world's biggest bond markets on Wednesday, but concerns about the fiscal health of major economies from Japan to Britain and the United States kept long-dated borrowing costs pinned near multi-year highs.

Worries about Japan's fiscal position were revived after Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's close aide said he intended to resign from his post, pushing Japan's 30-year government bond yield to a record high well above 3%.

That came a day after borrowing costs, which set the tone for lending rates for corporates and consumers, rose sharply in France and Britain while sterling tumbled, too.

A reshuffle of British Prime Minister Keir Starmer's top team of advisers on Monday renewed the focus on fiscal challenges given Britain's high levels of borrowing and slow growth. In France, Prime Minister Francois Bayrou is expected to lose a September 8 confidence vote he called in an attempt to win backing for an unpopular debt-reduction plan.

"There's a lot of renewed focus globally on the fiscal outlook and this seems to happen every couple of weeks. The UK and France were in focus yesterday," said Zachary Griffiths, head of investment grade and macro strategy at CreditSights in Charlotte, North Carolina.

"But I take comfort in the fact that in the U.S., the 10-year yield is pretty stable...and that suggests to me that things aren't falling apart. In general, I think the U.S. is actually performing rather well relative to other developed bond markets, at least from the 10-year point of view."

The U.S. Treasury market, considered the bedrock of the global financial system, has also seen pressure from worries about high debt, the impact of tariffs on inflation and concern about the independence of the Federal Reserve.

U.S. 30-year Treasury yields touched the closely-watched 5% level that investors reckon hurts risk assets for the first time since mid-July.

But the long bond yield backed off to trade 7.2 basis points lower on the day at 4.898% after data showed job openings fell in July, reflecting a softening labor market that reinforced expectations of an interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve later this month.


My comment: so a "softening job market" - meaning maintenance of, or worsening of un+underemployment,  is a good thing, allowing interest rates to fall?


The benchmark U.S. 10-year had risen to a one-week peak on Tuesday, but was down 7 basis points the following day at 4.207%.

Britain's 30-year gilt yields briefly touched their highest since 1998 at around 5.75% and were last down 7 basis points on the day as some stability returned to bond markets.

Speaking to a parliamentary committee on Wednesday, Bank of England chief Andrew Bailey said it was important not to put too much emphasis on 30-year borrowing costs as such long-dated bonds are not currently being used to raise funds.

Euro-area bond yields fell too, although French 30-year borrowing costs held close to their highest levels since 2009 and German equivalents were near 14-year peaks.

"The economic reforms needed to really cover increasing debt are lacking, and the capital market sees that," Deutsche Bank CEO Christian Sewing said at a conference on Wednesday, referring to the selloff in long-dated bonds.    

PRESSURE EVERYWHERE

Rising yields are a headache for governments that face higher spending needs and already hefty debt-servicing costs, just as they prepare to issue more bonds and face political obstacles to their efforts to get budget deficits down.

Britain said on Wednesday it would deliver its budget on November 26, as investors continue to speculate about tax rises that could dampen economic growth.

Analysts said fears the U.S. government may have to give up revenue from tariffs if they are deemed illegal have added to the pressure in the Treasury market.

"The current dynamic is further evidence that investor appetite for ultra-long paper clearly waned, not only from private investors but also from institutional players who typically provide a more stable demand base for this segment," said Dario Messi, head of fixed income research at Julius Baer.

A hefty pace of bond sales this week had also pressured bond markets on Tuesday, analysts said.

Fred Repton, portfolio manager at Neuberger, said Tuesday marked a record day for European bond sales just after investors had ramped up their bets on Fed rate cuts.

In the United States, at least 27 issuers tapped the high-grade corporate bond market on Tuesday, seizing on near-record tight borrowing costs and getting ahead of any market volatility sparked by the Fed's policy meeting later this month.

While that was likely a key driver of Tuesday's selloff, "market participants are again focused on deficits and political risk, and this theme is likely to continue far into the year," Repton said.

.......

Bond traders determinng the fate of nations.

Deplorable.






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thegreatdivide
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Re: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
Reply #1221 - Sep 4th, 2025 at 10:25am
 
Daves2017 wrote on Sep 3rd, 2025 at 1:13pm:
My bitcoin wallet has just recovered all loses  ( 13%) and enjoyed an 80%  increase on my investment .
Overnight.

Interesting times!


..."money" created out of thin air, as in a ponzi scheme, bearing no relation to the real economy.
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Daves2017
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Re: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
Reply #1222 - Sep 4th, 2025 at 4:35pm
 
Cryptocurrency we both agree is pure speculation .

But to a  much lesser degree so is the housing market and sharemarkets .

I find it all very interesting and want to understand more.

Why is Australia currency ( money) worth anything if it is just printed paper?

And gold? Why is that rock worth anything?

Does it only exist on pure speculation??
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I don’t care about Australians who are living in poverty or their businesses have gone bankrupt or those working hard and still struggling to survive.

BAN THE BURKA!

That’s fair more important!

Ffs
 
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Daves2017
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Re: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
Reply #1223 - Sep 5th, 2025 at 12:54pm
 
Apparently and I quote / paraphrase “ you bailed out of this debate “

Yet I have the last two posts in?

Please define your definition of bailing out?


I suggest it might be…”laughable “……
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I don’t care about Australians who are living in poverty or their businesses have gone bankrupt or those working hard and still struggling to survive.

BAN THE BURKA!

That’s fair more important!

Ffs
 
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thegreatdivide
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Re: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
Reply #1224 - Sep 6th, 2025 at 6:46pm
 
Daves2017 wrote on Sep 4th, 2025 at 4:35pm:
Cryptocurrency we both agree is pure speculation .

But to a  much lesser degree so is the housing market and sharemarkets .

I find it all very interesting and want to understand more.

Why is Australia currency ( money) worth anything if it is just printed paper?


Australian currency is backed by the productive capacity of the Australian economy.

Housing and share markets are said to be (in part)  'speculative' in the short term, ie their monetary value rises  and falls, as oppsed to their intrinsic -or utility - value, so  houses and listed companies (on average)  maintain value in the long term ie beyond  the usual business 'cycles', because  they maintain real utility value.

And of course investment in companies which  engender technological  advances and hence real productivity increases in the real economy can make investors very rich indeed. 

(Insanely rich; today I read  somewhere "Tesla pay package offer could make Elon Musk world's first trillionaire".  (Musk of course began the EV manufacturing revolution, necessary for global  transition to a green economy). 

Quote:
And gold? Why is that rock worth anything?


Because men have admired it forever as a sign of wealth, and hence - more recently- as a protection against government mismanagement of fiat currencies, the source of value of which the public don't understand.

eg, if the US government ended up destroying  the productive capacity of the US economy, your gold would be useless for purchasing  the necessities of life.

Quote:
Does (gold) only exist on pure speculation??


Unlike crypto currencies, gold jewelry is pretty....with romantic associations, ie, it is 'valuable'.

And central bankers indoctrinated  with the mainstream 'balanced government budget' delusion are currently buying gold because Trump is making them nervous about the value of the US dollar - the world's reserve currrency after WW2.  Hence gold is currently attracting delusional central bankers as well as romantics....and speculators.   

Of course  hunter-gatherers (with only pre ore-smelting technology) who survived on nature's bounty, saw no value in gold , and ignored it. They thought those stupid  white fellas fighting over rocks were mad....

(re you "bailing out of the debate":  you, along with bobby - who HAS bailed out, ceased to comment on the several posts I subsequently posted in this thread.

I suppose coming back several days later (after a prompt) with the usual questions about the 'value' of money, is better than just being content to remain ensconced in the usual ignorance displayed by the public).   
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thegreatdivide
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Re: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
Reply #1225 - Sep 6th, 2025 at 7:09pm
 
Meanwhile, surprise-surprise,  the new Canadian PM, Carney - an ex-central banker, and supposedly a "progressive" politician like Trudeau whom he replaced before the recent election,  is now urging "austerity" onto the hapless Canadian electorate:

(The Daily Digest)

Austerity is coming to Canada under the Carney government

The article makes painful reading.

Of course those living in poverty and/or financially oppressed by cost-of-living pressures will be the ones subjected to government 'austerity', as Carney attempts to keep the bond vigilantes at bay - just as PM Starmer in the UK, and France and other countries , are also seeing their popularity  plummet, for the same reasons.

Mainstream economic orthodoxy will destroy democracy....

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Daves2017
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Re: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
Reply #1226 - Sep 7th, 2025 at 10:49am
 
I simply don’t have the time to view every thread particularly when I have the last post in it.

Rather than “bailing “ I simply don’t find it interesting to reply to myself as you seem to think I should?

You note gold is valuable because it’s “ pretty “.

I suggest that for myself the value I find in crypto is entertainment.

I enjoy watching the market and I think it’s worth the investment purely for the entertainment value as well as learning something completely new and different to the old world value system you are  fascinated with.
Ha
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I don’t care about Australians who are living in poverty or their businesses have gone bankrupt or those working hard and still struggling to survive.

BAN THE BURKA!

That’s fair more important!

Ffs
 
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thegreatdivide
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Re: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
Reply #1227 - Sep 7th, 2025 at 2:37pm
 
Daves2017 wrote on Sep 7th, 2025 at 10:49am:
I simply don’t have the time to view every thread particularly when I have the last post in it.

Rather than “bailing “ I simply don’t find it interesting to reply to myself as you seem to think I should?

You note gold is valuable because it’s “ pretty “.

I suggest that for myself the value I find in crypto is entertainment.

I enjoy watching the market and I think it’s worth the investment purely for the entertainment value as well as learning something completely new and different to the old world value system you are  fascinated with.
Ha


So...you aren't interested in a critique of mainstream economics -  and its significance for well-functioning democracy -  versus an alternative (for something "new and different"...),  namely, an 'economy which works for all'.

Got it.

You came here and confirmed that crypto currency is pure speculation.

Good.

Now go back to being 'entertained' watching your bitcoin account rise and fall.....





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thegreatdivide
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Re: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
Reply #1228 - Sep 8th, 2025 at 12:13pm
 
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/265909749_Can_Banks_Individually_Create...

Can Banks Individually Create Money Out of Nothing? – The Theories and the Empirical Evidence

This paper presents the first empirical evidence in the history of banking on the question whether banks can create money out of nothing. The banking crisis has revived interest in this issue, but it remains unsettled.

Three hypotheses are recognised in the literature: 
(a)According to the financial intermediation theory of banking, banks are merely intermediaries like other non-bank financial institutions, collecting deposits that are then lent out.
(b)According to the fractional reserve theory of banking, individual banks are mere financial intermediaries that cannot create money, but collectively they end up creating money through systemic interaction.
(c)A third theory maintains that each individual bank has the power to create money ‘out of nothing’ and does so when it extends credit (the credit creation theory of banking).

The question which of the hypotheses is correct has far-reaching implications for research and policy.*** Surprisingly, despite the longstanding controversy, until now no empirical study has attempted to do so. This is the contribution of the present paper.

An empirical test is conducted, whereby money is borrowed from a cooperating bank, while its internal records are being monitored, to establish whether in the process of making the loan available to the borrower, the bank transfers these funds from other accounts within or outside the bank, or whether they are newly created. This study establishes for the first time empirically that banks individually create money out of nothing.
(my edit: when credit-worthy  customers seek and are granted loans, in line with the bank's risk- assessment rules).   

*** including the very sustainability of democracy...
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« Last Edit: Sep 8th, 2025 at 12:28pm by thegreatdivide »  
 
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aquascoot
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Re: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
Reply #1229 - Sep 8th, 2025 at 1:25pm
 
It would have to be (c)

They certainly have debts (which is an asset on the bank ledger) far far in excess of what some thrifty old grandma has in a term deposit.

When a bank lends a homeowner 1million dollars, they do create that money out of thin air.

They have an asset on terms of the loan and a liability in terms of the 1 million that is transferred to the vendor of the property.

It's why my essential argument that government spending hurts the poor and enriches the rich is correct.

Take the USA in 2003. They want to destroy Iraq and then rebuild it .
H
Let's say that costs 2 trillion dollars.

Do they raise taxes to balance the books or just print it.

The American public would never vote for higher taxes , so they print it .

The rich , the hallibuttons and Black Rock make a killing.

The poor get an economy where the interest payments on the debt are now higher then military spending and Medicare combined.

And what happens when you pump say 1 trillion into an economy as Australia did during covid.
Did they raise my taxes to pay for it.
Nope
My tax rate has gone down

The poor save none of it.

But if you own assets, shares or property, that ,money eventually comes to rest there.

Enriching the rich.


Government spending which is not paid for thru taxation pushes up asset prices.
It has to

And who own assets.THE RICH

poor people should be demanding an end to government spending
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