May 2024 S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 The MMT Podcast with Patricia Pino & Christian Reilly
- #186 Phil Armstrong: MMT & Austrian Economics (part 1)
- #185 Dirk Ehnts: The public debt is what we own, not what we owe
- #184 Steven Hail: What if people aren’t utility-maximising omniscient supercomputers?
- #183 Mark Diesendorf: The Path To An Ecologically Just Civilisation
- #182 Warren Mosler & Cory Doctorow In Conversation
- #181 Erik Dean: What’s Standing Between Us And A 15-Hour Work Week?
- #180 John T. Harvey: MMT, The UK, and Pound Sterling
- #178 Building An Economy For The People - Unpacking The Deficit Myth Part 7
- #177 L. Randall Wray: Money For Beginners - A Politician’s Guide
- #176 Dirk Ehnts: Ending The Polycrisis
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Money on the Left
- Aesthetics after Autonomy with Grant Kester
- Economic Democracy with Pavlina Tcherneva
- The Alternative with Nick Romeo
- How can novels help us think about money ... and maybe even save the planet? (Guest Lecture)
- Resisting Predatory Finance w/ Raúl Carrillo (Recovered Audio!)
- Modern Movie Theory: What We Do in the Shadows
- Criticism LTD w/ Matt Seybold
- Teaching Economics w/ Benjamin Wilson
- Monetary Foundations of Education w/ Larry Johnson
- Power to the People w/ Sandeep Vaheesan
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May 2024 S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Twitter Updates
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In the comments section at The Conversation, Professor Richard Holden does mention one fairly common criticism of MMT Accounting Identities as Behavioural Relationships I have addressed this in a previous Critic Engagement piece. Bill Mitchell has two blogs that addresses … Continue reading
MMT considers that the aggregate demand impact of interest rate changes are unclear and may not even be negative (for a rise) or positive (for a fall) depending on rather complex distributional factors. For example, remember that rising interest rates … Continue reading
I was involved in a conversation as to whether MMT was left-wing or not. My standard comment is that it is neither left- or right-wing it just is. Is, in this case, is a framework for describing and understanding the … Continue reading
The real point of departure for MMTers and textbook Keynesians is, I think, very much bound up in the loanable funds theory of the interest rate (the former rejecting and the latter accepting it). From that follow all sorts of … Continue reading
Part 1 Followup Part 2 Part 3 In a Conversation with Possum Part 1, I used the Accounting Identity for a closed system as if Australia for example was isolated from international trade and did not have open trade with … Continue reading