Stephanie Kelton: The big myth of government deficits | TED

Ғылым және технология

Government deficits have gotten a bad rap, says economist Stephanie Kelton. In this groundbreaking talk, she makes the case to stop looking at government spending as a path towards frightening piles of debt, but rather as a financial contribution to the things that matter -- like health care, education, infrastructure and beyond. "We have the resources we need to begin repairing our broken systems," Kelton says. "But we have to believe it's possible."
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Пікірлер: 2 900

  • @garrenwork2924
    @garrenwork29242 жыл бұрын

    Can we get an update Ted talk with her explaining inflation?

  • @MrMgrPL

    @MrMgrPL

    Жыл бұрын

    Inflation strikes poor people more that rich. She don't look poor, that why she promotes polisy that ingore inflation.

  • @christopherklotz2058

    @christopherklotz2058

    Жыл бұрын

    you already know that she will say her theory is sound and blame someone or something else.

  • @FaceWhatIs

    @FaceWhatIs

    Жыл бұрын

    10:30 Ignoring inflation is why she would say we should focus on keeping inflation in check?

  • @Kazakor

    @Kazakor

    Жыл бұрын

    She explained inflation and how it happens. An imbalance in demand creates an imbalance in supply, which drives up prices. We didn’t cause inflation by keeping people employed, fed and housed; we caused inflation by refusing to tax excess capital out of the economy. Inflation is caused when people with excess spendable income buy luxuries, not when people living paycheck-to-paycheck buy food. Spending on infrastructure, for example, can increase economic growth, which then pays for the spending. Spending on another aircraft carrier doesn’t stimulate economic growth, in the long run, but does contribute to inflation by driving up demand for something that doesn’t equally drive growth.

  • @MrMgrPL

    @MrMgrPL

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Kazakor No, printing money drives inflation, as surplus of money in circulation diminishes its value. Her proposal will be detrimental do low and middle class. How that printed money gets in to economy is also very important.

  • @charlesmunson3232
    @charlesmunson32329 ай бұрын

    Sure is tough to buy a house or even pay rent nowadays. Driving up asset prices through inflation is a terribly regressive system, i guess we wont call it a tax though.

  • @richardhintze1706

    @richardhintze1706

    7 ай бұрын

    MMT is a pipe dream. A govt that prints money is a cog in the wheel of the global economy, not the basis of the global economy. Every time the treasury “prints” dollars, the value of the dollar drops. Then we all have to accumulate more of them to retain buying power. The theory that you can create currency without harming the economy relying on it is false. All you’re doing is decreasing the relative value. The economy hasn’t grown, it has merely been scaled up, relatively. An economy only grows when new products and services are added. This activity creates jobs and increases the value of resources. Printing money only masks the true value. Govt doesn’t create anything. It is only a drain on the economy.

  • @btcberg3615

    @btcberg3615

    2 ай бұрын

    BITCOIN

  • @sunnydisinfectant

    @sunnydisinfectant

    3 күн бұрын

    Inflation is a supply/demand issue, with too many people trying to buy the same goods and services. If the additional money printed by the central bank is only spent on investments in infrastructure, rather than consumerism style spending like the Covid cheques, then inflation wouldn't be affected much

  • @stevewarden3374
    @stevewarden3374 Жыл бұрын

    apparently money does grow on trees! or on computers.

  • @mdaniels6311

    @mdaniels6311

    7 күн бұрын

    Where else would it grow?

  • @wertywerrtyson5529
    @wertywerrtyson552910 ай бұрын

    She says inflation is the real limit. I guess that limit got hit pretty fast…having this talk right before the biggest inflation period since the 70s 😂

  • @mx248

    @mx248

    10 ай бұрын

    Not to mention the highest debt-to-GDP ratio since the end of the Second World War! 😱

  • @dcj3831

    @dcj3831

    8 ай бұрын

    @newsoul.9 The very definition of inflation is too much currency chasing too few goods.....Physical resources. Your comment is a distinction without a difference.

  • @achimwokeschtla7582

    @achimwokeschtla7582

    2 ай бұрын

    @@dcj3831: Inflation has very little to do with how much money is out there. Inflation rises when supply is smaller than demand. Inflation shrinks when supply is bigger than demand. That’s all there is to it. If supply is limited and demand is bigger than supply the greed of the seller rises the prices. Very simple. Instead of raising interest rates the government could tax the greedy to reduce the inflation. That would be the more intelligent way to keep inflation in check.

  • @Zelousfear

    @Zelousfear

    2 ай бұрын

    ​​​@newsoul.9no, literally she says inflation is the limit on spending. @10:30

  • @achimwokeschtla7582

    @achimwokeschtla7582

    2 ай бұрын

    @@dcj3831 : „Newsoul“ is right! And you are basically saying the same thing without realizing it. Inflation is what needs to be held at around 2% . The available resources (human work force and materials) are the limitation of growth and therefore the amount of circulating money needs to be in balance with that. Even if the amount would be above that, as long as its parked on savings accounts inflation doesn’t get affected.

  • @ronobrien7187
    @ronobrien71879 ай бұрын

    Not long after she spoke about government's need to control inflation, we had the highest rate of inflation in 40 years.

  • @sotaque

    @sotaque

    9 ай бұрын

    Due mainly to price gauging in the private sector and not government spending.

  • @ronobrien7187

    @ronobrien7187

    9 ай бұрын

    @@sotaquePrice gauging? Dumping billions in currency into the M1 is a large contributing factor in inflation.

  • @sotaque

    @sotaque

    9 ай бұрын

    @@ronobrien7187 no it wasn't. It was mainly price gouging and disrupted global logistics from the pandemic, which placed added pressure on the demand side. Her argument is completely correct.

  • @ronobrien7187

    @ronobrien7187

    9 ай бұрын

    @@sotaque So you're claiming that increasing M1 supply has no effect on inflation? You might want to look back in history, in particular Germany after WWI.

  • @sotaque

    @sotaque

    9 ай бұрын

    @@ronobrien7187 Not since we officially dropped the "gold standard" in 1973 (NIxon), which is what she mentioned in the TED talk at about the 4 minute mark.

  • @daviddempsay4930
    @daviddempsay493010 ай бұрын

    When someone dismisses a question by saying, "It's the wrong question" (2:55) what that person is really saying is, "You are asking a question that I don't want to answer, therefore you are wrong for asking it." One of the first thing students will be told in an introductory economics class is that "There is no such thing as a free lunch." The notion of something for nothing is a fallacy, and deficits will ultimately have to be paid back in some way; therefore, questions as to how repayments will be made are legitimate and should be fully addressed.

  • @Rob-fx2dw

    @Rob-fx2dw

    10 ай бұрын

    Yes all deficits must be paid back as they are when the Treasury Bonds that are initially sold to fund borrowing that in turn fills the shortfall in the budget mature and are paid out. If they were not paid out nobody would have bought them in the first place.

  • @SolidAir54321

    @SolidAir54321

    9 ай бұрын

    This is the basic misunderstanding. The national debt and the deficits do not have to be paid back. It's more about increasing and decreasing the money supply when necessary. The national debt is really just a record of how much money we've created. Here's my little analogy. Say that you and I are on an island and we each have $100. That's the whole economy. Now I say I like your shoes and would you like to sell them. You say OK and sell them to me for $10. Then you say you'd like a coconut but your back hurts and can't climb the tree to get one so will I do it for you. You say you'll pay me $20. So I say OK and climb the tree and get you a coconut. That's all well and good. Now you decide that you don't need your car anymore and ask me would I like to buy it? I say OK I'd like it. How much? you say $2000. I say not only don't I have $2000 but there isn't $2000 in the whole economy so it's not possible. But I have an idea. On a piece of paper I'll write an IOU for $2000 and give it to you for the car. Then each time I climb the tree to get a coconut for you we'll scratch $20 off of the IOU. Obviously the IOU is the same thing as money and I just created it. But the real point is, there needs to be enough money in the economy to accommodate all the transactions that people need to do. And the size of the economy can grow for a number of reasons. For one, the population grows. Also if it's reported that the GDP has grown say 3% over last year then that means there's more productivity and more transactions. So the government (or FED, whatever) needs to increase the money supply perhaps permanently. The government is not so worried about the money it created. The government is primarily concerned with whether we're being as productive as we can be or whether there's not enough production causing inflation. It just adjusts the money supply to stay within inflationary or deflationary spirals or to get us out of a recession or to mitigate a crisis. So as long as productivity increases over time the money supply needs to increase to accommodate it. So we run a deficit to do this. And naturally we will run deficits more often than surpluses. (As Robert Reich likes to say, this is why deficits don't matter except as related to GDP.) The national debt is not really a debt that needs to be paid back. It's just a record of how much money we created and that we needed to create. Yes we pay interest on the debt, but again, we could just create more money to pay that. The concern would not be that we're in debt even further and have to pay back even more. The concern would be that we're increasing the money supply too much and causing inflation.

  • @daviddempsay4930

    @daviddempsay4930

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@SolidAir54321 For many years I have heard the idea that "deficits don't matter" bandied about, but this notion doesn't survive scrutiny when some very obvious questions are asked. For example: Do we pay interest on this borrowed money? Given that several sources clearly indicate that we are now paying record amounts of interest on our national debt, then it is clear that Deficits Do Matter. If we had not been required to pay that interest on the country's debt, then could the money we are now paying in interest have instead been spent on other needs? If yes, then Deficits Do Matter. Would having little or no national debt send a message to our foes that we would be in a strong financial position to afford a lengthy war? If yes, then Deficits Do Matter. Does having little or no national debt contribute to the strength of the dollar against other currencies? If yes, then Deficits Do Matter. Are we not taught early on in the study of economics that "There is no free lunch."? If the perceived unimportance of a national debt is tacit to "something for nothing", then Deficits Do Matter. Very often the national debt is defended by the notion that the debt is compensated for by subsequent economic growth, and that we are simply borrowing against future prosperity. So long as any of our national expenditures are made for things that do not contribute to national economic growth, then Deficits Do Matter, Worse yet, the notion of debt-funded future prosperity is predicated upon the idea that the economy can grow infinitely. If this presupposition is a fallacy (and it is) then Deficits Do Matter. Until ALL of these questions are fully addressed, Deficits Do Matter. Those who think otherwise are simply not looking forward far enough to recognize that the butcher's bill will eventually come due, and at that point, it won't matter how big our GDP is.

  • @Rob-fx2dw

    @Rob-fx2dw

    9 ай бұрын

    @@SolidAir54321 Your first premiss is wrong. The national debt is not just record. You have not thought through your response well at all. The national debt is all borrowed money. Much of that money is the investment of pension funds (when they bought the Treasury securities) and those pension funds must be paid back to provide for people's retirement. Much of the other is money borrowed from overseas investors and they want their money back on maturity of the Treasury securities that were sold to them. Those Treasury securities all mature in time and must be paid of then. Your thinking about the car purchase is infantile because anyone with good enough income, record of financial competence and a low risk profile can get loan from a private bank. The bank will create new money as loan which people are forced to pay back with some interest. There is no need for an existing pool of money to be in the economy because all of the sovereign money today is created as credit and debt. Ther is no restriction of growth in the economy caused by a lack of money because new money created by private banks as credit is available and there is no fixed quantity of money for every purchase so the prices adjust according to how much money is avilable to people and how much they are prepared to pay. That is the adjusting mechanism.

  • @SolidAir54321

    @SolidAir54321

    9 ай бұрын

    @@Rob-fx2dw I don't think we are disagreeing. When we borrow money we do need to pay it back. But we can create money to pay the borrower. So borrowing and creating are kind of the same thing. But we need to increase our productivity to account for the creation of that money. If you like to say it this way: we need to work more to pay it back. But if we DO produce more by increasing GDP or population or just being more productive then we DO pay it back. This can extend to overseas investors who essentially "lend" money. We can create money to pay them back but the problem is that they may then spend that money in the U.S. economy causing inflation. The problem is not that we don't have enough money. The problem is whether we can produce enough. So if production always increases along with the money we create (i.e. borrow), and at the same amount, then that's OK. I like to think of money as a promise to do work later. In my analogy with the car I did create money myself by creating the IOU. It's is same in our current economy as the bank creating money and lending it to me. I do have to pay the bank back. But I do that by working and earning money and paying back the bank. On the island, I did it by doing work---climbing up the tree. Then my IOU was reduced just as if my bank loan was reduced. If there isn't enough money, then money becomes more valuable and this causes deflation.

  • @ronobrien7187
    @ronobrien71879 ай бұрын

    If the issuer of currency can never run out of money, why do we have taxes? Some of the largest growth the country has seen was before there was an income tax.

  • @seanwalsh999

    @seanwalsh999

    8 ай бұрын

    Great question, I assume taxes were a form of kick starting an economy because only a government could collect them. And if no one had any money how could you collect taxes, so governments must have been the the first investor and issuer of currency and taxes were used to keep money circulating and thus keeping the perpetual monetary system we know as an economy going. Really I think taxes are just training wheels and can now be removed to really accelerate prosperity.

  • @nenemydog

    @nenemydog

    6 ай бұрын

    @@seanwalsh999 Yeah this. Establishing a money system goes hand in hand with the creation of taxes. It creates the demand for the currency. There's a difference between federal taxes and state taxes. The federal taxes could be removed. But the state gets it's budget from the fed and needs to manage it. Therefore States do rely on taxpayers money.

  • @tomhansen5219

    @tomhansen5219

    2 ай бұрын

    It's to keep the currency relevant. Without tax we could choose to trade in whatever currency the buyer and seller agree on. With tax reporting the government has control over ones transactions as they could ask to audit you and see receipts. Also tax has to be paid in the local currency thus adding to this. Tax is 100% not needed for spending by the government, but it does help with some wealth equality as tax bands get higher with income.

  • @btcberg3615

    @btcberg3615

    2 ай бұрын

    BITCOIN

  • @ianfryer

    @ianfryer

    Ай бұрын

    Taxes play several roles, a few of which are: 1) They remove currency from circulation, canceling out the new currency issued, thus controlling inflation. 2) They force people to work for the currency that is demanded back as tax, thus incentivizing productive labour. 3) She explains in her book how FDR created payroll deductions for Social Security because otherwise people wouldn't feel entitled to these entitlements.

  • @robertgillespie6890
    @robertgillespie68909 ай бұрын

    when you can't lose and only win, somewhere lies a fallacy😳

  • @mistercohaagen

    @mistercohaagen

    9 ай бұрын

    It's pretty simple to understand. The whole "We the people" who should be actually participating in this government make a plan to do stuff, fix things and help each other, then they open the Fed's cash hose for a bit, and things start happening. Orrrrr... we don't do any of that. Then people start reverting to their animalistic selves, with people dying homeless on the street from easily curable waterborne illnesses in the middle of a giant famine-blackout where nothing works and nobody cares. The rich people who skipped out on their tax bills have enough to float around pointlessly on their golden parachutes for a while, but eventually even they will touch down and get thirsty. I see a lot of room for Capitalism to produce the things that Capitalism is designed to produce, like poverty, pollution, corruption, resource overshoot, market externalities galore... but I don't see any fallacy. You can either hit the brake or the gas... which one do you want here?

  • @kyleolson9636

    @kyleolson9636

    9 ай бұрын

    Watch until the end. She discusses the circumstances in which increased spending can't fix a problem without excessive inflation. It essentially is when the economy no longer has the extra capacity to produce goods and services with that money. We just went through a period of supply shocks, restricted immigration, and corporate price gouging that worked together to cause inflation. We simply didn't have enough goods and people to spend the money on, so prices rose. If we had just increased legal immigration and restricted M&A over the past few decades, there would have been very little inflation.

  • @mistercohaagen

    @mistercohaagen

    9 ай бұрын

    @@kyleolson9636 M&A?

  • @kyleolson9636

    @kyleolson9636

    9 ай бұрын

    @@mistercohaagen mergers and acquisitions

  • @mistercohaagen

    @mistercohaagen

    9 ай бұрын

    @@kyleolson9636 Ah, thanks... that makes a ton of sense now. Imagine how susceptible to inflation we're going to be when Amazon envelops every other business. Then again maybe their closed-loop ability to drive and anticipate customer demand, combined with the fact that they'll probably end up being the sole employer, educator and payroll for this nation's "governmental" regulators / legislators... maybe they can respond more quickly than any goofy notion of "The Free Market" ever could, since the only mechanism they ever had as feedback was pricing. Lol what a nightmare we made for ourselves, allowing Capitalism to continue long past it's obsolescence. I'm ready for NL/RBE at this point! I always thought inflation was due to hoarding wealth when there isn't enough competition due to patent trolling. The inflated cost of something producible by only one vendor, is provably the individual unit-sized component of what we actually mean by the word "inflation". Now I can see how that's actually true, as it artificially creates the exact bottleneck Kelton described in the final section of this talk. Allowing all that dynastic wealth to stagnate and congeal in it's own little pocket of corruption simply due to all the "yes men" that are hoping for a piece of it, with their meddlesome outreaching tendrils that break good-faith systems we've always assumed reliable. I guess the patent system never anticipated people who would be morally willing to ransom something all of humanity actually needs, like vaccines, fertilizers for growing food and battery technologies. While MMT is more correct than older theories, it doesn't suggest any solution to the corruption problem. I think this is @robertgillespie6890's "fallacy" he was looking for.

  • @alfreddunn03
    @alfreddunn032 жыл бұрын

    Fiat money has always baffled me, banks create it out of thin air, and I (and the rest of us) spend practically the rest of our life, working away paying back with interest, a mortgage ...its basically an I.O.U system the whole world of money runs on.

  • @yelwamuhammad1134

    @yelwamuhammad1134

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hit me on👆 I have something different and profitable to introduce you into.

  • @Whatever-mx3bt

    @Whatever-mx3bt

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's how debt works, yep

  • @natertater4974

    @natertater4974

    2 жыл бұрын

    It is fun to think about it for me, how the banks create money. Ironically banks create money when we borrow it. Oh the supply and demand curves of debt and money supply.

  • @2Cool2Geek

    @2Cool2Geek

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@MrRichbc yeah we did that with the gold standard back in the day. Fiat money was a really important step in expansion and creation of our current economy

  • @tudorioan5104

    @tudorioan5104

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@MrRichbc Nobody really forced their internal financial politics to hold on to them. They estimated that they would make a good deal for themselves holding bucks. Now, if you want a piece of the action with the big boys, you have to pay the price and take some risks.

  • @harleyb.birdwhisperer
    @harleyb.birdwhisperer8 ай бұрын

    By extension of the logic, there is no need to ever issue government debt, or impose any taxes to obtain revenue. You just print it. Seems like flying blind, using ‘inflation’ (whatever that is) as a sort of financial altimeter while adjusting speed based on the fuel gauge. Could be dangerous in the mountains.

  • @denniscarney5249

    @denniscarney5249

    2 ай бұрын

    100% right. We should all refuse to pay taxes and cite this retarded theory in court.

  • @nadinefisher5871

    @nadinefisher5871

    2 ай бұрын

    This is not what she's saying at all 🤦🏽‍♀️ taxation is necessary to take money out of the system to avoid inflation and to redistribute to those who don't have enough. Inflation is a fall in the purchasing power of money

  • @nadinefisher5871

    @nadinefisher5871

    2 ай бұрын

    Inflation is the only real limit to public spending however, if public spending of X amount leads to an increase in goods and services produced that is greater than X, then that spending was actually deflationary. The money circulating in the economy falls in comparison to goods and services produced, and costs fall making us all better off

  • @harleyb.birdwhisperer

    @harleyb.birdwhisperer

    2 ай бұрын

    You wouldn’t need to tax to take money out if you hadn’t printed too much previously, would you? But I appreciate your effort to tell us what she wasn’t able to say for herself.

  • @denniscarney5249

    @denniscarney5249

    2 ай бұрын

    @nadinefisher5871 you're an absolute moron if you believe any wealth is being 'redistributed' to people in need. Take a look at how much of our budget goes into social programs versus the amount awarded to DOD vis a vis "foreign aid" (like Ukraine and Israel) that is REQUIRED to be spent buying arms from our military industrial complex. Or how much is spent subsidizing "research" on behalf of big Pharma and "green energy." All of that crap winds up back in the hands of the Oligarchy and is exactly what is meant by the "upward transfer of wealth." *THAT* has become the purpose of taxation in our corrupt system.

  • @miknak5254
    @miknak52547 ай бұрын

    I wish I could ask Dr. Kelton one big question about the interest payment on the government issued bonds and treasure notes. The bigger the national debt, the bigger the interest payment. Am I wrong to think that the federal government should reduce the amount of national debt so that the government would not allocate a large percent of its budget to this interest payment.

  • @logosao88

    @logosao88

    7 ай бұрын

    She would tell you that she wouldn't care. Ultimately, the Treasury could simply borrow from the Federal Reserve Bank (who can effortlessly create money to buy Treasury Bonds). So, even if interest payments grow, the Fed can finance it. The only worry that MMTers care about are the political consequences of inflation, which could get their advocates thrown out of political office. That's probably what they are most concerned about now.

  • @danielhutchinson6604

    @danielhutchinson6604

    7 ай бұрын

    @@logosao88 The myth that the Federal Reserve Bank is an independent Agency from Treasury, appears to reflect the reasoning that Fiat Currency creates. When proposed the Currency change to the FED issuing Dollars, was presented as the value of the Federal Reserve Note, was supposed to be backed by the US Treasury selling equal value Notes to support the FED Dollars. I studied Econ in 1970 as the proposals to solve the currency crisis of 1967 that could not appropriate funds for the War on Poverty, because the Colonial Conflict in Southeast Asia had used up all the profits. We assumed Americans were too smart to fall for a system like we have today. But here we are..... If Treasury is incapable of demonstrating an equal value from their sales of Treasury Notes and Bonds, the Value of the FED Note falls. We are foolish enough to throw Balls at Targets at a Carnival to win a Teddy Bear. Even directing a Grenade Launcher at some Carnival targets will not dislodge them from their perch. But our faith in our hormones or our strength keeps Fools paying a Buck to throw some more. The Government or the Bankers, provide lovely Ladies like this one to assure us that the system is sound, the Dollar is secure. The fact that a complex web of Government Agencies and Bankers now shift the support among a multitude of Players to offer the appearance of stability. When Humans begin to doubt the stability of the Currency, the value plummets. The US Economy has become a Carnival, and Pickpockets and Carnival Barkers just take the money as they see fit. We have been too long at the Fair. The economy is simply an illusion supported by smoke and mirrors, as bright lights distract us. The Fact that the BRICS Trade group now has within their association around 70% of the available resources on the planet, and the US Threats of military power that can overcome any obstacle, are diminished by the appearance of Pentagon Audits, that indicate that corruption has stolen trillions from the money allocated to scare the Citizens of the World. The Carnival of US Economic supremacy, is about to fold up the tents and split for another Town...... The illusion is over.

  • @gusgalvanini

    @gusgalvanini

    3 ай бұрын

    You are 100% right, She lives in Lala land where the laws of physics & thermodynamics dont apply, Just because they print money, doesnt mean that goods and services are produced, An economy consists of goods and services, and a toilet paper they print is no longer valuable as they print more and more, buy Bitcoin or Gold, even stocks are issued by companies, the higher the price, the more stocks they issue, ridiculous, and We have to work for thay crap

  • @Zelousfear

    @Zelousfear

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@logosao88 I think you underestimate the consequences. To paraphrase a quote, when the poor can no longer afford food, they will eat the rich ... too bad she's so thin

  • @ianfryer

    @ianfryer

    Ай бұрын

    @@logosao88 I don't think this is right. The Fed is not the one that creates money - only Congress has "the power of the purse" and can spend money into existence. The Fed can apply monetary policy to try and add funds to the money supply and does this mainly in two ways: 1. changing the target fed funds rate with the goal of affecting other interest rates, and 2. buying Treasury securities on the open market to add funds to bank reserves. MMT is arguing that monetary policy alone is not a good solution to the problem of inflation. In addition to monetary policy, it calls for fiscal policy (government spending and taxation) to play a larger role in controlling inflation, and many heads of central banks agree.

  • @roonsbane
    @roonsbane8 ай бұрын

    She completely glosses over the fact that our government deficit, or debt is borrowed money. People invest in government bonds, because they expect a return on their investment. If there is no return, there is no investment. You also can’t just print, or virtually create money out of nowhere, because it devalues the currency.

  • @chev39rsh

    @chev39rsh

    8 ай бұрын

    they don't care. I have never heard one of these modern economist explain how they are protecting anyone's actual worth. what hey are peddling is government control at the cost of independence and liberty from such nonsense.

  • @williamparker1085

    @williamparker1085

    8 ай бұрын

    your the one not understanding.....listen again

  • @ictia7036

    @ictia7036

    8 ай бұрын

    @@chev39rsh why would I want independence from free healthcare?

  • @ictia7036

    @ictia7036

    8 ай бұрын

    The FED adjusts the money supply as it is

  • @chev39rsh

    @chev39rsh

    8 ай бұрын

    @@ictia7036 Its not free. What they claim is free is you don't see the cost and there are no frictions you can apply to reduce it.

  • @aduffield
    @aduffield2 жыл бұрын

    No one ever asks "How will we pay for this new war" We've got infinite money for war and tax breaks but never when it actually helps the people

  • @Psnym

    @Psnym

    2 жыл бұрын

    The people who want a higher defense budget believe it is in the general public interest. The people who want more social program spending believe it is in the general public interest. There are limited real resources. This woman is arguing for government central planning. No thanks

  • @2Cool2Geek

    @2Cool2Geek

    2 жыл бұрын

    Foolish response, that demonstrates a child like understanding of politics and economics. 0 out of 5 stars would not reply again.

  • @KenTheAdventurer

    @KenTheAdventurer

    2 жыл бұрын

    only because there's barely any money back from helping the poor

  • @aduffield

    @aduffield

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@KenTheAdventurer what exactly is the ROI on giving rich more money to store offshore, or companies to buy back their own stock, or feeding the military industrial complex? The reason they were called "stimulus" checks was because they went to those that needed it and they turned around and spent it, "stimulating" the economy and preventing a recession. Capitalism doesn't work if no one has the money to buy what you're selling. Give people money, demand goes up, supplies have to be increased and jobs are created and the business owners get rich. Money flows up, not down. Giving money to the rich doesn't stimulate demand or create jobs it makes things worse.

  • @adamk1520

    @adamk1520

    2 жыл бұрын

    War is terrible, but funding defense creates jobs and production. The issue right now is labor. Spending without labor is a problem.

  • @jobegerlach87
    @jobegerlach872 жыл бұрын

    inflation is an invisible tax on people who dont have enough money to invest. if you really "care" about inequality and minorities then stop printing money, stop bailing out banks, and start helping people understand what fiscal responsibility entails. its easy to claim MMT will work, but if people cant invest then your saving accnt interest will never keep up with inflation and thus the CPI will slowly outstrip their ability to live comfortably... this is why millennials like myself have a more difficult time affording housing than our parents. also its really easy to say printing money will fix things when you have a tenured position that safe and hermitically sealed off from the markets at large.. shaking my head sadly right now...

  • @lexiwu2341

    @lexiwu2341

    2 жыл бұрын

    couldn't agree more!!!

  • @maxmoser412

    @maxmoser412

    2 жыл бұрын

    On the contrary, high inflation generally leads to investors losing lots of money in the market. Just look at what's been happening to the markets since the Fed started talking about upwards of three interest rate hikes coming. Soon as the Fed changed their tune from transitory inflation to not transitory, the markets tanked.

  • @jobegerlach87

    @jobegerlach87

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@maxmoser412sure that's true, but it still doesn't change the fact that people without disposable income are more heavily impacted by inflation than people who invest. Even with a downward trend in the market here and there your 401k will still outperform any sort of savings someone with no disposable income manages to build up.

  • @maxmoser412

    @maxmoser412

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jobegerlach87 totally agree, was just pointing out that inflation does impact every American, wealthy or not. Certainly not to an equal extent as you pointed out.

  • @ChannelMath

    @ChannelMath

    10 ай бұрын

    It depends where the money that cause the inflation went. (unless it's cost-push inflation, which is mostly what we are experiencing now, which sucks and has nothing to do with fiscal or monetary policy) If the money went to "people who don't have enough money to invest", then they win. If it went to someone else, they lose. Either way, it's just redistribution of wealth. Good for some, bad for others. Either way, wages will eventually catch up to inflation

  • @Rachelebanham
    @Rachelebanham7 ай бұрын

    There's some interesting ideas here (and in MMT) and I agree that inflation rather than deficit should be a better measure of an economy. However, the MMT idealogues are in my opinion missing two things that always happen in practice: 1. squirting fiat into the economy pretty much always ends up with _residual_ inflation even after government re-balancing measures (through taxation, interest rate hikes, etc.). 2. Governments spend a significant proportion of what she is defining deficit surplus not on the local population but quite often on foreign investments, foreign contracts that don't benefit the tax payers. So you have an open economy. So medium to long term money just leaks out the closed economy to make MMT work. I think it's important to not to be too ideological about MMT. Aspects of it do work but at the end of the day, if you squirt in excessive amounts of money into the system far and beyond what the country can produce then you're going to get inflation. At the end of the day, money (or wealth) is only a measure of the country's output and that's fundamental. And that is what Thatcher was really saying when she made her quote about there is no government money.

  • @mymateian

    @mymateian

    7 ай бұрын

    Great comments. She didn’t mention that the UK and USA don’t produce the raw materials anymore, so a large portion of the money goes abroad, to China for example.

  • @Rachelebanham

    @Rachelebanham

    7 ай бұрын

    @@mymateian exactly

  • @Gordon87Gekko

    @Gordon87Gekko

    6 ай бұрын

    You are 100% correct and your comment is very intelligently written....cheers 😊

  • @JGS2295

    @JGS2295

    5 ай бұрын

    "if you squirt in excessive amounts of money into the system far and beyond what the country can produce then you're going to get inflation" This is fundamental to MMT. It consistently and explicitly places the real resource constraint at the front and centre of fiscal policy decision making. Mainstream macro obsesses over the red herring of arbitrary government balance sheet positions over an arbitrary time horizon when deciding on spending. THAT is the crazy one.

  • @TyrianHaze

    @TyrianHaze

    2 ай бұрын

    MMT is nothing new. Most people taking an economics 101 class can think up of something along the lines of "how about we don't tax people, and just print more money and tax them via inflation?" The real problem is who is doing the printing, and who they are giving that money to. Turns out people are corrupt, and they give that money to themselves and their buddies, and have everyone else pay for it via inflation.

  • @dammain1068
    @dammain10683 ай бұрын

    If we can just print money why am I getting taxed?

  • @mikec2582

    @mikec2582

    2 ай бұрын

    Taxes are used to ensure we will USE the dollar and not some other means of trading. If you MUST pay taxes and you MUST pay your taxes in dollars you will NEED to find them. So you will insist that you're paid in dollars. And so will everyone else. Everyone using the same currency has HUGE advantages in an economy. Taxes are also used, albeit less often, to decrease the money supply and slow an over heated economy. There is disagreement about how well this works. Mostly because Congress has to increase taxes and we all know how Congress gets things done. So it isn't a "go to" solution we use.

  • @ianfryer

    @ianfryer

    2 ай бұрын

    @@mikec2582 Good response - taxation is mainly an incentive producer, but it also removes money from the economy, regulating the money supply and therefore inflation. To work really well, taxes need to be well targeted. On the other hand, in her book she is arguing that leaving it to the Fed (or other central banks) to exercise monetary policy alone (QE, interest rates, etc.) is not a "go to" solution either (although it is how things currently work). Even the heads of central banks are calling for a combination of both monetary and fiscal policy (the latter being government spending and taxation) in order to control inflation and unemployment. Taxation on really wealthy people is especially important, not because currency-issuing governments need tax revenue to fund their programs (according to MMT they don't), but because really wealthy people horde their money and don't circulate it as readily in the economy. They are effectively removing dollars from circulation...

  • @davidshi467

    @davidshi467

    Ай бұрын

    Because we have to work, not the government employees.

  • @NS-pj8dr

    @NS-pj8dr

    Ай бұрын

    To hedge inflation, as she explained

  • @TeslaLegend
    @TeslaLegend2 жыл бұрын

    Little knowledge is a dangerous thing.

  • @gpdewitt
    @gpdewitt2 жыл бұрын

    6:33 "the government's bank, the federal reserve..." I don't think so. The "Federal Reserve" is a gross misnomer, it's a private institution, NOT a part of the government. So the national debt is owed to private concerns?!

  • @nelsonomicsruns9246

    @nelsonomicsruns9246

    2 жыл бұрын

    Print up infinite amounts of worthless money and buy up real assets with it. Quite a scam, yeah? Ask Jefferson said, eventually they print up enough money to own the whole Earth. Somebody famously said "Robbing a bank is nothing compared to owning one"

  • @TheJamesRedwood

    @TheJamesRedwood

    2 жыл бұрын

    "the government's bank" does not imply ownership, any more than "Gary's bank" implies that you own the bank you use. One of your premises is correct, in the US the government does not own the central reserve bank. The other - that her choice of words implied ownership, does not.

  • @SmashBrosBrawl

    @SmashBrosBrawl

    2 жыл бұрын

    Bingo, Stephanie Kelton believes the US govt can print money. it Cant

  • @swmita

    @swmita

    3 ай бұрын

    @gpdewitt ... and there is! The Federal Reserve IS NOT an American Entity, some refer to it as The London Connection. The book The Secrets of The Federal Reserve by Eustace Mullins delves into the point you made, which that IT IS NOT The Government's Bank. BTW that book was written in 1958 and by design was given a more boorish innocuous title to its name. In any event, the ingenious concept of The Federal Reserve in being able to print endless supplies of money, only works to control the global economy when that same currency is recognized as The World's Currency; also known as The Petro Dollar. In contrast to the USD being used as a global currency due to the arrangement the U.S. have with Saudi Arabia, there is now the BRICS new alliance and plan to establish their own currency. If Saudi Arabia jumps ship and aligns themselves with the nations of BRICS, we will be seeing an attempt to usurp the USD which WILL happen "if" the USD is no longer used as The Petro Dollar. Once that happens the paper that the USD is printed on will become worthless. In essence we may be witnessing in real time, the beginning of the end for America as we now know it, which will be inevitable, "barring a catalyst event such as WWIII". Hence the definition that "All Wars Are Based on Economics"

  • @regorsgarageboatbasin7515
    @regorsgarageboatbasin75159 ай бұрын

    How does MMT handle debt service? As the Federal Reserve raises interest rates to fight inflation, the US budget must accommodate higher spending for debt service in the yearly Federal budget. The debt service is currently 7% of the budget. Chairman Powell states the current spending is not supportable long term.

  • @JGS2295

    @JGS2295

    5 ай бұрын

    A lot of MMT economists advocate for permenant zero interest rate policy (ZIRP). They argue monetary policy is the wrong tool to combat inflationary pressures and much stronger automatic fiscal stabilisers are preferred (i.e. the Job Guarentee acting as an Employed Buffer Stock as opposed to the currently used Unemployed Buffer Stock which is far weaker a stabiliser).

  • @blythebyrd7471

    @blythebyrd7471

    3 ай бұрын

    Keynesian Economics versus Austrian/Free Market) Keyensine econovis always leads to boom and bust cycles. It was developed before and during WW2, and caused the Federal Reserve to be founded by the government, JP Morgan, and John Rockefellet at a hotel off GA’s Atlantic shore.

  • @Egalitare
    @Egalitare8 ай бұрын

    “Are these things worth doing?” is the correct frame. The problem we face is the monetizers are almost exclusively the ones who are (for lack of a better word) allowed to ask and answer this. Waste water treatment is not and never has been a profit center. Yet it is indispensable. Just saying 🤷🏽‍♂️

  • @fredloeper8579

    @fredloeper8579

    7 ай бұрын

    Then why am I paying a water bill every month?

  • @jimmystevens8

    @jimmystevens8

    4 ай бұрын

    Because it’s a limited resource. So you don’t use 4 times the amount you could get by on because it’s free. There isn’t enough for everyone to water their lawns for 3 hours a day all summer. Y

  • @mfsalatino
    @mfsalatino2 жыл бұрын

    ARGENTINA

  • @davedubay2572
    @davedubay25722 жыл бұрын

    Question: What happens when payments for interest on the debt become the biggest budget item? Does this crowd out other spending? As debt goes up and up will interest payments crowd out more and more? Or is this 6 really a 9?

  • @avirichar4981

    @avirichar4981

    2 жыл бұрын

    Dave: that sounds like you're fundamentally (and fairly rudely and ignorantly) ignoring the core premise proposition (and factual reality empirically warranted by simply observing the actual extant data), that federal budgets aren't household budgets. Period. The only way to cling with a death-grip to that fallacious myth, that somehow something as complex as an entire state's financing is magically the exact equivalent (or even just a bigger version of same) as some relatively small handful of people, is to ignore how systems of every kind work, in nature, in human context, always -- and how that fundamentally differs by scale, because emergent properties increase, when you have more factors involved, more elements, more components, just plain more. Here the simplest debunking of the foolishness of the entire misplaced paradigm and ignorant way of thinking is this, inherent in your own off-base questioning's basis: as described clearly and hard to misunderstand in the vid (unless mired in a whole worldview that blocks even looking at the point and hearing any single word said), when the government spends money, and so increasing what is mis-named "debt" overall and each year's "deficit," it isn't borrowing from anybody, ever, not really, and certainly in no way whatsoever like when we individually do that, or as families, again, in households. Simplest to see, because that money "spent" is actually going into the very same *revenue* sources that pour in money *to* the government, and *not* by "increasing taxes" as in raising a rate (even though that of course could and should be done for certain very small and resource-hoarding subsections, extremely rich individuals, and incessantly profiteering-to-insane-levels corporations). But rather, simply because when *people* have more money, they can actually spend it, as well as afford to do other things that cost more money, including set up businesses, move to where higher paying jobs are, buy houses and other owned homes, not to mention just live longer, and be more productive, etc. etc. etc -- all of which, at the *same* tax rates will nevertheless pour *more* money into the federal (and state/province/etc.-sub-federal governing levels, city and county and so on as well) funding coffers. It's really as simple as understanding math, and knowing that the numbers mean nothing unless you correctly apply units, i.e. the names of whatever the numbers apply to, aka context. Of course you'll probably intentionally perpetuate your own misunderstanding by misreading this, per the obsolete legacy "gold standard" etc. bs paradigms (such as scarcity model, chicago model or whatever of economics, aka racketeering imposed on you by perpetrators past, and which you become the perpetrator of as long as you buy and swallow that feces continually as a sewn-together human-centipede segment). But hey, maybe you could become humanized again and stop pushing the lies and violence that protection rackets always peddle. Who knows? If so, welcome to the human race again!

  • @nathankuszewski4579

    @nathankuszewski4579

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@avirichar4981 put the thesaurus down

  • @Rob-fx2dw

    @Rob-fx2dw

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@avirichar4981 Your reply is just rubbish. You are ignorant of the fact that all of the money government spends is ultimately tax money. That is because the majority is tax money to start with and the remainder is borrowed money they get from selling bonds to the Federal reserve or to the public or overseas entities . All of this borrowed money has to be paid back when the bonds that were sold to get it actually mature with interest. The bonds All mature in time so eventually all of the borrowed money becomes a burden for the taxpayer. Ultimately there is no free money or non tax money. You say "when the government spends money, and so increasing what is mis-named "debt" overall and each year's "deficit," it isn't borrowing from anybody, ever, not really, and certainly in no way whatsoever like when we individually do that, or as families, again, in households.". This indicates you are also ignorant of the fact that since 1971 all the so called sovereign money is credit and your response displays this ignorance of the nature of sovereign money today .

  • @joseornelas1718

    @joseornelas1718

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@avirichar4981 "understanding math". Yes, a negative number in your account means you've spent too much and the answer apparently is to steal the difference.

  • @georgehresko3150

    @georgehresko3150

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@avirichar4981 Do you realize that you avoided answering the question with all that word salad you produced? Or was that your intention? What actually does happen--take the time to explain in fundamental mechanics--when the interest on the government debt becomes the largest item in the government budget? Suppose interest rates run to 15% on our current roughly $30 trillion. Let us readers know your answer please.

  • @jacobhicks7959
    @jacobhicks79597 ай бұрын

    If you follow her logic why do we even pay taxes?

  • @lordofthegadflies7389

    @lordofthegadflies7389

    7 ай бұрын

    A fortiori, why does the government tax or borrow? According to this econo-nincompoop all it has to do is print funny money to pay for everything. Taxes and borrowing could be reduced to zero and inflation would be beyond Argentine. Zimbabwean!

  • @jackbrons4904

    @jackbrons4904

    7 ай бұрын

    You've asked a very good question. Modern Monetary Theory actually proposes that we have it backwards on why we pay taxes. In the past taxes were used to bring money into the government to pay for services. Now under FIAT currencies it's more accurate to say taxes are actually used to remove money from the economy to prevent inflation. The roles flipped around once we took currency off the gold standard.

  • @yeboscrebo4451

    @yeboscrebo4451

    6 ай бұрын

    @@jackbrons4904and that’s the problem now isn’t it

  • @socratesagain7822

    @socratesagain7822

    2 ай бұрын

    Taxes were originally designed by sovereigns to prevent wealth hoarding. A handful of wealth hoarders could become hegemons and stage coups. Once these aristocrats took power they hoarded natural resources and charged an arm and a leg for them. The people thus became rent-paying plebeians, serfs and peasants. Nowadays not paying taxes lands you in federal hoosegows, unless you own a platoon of treacherous intellectuals trained in tax and corporate law who via lobbyists wrote tax law and understand tax havens and off-shore accounts. Thus, these hegemons pay little if any taxes. So they can become bigger and bigger "influencers." (or "powerful"). Ain't finance capitalism grand? Taxes should in theory only be paid to entities that can't print money such as states, counties and municipalities. Be well.

  • @TyrianHaze

    @TyrianHaze

    2 ай бұрын

    @@jackbrons4904 They tax you via inflation, and then they take your money to "keep inflation down" while you don't have the money to pay for goods and services that they supposedly kept inflation down for you to afford.

  • @seanannigans
    @seanannigans Жыл бұрын

    She kinda answered it at the end. You can’t have the government spur growth initiatives when there is full employment or a lack of resources cause that leads to inflation.

  • @pinewood6340

    @pinewood6340

    Жыл бұрын

    Except she's lying / completely out of touch with reality. Only one thing causes inflation, money printing. Without that, an increase in price of one thing would mean an equal and opposite decrease in price of another thing. Not in her world, we're getting increasing prices of almost everything, while paychecks aren't keeping up. So damaging.

  • @Mctazin

    @Mctazin

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pinewood6340 " Only one thing causes inflation". You don't think issues with supply lines cause inflation?

  • @pinewood6340

    @pinewood6340

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Mctazin Any increase in price of one thing causes a decrease in price of another, if money were real. Since our money is fake, prices for ALL things can go up. This is only due to money printing. No money printing, and any "inflation" is temporary and is with one sector / set of items, offset by decreases elsewhere.

  • @Mctazin

    @Mctazin

    Жыл бұрын

    @Pine Wood what are you talking about? Why would an increase in one price necessitate an equal and opposite decease in another price? Also the framing of this is bizarre. Obviously we are talking about the way inflation functions in the modern economy not whatever imaginary "real" money economy you are talking about. I feel like your first comment was wrong but almost made sense and now the wheels have come off and I'm just reading nonsense.

  • @pinewood6340

    @pinewood6340

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Mctazin Because if more dollars are being spent on one thing, less dollars would be being spent on other things, because of reality. The only way both things go up in price is if more and more fake dollars are printed out of thin air. Otherwise where would the dollars come from? The only thing that was nonsense was this TED talk. There's a reason it's called Modern Monetary 'Theory'.

  • @justinw3214
    @justinw32142 жыл бұрын

    Money printer go brrrrrrrrtt

  • @yelwamuhammad1134

    @yelwamuhammad1134

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hit me on👆 I have something different and profitable to introduce you into.

  • @tudorioan5104

    @tudorioan5104

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@MrRichbc Bitcoin was born as pure hate against the government. It is advocated by financial illiterates who ignores the fact that deflation is even worse than inflation. That doesn't prevent bitcoin from being attractive and it actually makes a great deal for some financial institutions. Simple business, easy money, the more anti-system idiots in the crypto game, the more profit for the big sharks 😁 Another great robbing tool 😁 ...fine, go ahead and buy bitcoin ! 😂

  • @rafaelborbacs

    @rafaelborbacs

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tudorioan5104 of course BTC was created for hate agains the government. Don't you hate those who rob 50% of your labor and destroy the currency you were forced to keep your saves in? I do. Bitcoin is only deflationary because dólar, euro and other fiat are inflationary. As long as it keeps decentralized and I remain vigilant on my private keys, no one can put the hands on the fruits of my work. And that is extraordinary, unprecedent and priceless

  • @btcberg3615

    @btcberg3615

    2 ай бұрын

    BITCOIN FIXES THIS

  • @termsofusepolice
    @termsofusepolice2 жыл бұрын

    Going with the "69" analogy during a public presentation was a bold choice.

  • @Realliberal
    @Realliberal2 ай бұрын

    “I’m one of a handful of economists “ On the government pay roll.

  • @btcberg3615

    @btcberg3615

    2 ай бұрын

    BITCOIN OR GO DOWN WITH THE SHIP

  • @johnb.1020

    @johnb.1020

    Ай бұрын

    *toilet roll

  • @sparkyfromel
    @sparkyfromel9 ай бұрын

    MMT is to fiat currency what sub prime loans were to mortgages

  • @btcberg3615

    @btcberg3615

    2 ай бұрын

    BITCOIN

  • @NS-pj8dr

    @NS-pj8dr

    Ай бұрын

    Lol no

  • @ThexBorg
    @ThexBorg2 жыл бұрын

    So after telling the public for decades that government debt is bad, now that it can never be repaid, corporate America is now selling it as though it’s not bad..

  • @AV57

    @AV57

    10 ай бұрын

    Debts tend be bad, because there is an impatient creditor with the ability to force you to pay it back on their onerous terms. That does not apply to the United States federal government. The one issue that must be respected and accounted for is the strength of the dollar internationally. And this is largely kept stable by America’s military, which is widely welcomed and invited into every 1st world country. All those foreign governments that want US troops to keep them safe also have an extreme bias in favor of the US dollar remaining stable, so they will circulate the dollar which fights inflation.

  • @jysmtl

    @jysmtl

    8 ай бұрын

    Two things, no? Strength of the dollar and inflation.

  • @Sepp_Tember
    @Sepp_Tember2 жыл бұрын

    Increasing the monetary supply is just like the taxation of savings. But unlike a direkt tax to savings, stealing the purchasing power of the people via inflation is much easier, because the numbers on their accounts stay the same.

  • @harshitjain575

    @harshitjain575

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sadly we are governed by a bunch of socialist lunatics who just don't care.

  • @thespalek1

    @thespalek1

    2 жыл бұрын

    Exactly!!! Most people are even happy on that road, because sooner or latter it involves rise in salary, which feels good.. It's such a scam... :-((

  • @8ace02

    @8ace02

    2 жыл бұрын

    So, you´re basically saying budget deficit is necessarily leading towards inflation. Although that´s been the neo liberal mantra for decades, empiric research in macro economics does not support that as a given or even as an automatism.

  • @thespalek1

    @thespalek1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@pnw_jordan That's the trap of simply believing someone, who knows a bit more than you. Of course, she has studied. Of course her work has been reviewed. And of course many of her peers strongly disagree with her. Economy isn´t always exact science. Generaly you have Deficit hawks, deficit doves and deficit owls, all sides sporting greatly studied names and coming to different conclusions.

  • @thespalek1

    @thespalek1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@8ace02 Please, which empiric research do you mean? Could you post some studies? Budget deficit doesn´t necessarily lead towards inflation. But financing it by non-existent money does. Naturally. If you raise an ammount of currency in existence, you lower the value of that, if the ammount of product created in the same society stays the same. Plain and simple.

  • @alanjavari4067
    @alanjavari40677 ай бұрын

    The basic point that has been twisted is: just because we have a “deficit” against the government budget doesn’t mean we don’t have the economy to support the spend. That’s all fine and dandy if we could predict next years gdp, the reason we have the budget is to put some restraint on speculating against our future economy. I’d be all for basing the budget on last years gdp or similar, but we spend well beyond our industrial capacity and kill our ability to pull that trigger when a real crisis comes along. Also a 6 does not become a 9 when viewed from the top, it’s just a misunderstood 6, and ironically a good illustration of this talk.

  • @apoch2001
    @apoch20017 ай бұрын

    This was painful. Deficits are only ok if the money spent had an net surplus to productivity. Paying for social services because ppl could only consume and not save is like throwing good money after bad.

  • @pacmonkruz9846
    @pacmonkruz98462 жыл бұрын

    The best example was why rescue car companies who can’t produce free emission cars? Why rescued banks who knew it wasn’t sustainable(home loans)?why redo roads for fossil fuel cars rather then self driven cars? Why spend on electrical poles instead of looking into tunnels ??

  • @windfall35
    @windfall359 ай бұрын

    Did I miss the part of her talk which deals with the impact of a 6% terminal rate resulting in 40% of the federal budget going to service annual debt costs?

  • @seanwalsh999

    @seanwalsh999

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes, that would be the banksters from 1913.

  • @palladin331

    @palladin331

    8 ай бұрын

    Implied in her scenario would be higher taxation of the rich (including elimination of the Social Security and Medicare caps), and some form of wage and price controls to keep a lid on inflation, which is a result of creating as much profit as the system will bear. Retained profits and accumulated wealth are uncollected taxes paid by all of us. So to tax profits is simply the return of the people's money to be used for purposes other than allowing people and corporations to become morbidly rich. Deficits and national debt are offset by the enormous assets, resources, financial power, and military strength of the nation. All together, it's called the wealth of the nation.

  • @seanwalsh999

    @seanwalsh999

    8 ай бұрын

    I like the use of the term " morbidly rich " not sure if you coined it, but I have never heard the term before. I just heard another new one today, " Cryptopia " @@palladin331

  • @meysamramezani3087

    @meysamramezani3087

    3 ай бұрын

    @@palladin331 Higher taxation of the rich only works as long as they play the game along. Many rich people have the means to easily move to another country and take their business with them.

  • @billgeorgene
    @billgeorgene8 ай бұрын

    With her logic, we should not need to pay taxes. Simply let the government create whatever money is needed to do whatever is necessary.

  • @kingo8914

    @kingo8914

    7 ай бұрын

    She writes a lot about taxes in her book. They're needed to make money valuable, manage inflation, discourage and encourage certain behaviors, and manage inequality.

  • @johngalt8564

    @johngalt8564

    2 ай бұрын

    The fact that academics believe this tells you all you need to know about academia….and I say that as an academic myself!!

  • @btcberg3615

    @btcberg3615

    2 ай бұрын

    BITCOIN FIXES THIS

  • @pablopipipopo

    @pablopipipopo

    Ай бұрын

    yes, and we would pay everything via inflation. no "tax" needed.

  • @jackprescott9652
    @jackprescott96529 ай бұрын

    "... finding the money to pay the things we need in a Country like USA or UK is never an issue..." The rest of the world must take note on "Contries like USA or UK". Because printing money have been the tomb to the economies of latinamerica for example.

  • @VallenChaosValiant

    @VallenChaosValiant

    9 ай бұрын

    You are wrong. Printing money is only a problem when your debt is in someone else's currency. If you print Yen to pay US debt you had to buy US dollars, which lower the price of Yen, which then increase the price of the debt. This cycle cause hyperinflation. But this does NOT happen if the debt is in local currency. If you print US dollars to pay debt in US dollars, the debt gets paid off because it gets devalued WITH the currency. The key is to not have forign currency debt. Local Currency debt doesn't matter (at least not matter enough)

  • @jackprescott9652

    @jackprescott9652

    9 ай бұрын

    @@VallenChaosValiant Why am i wrong then? A lot of countries in south america have been printing money with disastrous consecuences.

  • @VallenChaosValiant

    @VallenChaosValiant

    9 ай бұрын

    @@jackprescott9652 Did you READ anything I wrote? The South Americans buy imports using US dollars, not their local currency. So the debt is in US dollars. And trying to print their way out doesn't work because the debt gets bigger that way. But if your debt is local currency like in Japan, or if you are the US of A, then it doesn't matter because the debt gets devalued by printing. and if you don't understand this then you don't understand hyperinflation.

  • @jackprescott9652

    @jackprescott9652

    9 ай бұрын

    @@VallenChaosValiant OF Course. I mean, USA can do that. Sadly my country can`t.

  • @nofreelunch7381

    @nofreelunch7381

    9 ай бұрын

    @@VallenChaosValiant So why don't all countries simply only issue debt only in their local currency? Then they don't have to worry about deficits?

  • @IdahoHobo
    @IdahoHobo9 ай бұрын

    The scary part is.she kept a straight face throughout. her presentation.

  • @denniscarney5249

    @denniscarney5249

    2 ай бұрын

    No, the scary part is that she and the others who developed MMT are the ones running our economy.

  • @RemyJuju2

    @RemyJuju2

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@denniscarney5249No, the scary part is that it's actually working... Low unemployment, stock market up, GDP up and wages up. Government money is going more towards jobs and less on food stamps, unemployment benefits and other programs that are "hand outs".

  • @denniscarney5249

    @denniscarney5249

    2 ай бұрын

    @RemyJuju2 you have to be an absolute moron NOT to understand the way the unemployment data is manipulated. You *really* think that in a country of 330 million people, we only have 2-4 million unemployed at a time? Stock markets are projections based on anticipated revenue and have *nothing* to do with OUR economy (since all of the main corporations are international). Of course GDP is up... it's called inflation. What's your supposed explanation for wages not keeping up with inflation? The growth of the homeless rate? The number of Americans unable to afford $500 emergency or the number holding multiple jobs to make ends meet?

  • @vladimirool

    @vladimirool

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@RemyJuju2the only reason it may seem to be working is because foreign producing nations (China, Mexico etc) accept the USD. This woman is a gaslighter

  • @JohnSmith-zi9or

    @JohnSmith-zi9or

    2 ай бұрын

    @@RemyJuju2 Is it working? Inflation is killing us and causing the economy to fail. Lots of companies are increasing layoffs. GDP for 24Q1 was 1.4%, much weaker than the Administration expected. It had been 4.9% in 23Q3, more than a 70% reduction. The stock market is up because many corporations are still showing profits because they've been cuttings costs (layoffs). Go to your local car dealership and look what's happening -- they can't give them away. Americans are BROKE. High debt and inflation has killed the American family budget.

  • @andrewwhite7210
    @andrewwhite72108 ай бұрын

    So why does the government spend such a large portion of it's budget on "debt maintenance"?

  • @DrNormGutHealth

    @DrNormGutHealth

    8 ай бұрын

    Exactly. She fails to mention this inconvienent fact.

  • @henrywasserman

    @henrywasserman

    8 ай бұрын

    Is it possible that a day could come where the interest owed on the debt starts increasing at such a rapid rate that the computer software won't be able to calculate the number?

  • @MrMarinus18

    @MrMarinus18

    7 ай бұрын

    No reason at all. Since the government has infinite money they spend as much as they want to spend. The thing is though that the US government is highly corrupt and usually capitalists don't want the government doing stuff. After all you can't sell people something they are getting for free. If the government were to create public healthcare that would cut into the profits of the insurance companies.

  • @TyrianHaze

    @TyrianHaze

    2 ай бұрын

    @@MrMarinus18 "government has infinite money." LOL

  • @MrMarinus18

    @MrMarinus18

    2 ай бұрын

    @@TyrianHaze They do. What would the limit be if you can print your own money? The answer is the limit is the real economy and the means within the borders of the country.

  • @hugotrevino2565
    @hugotrevino25658 ай бұрын

    This lady did not say the secret part out loud, she just whispered it “countries like the US and England”, Yep, those countries are the only ones that can borrow money from the rest of the world in their own currencies. What she is not saying is that the rest of the world is picking up the tab for “those countries“ deficits. That’s why “those countries” need to have the mightiest armies just in case some other country doesn’t want to take their currency.

  • @TyrianHaze

    @TyrianHaze

    2 ай бұрын

    It's not just other countries picking up the tab. The tab is picked up by anyone that doesn't drink directly from the teat of the US government.

  • @abucs
    @abucs2 ай бұрын

    When do i get my government authorised printing press?

  • @ianfryer

    @ianfryer

    Ай бұрын

    Sounds like you are missing the central distinction drawn in MMT: the difference between currency issuers and currency users. Sorry, but you are not a currency issuer.

  • @Rob-fx2dw

    @Rob-fx2dw

    Ай бұрын

    @@ianfryer How dumb is that comment of yours? It denies the fact that most money in the economy is not produced by the Central bank or government but is created out of bank lending to their customers which is over 90% of it. That money like the money created by the Central bank (Federal Reserve in the U.S. ) is credit fiat money. There is no distinction between the money created by the Central banks and that created by private banks. It is all interchangeable and indistinguishable from one dollar to the next.

  • @ianfryer

    @ianfryer

    Ай бұрын

    @@Rob-fx2dw There may be no difference between the dollars themselves, but that doesn't mean that there is no difference between the way those dollars are created. "One notable difference between the two types of money creation is that there is no external limit to the total amount of money the [central bank] may create through its asset purchases, other than the impact the additional money created has on inflation. In contrast, the amount of money that a private commercial bank is permitted to create depends on the amount of the bank’s equity relative to its assets. The limiting rules, known as capital constraints, are established by [a country's] banking regulator in a set of guidelines." What is the upshot? "Money creation by the [central bank] through purchases of government securities is essentially an internal government process; this means that external factors, such as financial market dysfunction, cannot cause the federal government to run out of money. Inflation is the main limit to the amount of money the [central bank] can create through asset purchases." "Another significant difference is that the key factor in a private commercial bank’s decision to give a loan to a private entity is the creditworthiness of the borrower, whereas the key factor in the [central bank's] decision to purchase assets is its ability to achieve its inflation target." Now I may be missing something, as I am clearly not as educated as you on the topic. I had to do a bit of reading, and I got this specific information from an online article titled "How the Bank of Canada Creates Money Through its Asset Purchases". But this strikes me as the main point that MMT economists are trying to make: Only the federal government is in the position of being unable to run out of money denominated in its own currency.

  • @ChristianMotivationMedia
    @ChristianMotivationMedia2 жыл бұрын

    In a world full of anxieties, remember this verse tonight, “I will both lie down in peace, and sleep; For You alone, O LORD, make me dwell in safety.” Psalms 4:8

  • @infini_ryu9461
    @infini_ryu94612 жыл бұрын

    Ah yes, we've gone from "It's a problem" to "It's not a big problem" to "We are literally on a monopoly board".

  • @jackolantern7342

    @jackolantern7342

    2 жыл бұрын

    We've always been a on a monopoly board. It's just that the whole game is setup so those closest to the dealer get to charge rent for the other plays to use the game pieces.

  • @marcodedonno2797

    @marcodedonno2797

    2 жыл бұрын

    The world economy works EXACTLY like Monopoly lol

  • @coolioso808

    @coolioso808

    Жыл бұрын

    haha, yeah, the ruling elites decided to set everybody up to play the game Monopoly on the global scale. Anybody who played Monopoly knows how it always turns out. So of course the ruling elites want to play this game, it works in their favor, but for 99% of people it mostly sucks. It doesn't have to be this way, we can change it, if we want to.

  • @sinker0

    @sinker0

    Жыл бұрын

    She's 100% right

  • @ChannelMath

    @ChannelMath

    10 ай бұрын

    No. In Monopoly, the money is limited and prices are fixed. The whole point of the talk is that the world is NOT like Monopoly

  • @BritishBeachcomber
    @BritishBeachcomber10 ай бұрын

    The real problem is that most governments only think as far as the next election. The people need long term policy so we can invest in a better future for all of us and our children.

  • @runnergo1398

    @runnergo1398

    10 ай бұрын

    Some policies do end up long term. Just look at Obamacare. Something all Republican voters hated (for many odd reasons), but ended up wanting to keep it because getting rid of it would hurt them very much. When Trump tried to get rid of it, a federal judge shut him down knowing how much it would hurt the country. Obamacare was just a stepping stone towards universal health care. Obama knew there was no way he could get a universal healthcare bill to pass because there are way too many greedy people on both sides of the isle.

  • @thomassenbart

    @thomassenbart

    9 ай бұрын

    Long term economic policies depend upon sound economics, stability in markets, dependable energy, quality workers, low taxes etc...not MMT.

  • @runnergo1398

    @runnergo1398

    9 ай бұрын

    @@thomassenbart Low taxes my *ss. Tax the rich!

  • @VallenChaosValiant

    @VallenChaosValiant

    9 ай бұрын

    @@thomassenbart Your mistake is thinking MMT isn't already what is happening since the end of the gold standard. MMT doesn't CHANGE anything; MMT is just what real life is doing right now. You are already living in MMT even if you deny it. MMT is just describing the CURRENT monetary system. How money works NOW.

  • @thomassenbart

    @thomassenbart

    9 ай бұрын

    @@VallenChaosValiant No, I'm not. Gold has no more intrinsic value than paper, which has no more intrinsic value than trust in the federal govt... If the public loses confidence in any medium, currency crashes. MMT is something at another level because it asserts that there is no connection between public confidence and the value of money and that you can make as much as you want without consequence. You can't. The latest round of inflation is the tip of the proverbial iceberg. As govt. debt continues to increase, it crowds out all other expenditures and the only way to end this debacle is through inflation, which will destroy the debt but that only happens if govt. restrains spending, which it does not seem capable of doing. Gold is not the answer either and any attempt to go back to this standard would destroy the economy as quickly as MMT. What is needed is responsible governmental spending and taxation, roughly in balance. Such a formula allows for an ever more prosperous society, all things remaining equal.

  • @waichui2988
    @waichui298810 ай бұрын

    The problem is that the United States does not have the physical resources she mentions. The US is issuing money to buy huge quantity of resources from foreign countries. How much federal debt would it take for foreigners to refuse to accept the US dollar any more? 80 trillion? Maybe 267 trillion is acceptable? Better not find out.

  • @seanburton5298

    @seanburton5298

    9 ай бұрын

    We are finding out!

  • @MrMarinus18

    @MrMarinus18

    9 ай бұрын

    Yeah, like dismantling your own light industry and shipping it all of to China. That was a pretty bad idea.

  • @triforcelink
    @triforcelink2 жыл бұрын

    TLDR; Ignore the debt, but keep inflation in check.

  • @briane173

    @briane173

    8 ай бұрын

    If WE followed this maxim normal folks would all be in debtors' prison. Aside from their control of the fiat currency, why should government not be bound by that same rule? The States are constitutionally bound to balance their budgets; only the _Federal_ government doesn't have to live by that requirement. Do you see the problem here.

  • @dave9547

    @dave9547

    2 ай бұрын

    Printed money creates inflation. Maybe more thinking and a little less tldr in your life would help you.

  • @giancarlogiuffra4143
    @giancarlogiuffra41432 жыл бұрын

    I get the reasoning. If the industry sector that will support the new government spending has the necessary excess capacity, then there shouldn't be inflation in that sector. However, the households employed in said sector, will have more money to spend. Wouldn't that in theory put pressure on the average household basket? I suppose there has to be a bet on where that money will ultimately flow, right? Maybe we just have to hope that the average household has healthy expenditure habits or something like that.

  • @Achrononmaster

    @Achrononmaster

    2 жыл бұрын

    No. It does not work in the simple-minded linear proportions way you suggest. Macroeconomics (unlike micro-econ for a single firm) is fundamentally a nonlinear dynamical system. Households can choose to save rather than spend (and spend to to do what, eat more? buy more houses? you cannot spend on goods that are not for sale, and firms hate raising prices when there is demand pressure, they pressure to map up output, until they run out of resources, typically only then, and only if they have a near monopoly, will they put up prices). Thing is, in an uncertain world households do save a lot of surplus income annually. All such savings are a demand leakage from _circulation_ so are a huge deflationary bias. It is thus not the stock of currency in existence that puts pressure on prices, it's the rate of circulation, and even then there is no deterministic causal path to inflation. To get inflation from excess demand firms have to run short of labour or machines to hire, since they tend to increase capacity rather than raise prices. Provided resource slack exists then , the general price level will not change linearly with increased governemtn net spending.

  • @akeuur

    @akeuur

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Achrononmaster Very good and clear explanation, I hope many people read it and understand this simple fact you mention: ''It is thus not the stock of currency in existence that put pressure on prices, it's the rate of circulation, and even then there is no deterministic causal path to inflation.''

  • @Matt-vm6jv

    @Matt-vm6jv

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Achrononmaster great breakdown, upvote

  • @clemfarley7257

    @clemfarley7257

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, straight out of Milton’s memoirs. No one cared when Emperors diluted the gold in coins. And this theory is modern to boot.

  • @Katu3572

    @Katu3572

    Жыл бұрын

    @@clemfarley7257 🤌👍yes

  • @azdjedi
    @azdjedi11 ай бұрын

    If the surplus is good for one group of benefactors, then equally true is it was bad for another group. The "other group" is the deficit, that needs to be filled.

  • @danielcleveland3600
    @danielcleveland3600 Жыл бұрын

    I recall this speaker being interviewed on a morning show around 18 months ago. She said deficits don't matter in essence, I thought "you're right the don't matter until they do". Talk about short sighted - while the reason for our global inflation isn't entirely government debt spending it certainly was a major contributor. Now we are dealing with the results.

  • @shaunrutherford7764

    @shaunrutherford7764

    Жыл бұрын

    I would look to corporate greed, consolidation, and our lack of robust antitrust laws over the past 50 years as the main culprit.

  • @JGS2295

    @JGS2295

    Жыл бұрын

    But that's not the case at all. The current global inflationary pressures are primarily due to energy and food price shocks (largely attributed to Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the associated wheat and other raw material supply interruptions) and the more general global supply chain issues post covid-lockdowns - particularly China's zero-covid policies having ripply effects around the world. In short, the increased rate at which average prices are rising this year compared with last year has very little to do with increased deficit spending by lots of governments during the pandemic.

  • @Katu3572

    @Katu3572

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JGS2295 what about the American invasion of the world? Oh no not Russia again. Keep printing so Zewlenskys wife can to shopping in Paris. How much $ have usa printed for Ukraine? USA most corrupt government

  • @danielhutchinson6604

    @danielhutchinson6604

    Жыл бұрын

    Bankers enjoy Debt, they charge Interest to remove it and then your Debt becomes their income. The Ponzi Scheme of Capital requires us to now believe in the Digital Dollars that we never see. Economists enjoy the concept, it pays them to discuss it. We the People can actually stop participating in their Fiat Dollar scheme that was implemented by Nixon at the request of the Rockefellers, who now have made the Family Bank into the Nations Biggest. The Wealthy seem to be the ones who use Money to manipulate the rest of the Population, by using money as leverage to buy Politicians. It seems pretty simple to promote an Oligarchy when they make us all play their Game......

  • @danielhutchinson6604

    @danielhutchinson6604

    Жыл бұрын

    @@javierolguin2502 Was that reply to Janie Smith sufficient?

  • @markcampbell7577
    @markcampbell75772 жыл бұрын

    Monetary easing is evidence of the reality of government deficit and government debt.

  • @thebuzh3rd

    @thebuzh3rd

    10 ай бұрын

    It is not. See 'religion' for proof of people doing stuff confidently wrong.

  • @vsanden
    @vsanden2 жыл бұрын

    This is a story about central decision making and spending. Resources are limited and the currency of one country also had an exchange rate vs another currency which means there is scarcity even in that respect. There are many different people with different opinions about what a country needs (war, healthcare, etc) and some spending is gone and some will be an investment in a more efficient future (roads, infrastructure). We should spend wisely, so the talk doesn’t totally make sense to me.

  • @Achrononmaster

    @Achrononmaster

    2 жыл бұрын

    Kelton would agree with you mostly, she mentions around @2:30 and again at @9:25 the key questions are about what resources the government claims? Kelton is all about _spending wisely_ how could you fail to hear that?

  • @kellybeard8713

    @kellybeard8713

    2 жыл бұрын

    Check our her book.

  • @roughhabit9085

    @roughhabit9085

    2 жыл бұрын

    Has she found inflation yet?

  • @lukaradojevic7195

    @lukaradojevic7195

    2 жыл бұрын

    You already have central planning,which is being done by private wall street banks,not the government,because in our system private banks create new money supply when they give and create new loans(they don't lend fractionally or from reserves,they create it same way as central banks do,out of nothing),so there is posiblity for inflation not only if government create and spend money,but from private banks and sector also.everytime some bank decide to give loan to some client and company,they are increasing the money supply and engaging planning of economy and its direction.they it is just a question of in which system you want to live,one in which planing is being done by small number of privately owned banks who mostly lend for asset and financial speculation for short term capital gains and consumer purposes so people go into debt to consume stuff,all of which is not productive and don't add anything real to economy,it is wealth extraction actually,when you create money out of nothing and just buy assets in order to sell them at higher price or take the rent and dividend,you didn't create nothing,you extracted wealth from the real economy into FIRE sector(finance,insurance,real estate owned by banks)or you want to live in system where planning is being done by institution that at least have to pretend that work for the public,because there is election every few years and we have at least some control over what is being done there..

  • @coolioso808

    @coolioso808

    Жыл бұрын

    Some resources are scarce, yes, but many resources are abundant, at least for now. But our economic system worldwide, running on capitalistic infinite growth is a recipe for disaster. That's a key problem. We can't expect a sustainable environment using an unsustainable anti-economic system. So that means there should be short-term solutions and long-term ones as well. In the short-term, understanding the myth of deficits, and the fiat currency countries such as US, Can, UK, Aus, China and Japan that cannot run out of money, they should all be ensuring the basic needs of the people be met: no poverty, no hunger, no homelessness - using programs like a basic income and housing for all - and re-build infrastructure to be advanced, efficient and powered by renewable energy. Education should be free, healthcare should be free because they are human rights and promote general wellness in society. Long term, we need a sustainable alternative economic system to capitalism, like a Natural Law resource based economy, where Natural Law is how we collectively manage resources in an open-source, public access way. With local self sufficiency being a key goal to promote direct democracy and eliminate political roles. Politics is out of the way of resource management, replaced with logic and reason, Natural Law and various groups of experts in their field collaborating on problem solving and life improving projects.

  • @alvaromd3203
    @alvaromd32032 жыл бұрын

    MMT is a very interesting theory (which has other authors at the frontline). Yet, the high inflation in US and around the globe (I’m writing this commentary 7 months after the video was posted) challenge some of her assumption and prove that it is not so simple.

  • @HistoritorJimaldus

    @HistoritorJimaldus

    2 жыл бұрын

    Which assumption does it challenge? And what do you think has caused the current high inflation?

  • @AlexScorpionVn

    @AlexScorpionVn

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@HistoritorJimaldus 10:20 they should keep inflation in check.

  • @HistoritorJimaldus

    @HistoritorJimaldus

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@AlexScorpionVn doesn’t the current high inflation prove that she was right and that governments should have focused more on controlling inflation?

  • @GK-gc9cv

    @GK-gc9cv

    2 жыл бұрын

    Straight up proves what anyone should have been able to easily see: she is flat out wrong

  • @GK-gc9cv

    @GK-gc9cv

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@HistoritorJimaldus what caused inflation? I dunno maybe printing trillions of dollars in the past few years? And yet we should have printed and spent more???? 🙄 Hmm

  • @1962beachboy
    @1962beachboy Жыл бұрын

    High gov debt is a drag on the economy fuzzy math or not. Wouldn't we be better off with a much lower national debt (and the interest on that debt) and lower interest rates?

  • @Rob-fx2dw

    @Rob-fx2dw

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes it would be better if it had been much lower. The national debt she claims is an asset is really a debt for taxpayers to pay off when the treasury securities that were sold by government actually mature and have to be paid off with any interest and some large percentage has been sold overseas and they don't foot the bill for paying it off but resident taxpayers actually do without any other resident local getting the benefit of interest.

  • @tiengangale2585
    @tiengangale25852 жыл бұрын

    This is the talk I have long been waiting for an economist to make. We pay for wars without questions but can't fund people basic needs. Every country in the world in debt but it only ever seems to be use as a political tool.

  • @SmashBrosBrawl

    @SmashBrosBrawl

    2 жыл бұрын

    What makes you think MMT fixes the US government spending trillions on offshore wars????

  • @jaxoncanseeyou

    @jaxoncanseeyou

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@SmashBrosBrawl that's not what they're saying. They're simply remarking that what she says in this talk is already true for military spending - that the US government prints money to resource wars. But it is unwilling to do the same to fund things that would actually help people

  • @SmashBrosBrawl

    @SmashBrosBrawl

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jaxoncanseeyou but it's not free, that's trillions of dollars that would've stayed in the tax payers pockets. The govt is not better an omniscient being that knows how to beat allocate resources. The private market with hundreds of millions are much better at doing so

  • @jaxoncanseeyou

    @jaxoncanseeyou

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@SmashBrosBrawl well that has nothing to do to the comment you're replying to, and shows that you didn't watch or understand the video. What a troll

  • @SmashBrosBrawl

    @SmashBrosBrawl

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jaxoncanseeyou Japan already has pseudo-MMT, 0% GDP Growth for like 3 decades now. Great policy 😃👍

  • @adamk1520
    @adamk15202 жыл бұрын

    We need labor! Without labor, spending is pointless.

  • @adamk1520

    @adamk1520

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@LegendLength Besides any point. People are being paid to stay home when we need some of these people to be at work.

  • @7788Sambaboy

    @7788Sambaboy

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@adamk1520 ...as a billionaire myself, who receives millions and millions from the gov't each year I like the way you think. I need uninformed, wannabe economists to watch fox news and keep my extravagant wealth in my pocket...I spend millions paying for media and gov't to do my bidding. Thanks for helping me by repeating the same stupid things over and over.

  • @adamk1520

    @adamk1520

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@7788Sambaboy Billionaires pay money to the government. Billionaires don’t spend time commenting on KZread.

  • @7788Sambaboy

    @7788Sambaboy

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@adamk1520 OK, I might have exaggerated my wealth, and I actually do agree with you that we need labor...but we have it. There are lots of people waiting for a decent job and there are many willing to switch. Before spending money we need to ask "will this benefit workers, citizens and the country?" and this one is a no brainer...then we need to do it. and sorry, my use of "stupid" in my comment was rude and pretentious...I apologize.

  • @Tetragrammaton22

    @Tetragrammaton22

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@adamk1520 people could return to work, and the economy could go back to normal, if people took the pandemic seriously from the start and followed the rules

  • @rh-bd6wv
    @rh-bd6wv8 ай бұрын

    What is a TED talk? A forum where speakers are applauded for saying things that least represent reality.

  • @alwagner9722

    @alwagner9722

    8 ай бұрын

    Exactly. No mention of the privately owned Central Bank charging intrest on the National Debt which "our" government has to borrow on.

  • @margaretames6522
    @margaretames6522 Жыл бұрын

    Adding dollars to the economy has to be done where there are available resources. Too many dollars created at once could drive inflation. Simple.

  • @ChannelMath

    @ChannelMath

    10 ай бұрын

    that's MMT!

  • @MrMarinus18

    @MrMarinus18

    9 ай бұрын

    Actually the evidence for that is pretty shaky. The country that has run deficits the longest and has the highest debt is struggling with massive deflation.

  • @seanwalsh999

    @seanwalsh999

    8 ай бұрын

    Would that be Japan?@@MrMarinus18

  • @Jeff-ie6ek
    @Jeff-ie6ek2 жыл бұрын

    "when the country is controlling its own money supply, it practical can't run out of money". The Zimbabwe government used to think the same thing, the rest are now history.

  • @Mehwhatevr

    @Mehwhatevr

    2 жыл бұрын

    yeah I liked most of what she said, but I don't get this part. maybe she didn't explain well enough because I'm thinking similar to you are. Did Zimbabwe and other countries like it lack the resources or something, is that why printing money destroyed them? flooding the market with money when there aren't enough resources drives the prices up? Is that what she's saying?

  • @nathanbishop4771

    @nathanbishop4771

    2 жыл бұрын

    When the United States prints money, it does so by selling bonds. The US currency is backed by debt, and we've never defaulted on payments of it. Countries printing money into hyperinflation tend not to issue bonds. Today's short term inflation is largely driven by COVID triggers (supply chain issues, housing shortage).

  • @jayceh

    @jayceh

    2 жыл бұрын

    It depends if your debt is primarily in local currency (USD) or foreign currency (Zimbabwe, Weimer Republic)

  • @Mehwhatevr

    @Mehwhatevr

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@nathanbishop4771 yeah. more money has been printed, driving up demand to buy. but supply can't keep up so the prices go up driving inflation. hypothetically (in my mind at least), if things ever return to normalcy, then supply should go up and we may see deflation.

  • @Rob-fx2dw

    @Rob-fx2dw

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@nathanbishop4771 You say "The US currency is backed by debt, and we've never defaulted on payments of it". The US defaulted in the great depression under FDR. There is guaratee that counties creating and selling bonds will not experience hyperinflation. It also depends on whom they sell the bonds to. If they are sold to the central bank who creted new money to pay for them and they are onsold to others before they mature there will be inflation pressures. If the money that pays for them is created out of nothing and not destroyed when they mature there will be inflation pressure.

  • @richardmarshall1647
    @richardmarshall16472 жыл бұрын

    Printing more money comes at the cost of currency devaluation , which if a net importer spells death spiral.

  • @dag410
    @dag4108 ай бұрын

    Well, it looks like we are in one of the largest asset bubbles in history.

  • @davelunger7413
    @davelunger74138 ай бұрын

    Good talk, if the goal is to enrichen the Banksters that we pay the interest to, for the deficits/debt we create. Asset-based currency prevents Bankstering.

  • @lemonsavery
    @lemonsavery2 жыл бұрын

    I'm unable to follow a lot of this, however I do agree that using money as a measure of capability is inferior to using resources as a measure.

  • @gasdive

    @gasdive

    2 жыл бұрын

    This is how I have always understood it, and though it is with kings, it scales to the modern world. Once, before machines and industry, wealth was exclusively land, because land grew food and the food drove the humans and animals that made everything. So to get wealthy, Kings had to conquer their neighbours and take their land. So they sent armies. The armies travelled to the neighbours and took their land. The soldiers were paid by what they stole from the neighbours (and the Lords who raised the armies got land). That works fine until you've conquered a few neighbours. Then the army needs to steal stuff along the way to get to the next nearest neighbours. But that's the King's land! No good will come of that. So, the king tells everyone that next year part of the annual tax will be not just food, but a coin that has a picture of the king on it. The king makes coins. Lots of coins. He doesn't actually want coins from the people. He literally just made them himself. Then he gives coins to the army and tells them that if they want food or other good on the way to battle, the villagers will swap coins for things. The villagers don't really want coins. You can't eat them. They're worthless... Except... They're going to need one for this year's tax. The tax is what gives the money value. Not this "proof of work" malarkey, or the "intrinsic value of gold". So the king makes coins, gives them away, then demands them back. Things get done. What she's taking about is just an extension of that. The "King" wants a new bridge/road/hospital or whatever. He creates money out of nothing and hands it to construction companies. They hand it to construction workers. Construction workers hand it to cafés, supermarkets, car dealers, they hand it to waiters, shop workers and salesmen. Each pays some tax, and over several transactions, the government gets it back. If there was no tax, that money would build up in the economy and eventually you'd need a wheelbarrow to carry the cash to the store to buy bread. The tax maintains the value of the money. So the limit isn't the supply of money, its the speed at which the money can circulate, with a little bit being removed each time it changes hands. But if the economy is going to grow, the government has to create money and give it way. That means more going out of the government than going in. That difference is deficit.

  • @rafaelborbacs

    @rafaelborbacs

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@gasdive what if you could refuse to pay taxes to the king all together? What if the king's collector can't tell how many land, crops or coins you have. That's the crypto revolution. It's disrupting the government

  • @gasdive

    @gasdive

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@rafaelborbacs then when the soldiers cross your land, and they're hungry, they kill you and take your stuff instead. Easy.

  • @kmmm6083

    @kmmm6083

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@rafaelborbacs no, the crypto it's supported by speculation and it's not anonymous no more

  • @hughtierney9109

    @hughtierney9109

    9 ай бұрын

    Thanks fortaking the trouble to post that. I found it useful.@@gasdive

  • @js-wq6zy
    @js-wq6zy Жыл бұрын

    Money is power, those with it don't want others to catch up

  • @andrewwalsh2755

    @andrewwalsh2755

    Жыл бұрын

    Wealth is power... money is just an IOU...

  • @thomassenbart

    @thomassenbart

    9 ай бұрын

    Nope, not at all. That is not how it works.

  • @dave9547

    @dave9547

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@thomassenbart that's exactly how it works

  • @agrivere5494
    @agrivere5494 Жыл бұрын

    Wonder what she thinks about modern monetary theory now…as the MMT proponents say, the only thing we have to worry about is inflation…you think? That’s like saying we can jump out of airplanes as much as we want, all we have to worry about is hitting the ground…

  • @decorumrose

    @decorumrose

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly!😂

  • @elliotfrahs5997

    @elliotfrahs5997

    Жыл бұрын

    The difference is that MMT centers inflation as THE thing to avoid, whereas the CBO today tracks deficits which are unrelated to inflation. In other words, the CBO is saying "we can jump out of airplanes, as long as it's night time." If we can get Congress to focus on inflation, we would expose what spending contributes to inflation down the road, and what spending will not because we have the resources to provide the benefit we're spending on.

  • @ronwoodward716
    @ronwoodward7168 ай бұрын

    She must have missed that econ class where they talked about inflation and how it decreases the value of our money. When you deficit spend you create money out of nowhere. More money chasing the same amount of products and services means the prices have to go up unless productivity expands. If the government spends all that productivity increase with deficit spending they are robbing everyone of a possible higher standard of living.

  • @briane173

    @briane173

    8 ай бұрын

    This is so basic that I'm flummoxed that I'm hearing this BS from a friggin' _economist!_ What makes her think that shrinking the value of the dollar makes ordinary people better off? It's pretty obvious that she sees government power as omnipotent, and they can call a dollar anything they want. They redefine it every single time it borrows from the Fed. Keep doing that and you've got the Wymar Republic -- Brazil. Argentina. This is snake oil. I'd like to hear her excuses today after what this profligate govt spending has done to the macro-economy today, two years later. Housing so overpriced people are literally out in the streets because they can't afford it. Gasoline at $6 a gallon, groceries 30% more expensive than two years ago because of those transportation costs. A blazing hot labor market that is continually putting inflationary pressure on businesses to pay the salaries demanded, at a time when inflation is just as hot. Her excuse is "Hey, we've got the Fed! The Fed controls employment! The Fed controls the currency!" This is madness.

  • @pranafoods1
    @pranafoods12 жыл бұрын

    Money corutps just look at all the monopolies, greedy corporations .

  • @CynthiaTheHealthExperience

    @CynthiaTheHealthExperience

    2 жыл бұрын

    Money doesnt corrupt. Government does. Money is just a system of communication between individuals

  • @Pg3dpros
    @Pg3dpros2 жыл бұрын

    The logic gaps, conflation of issues, lack of prioritization and rationalizing are astounding.

  • @grimaffiliations3671

    @grimaffiliations3671

    2 жыл бұрын

    What do you mean

  • @Rob-fx2dw

    @Rob-fx2dw

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes oustandingly bad and rife with conflictions and contradictions within itself.

  • @briskyoungploughboy

    @briskyoungploughboy

    11 ай бұрын

    lol, you again!@@Rob-fx2dw

  • @briskyoungploughboy

    @briskyoungploughboy

    11 ай бұрын

    The commentator is overwhelmed by the exuberance of his own verbosity.

  • @pratinavp
    @pratinavp Жыл бұрын

    This is what happens when basic human common sense and economic prudence is overridden by pseudo intellectualism and fundamentally leftist policy. I think the very learned economist forgot about the problem of inflation and how common people that she is referring to suffer because of it. In this global financial system, if a country is overleveraged, Sri Lanka showed us what would happen. So for god's sake don't let basic human common sense be forgotten while thinking about economics. Yes. The government must spend on infrastructure and other areas for the betterment of enterprise, people and society.. however.. everything must be paid for. There's no alternative

  • @lordofthegadflies7389

    @lordofthegadflies7389

    7 ай бұрын

    You have it right. She briefly mentions inflation then drops the subject. This is propaganda expounded by a fool to confuse morons.

  • @jackbrons4904

    @jackbrons4904

    7 ай бұрын

    You could've made your comment shorter by just writing "I don't understand Modern Monetary Theory". Appealing to 'common sense' in a hyper-complex research discipline like macro-economics doesn't make any sense.

  • @socratesagain7822

    @socratesagain7822

    2 ай бұрын

    Dear TINA-ist, Madam Thatcher coined that disingenuous phrase. Please re-read your geo-political economics boosk. Please read my comment above. Be well.

  • @TyrianHaze

    @TyrianHaze

    2 ай бұрын

    @@jackbrons4904 Modern monetary theory is bullshit. Keep letting them take money right out of your pocket with inflation year after year while they lie to your face telling you inflation is under control. It's really showing us how much you understand mmt.

  • @The.world.has.gone.crazy...

    @The.world.has.gone.crazy...

    6 күн бұрын

    "Monetairy systems " are a fake man made construction, it's not a law of nature. 😊

  • @wtan1851
    @wtan1851 Жыл бұрын

    Now we know why we have high inflation. Since when did economists teach that lunches are free?

  • @garbonomics

    @garbonomics

    9 ай бұрын

    There are lunatics in economics as well as any other discipline. And “experts” are constantly wrong. If in doubt look at how the “experts” handled COVID.

  • @scbill88
    @scbill882 жыл бұрын

    So there is a magic money tree. My parents were ..$&cking liars.

  • @pjauthur9869

    @pjauthur9869

    2 жыл бұрын

    it doesnt exist if your talkin household finances but if youre talkin about most western economies and governments then yes

  • @SWRaptor1

    @SWRaptor1

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well, there is a magic money computer, not a tree and it only applies to the governments that control sovereign fiat currencies. Not your parents.

  • @illiiilli24601

    @illiiilli24601

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@pjauthur9869 depends on how you define most. This doesn't apply to any country in the Eurozone, which is a lot of countries.

  • @josefigueroa4033
    @josefigueroa4033 Жыл бұрын

    9:02, Lets just flip the graph upside down! Problem solved :)

  • @marcotalamantez5982
    @marcotalamantez5982 Жыл бұрын

    “We just had the shortest recession in U.S. history.” Well that didn’t age too well.

  • @JGS2295

    @JGS2295

    Жыл бұрын

    Why has the US GDP failed to grow for two consecutive quarters?

  • @lenilsonsilva3690

    @lenilsonsilva3690

    Жыл бұрын

    US is not in recession right now. Look at the numbers.

  • @sinker0

    @sinker0

    Жыл бұрын

    We're in a recession? Keep trying so desperately

  • @DouglasBerry-bt9mp
    @DouglasBerry-bt9mp7 ай бұрын

    The economy does not consist of money. It consists of what people do and what they have the potential to do. Government spending does not of itself make the economy bigger or smaller just different. It merely changes what people do. In the long term whether the economy grows or shrinks as a result depends on the quality of decision making by the politicians and whether they make better or worse decisions than individuals.

  • @Danny_6Handford
    @Danny_6Handford10 ай бұрын

    Excellent talk Stephanie and great job in writing the book "The Deficit Myth"! One of the most stunning things I learned about modern economies is that money is created when someone takes out a loan and goes into debt. I was well into my forties when I learned this about modern money. At first I did not believe it and it is certainly not what I was taught about money in my younger days. Modern money is mostly about getting governments, corporations, businesses and people into debt and there is also quite a bit of smoke and mirrors involved. The idea is to keep the borrowers continuously in debt so they can continuously keep paying interest to the “lenders”. The cruel joke is that the money given out for the loans that make up this debt does not exist. The money is created by entering numbers into the borrowers account when the borrower takes out the loan. As the loan is paid back, the money that was created for the loan is eliminated and no longer exists, but the institutions that created the money get to keep the interest that was paid. So, the more debt there is, the more money there is and the more interest that is paid to these institutions. The other cruel joke is to get a loan like this, most of us have to put up some collateral, so if you default, they can take ownership of your collateral. So basically, they get your possessions of whatever collateral you put up for free and with no risk since the money they “lent” you did not exist. Supposedly, this has been determined to be a legitimate way to do business! If money really needs to be created by simply entering numbers into accounts or printing it into existence, remember I am saying “if”, then the government should be the only authority allowed to create this kind of money for the nation without “borrowing” any from the private banks since they don’t have it either and just simply create it the same way the government would. This way the government would not have a national debt and would not be paying interest on money that private banks did not have. On the international level, debt has been used as a tool to gain power, status and influence over other countries for centuries. In the past century, the US perfected this technique. In the 21st century, China and some other countries have also learned this trick. Again, the idea is to keep the borrowers continuously in debt so they can continuously keep paying interest to the “lenders”. So if the country defaults, the “lenders” can take ownership of the country’s resources that was used for collateral. They get whatever collateral the country put up for free and with no risk since the money they “lent” did not exist! This is how America and the US dollar has been able to be the dominant player in the world economy but is now being challenged by other countries that have learned the trick. The banks should only be allowed to lend a percentage of money that has been deposited by their customers. If the banks do not have enough money to lend to corporations and businesses so that they can expand or continue to innovate, then the government can create the money to lend them and the government can collect the interest for these loans. This would also reduce the amount of taxes that businesses, corporations and individuals would have to pay governments. For these ideas to work, governments would have to be democratic and elected in fair and free elections which does not always happen! The strategies used to keep the economy growing is by promoting and encouraging borrowing especially government borrowing which of course creates more government debt. The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) represents the size of the economy which is the amount of money the economy is worth. When the economy is continuously growing, the GDP is also continually growing. Similar to any addiction, more and more borrowing is needed to have the same effect on economic growth. When the government debt starts to become greater than the value of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), technically it will no longer be possible to pay back the government debt. If it continues, the buying power of money will start to be significantly reduced and if the government debt starts to become several more times higher than the GDP, the money and financial systems will probably collapse. If this happens, the system is reset and the cycle is repeated. During the run up there will be some good times but, after the reset times will probably not be good and war is also a possibility. This cycle has been repeated continuously throughout history from the Chinese Dynasties to the Roman Empire to Germany after World War One and to Argentina, Venezuela and to many African, Asian and Middle Eastern nations in the 21st century. If America with the US Dollar can avoid this cycle, they would be the first. The thinking that the economy always has to grow for there to be innovation, progress and prosperity will eventually become a problem on a finite planet with limited resources. This may have worked well in the past when communities and societies did not know the scale of the planet and the environment. I think the focus know needs to be on sustainability not on growth! There needs to be flexibility in the system for the economy to be able to expand and contract and for a contraction to be considered normal and not a problem or a failure and for the contraction to be just as innovative and prosperous as the expansion. For this type of thinking to work, there needs to be some new economic models developed along with some new types of financial systems. If the academics along with the economist, engineers, politicians, corporations, capitalists and entrepreneurs can figure some new economic models that are based on sustainability instead of growth, I am sure there will be some noble prizes awarded. The way this can begin and at the same time improve peace and fairness, is when our business, government and academic leaders along with our wealthiest and brightest and smartest among us can learn to be much more truthful, honest and trustworthy and much less greedy and also learn to avoid being bribed and becoming criminals and with the rest of us start to understand that the wellbeing and happiness of others benefits everyone and is the bases for morality. Capitalism is the best system with the best ideas but some of the ideas of capitalism need to be amended with the primary focus and objective being sustainability not growth. If people are struggling to survive or risking their lives fighting wars, they will not care about anybody else or about the damage and devastation of towns, cities and communities including the planet’s environment. They will also be much more aggressive and willing to commit crimes and behave in violent ways with animosity and hatred toward others that don’t look like them or do not share the same believes and values. I do not agree with all the ideas in these books, such as a basic government income for everyone, but “Doughnut Economics” by Kate Raworth, “Prosperity without Growth” by Tim Jackson, “Confessions of an Economic Hit Man” by John Perkins and "The Deficit Myth" by Stephanie Kelton and organizations like “The Centre for Advancements of the Steady State Economy” are promising developments.

  • @jsnel9185

    @jsnel9185

    9 ай бұрын

    This comment is it's own TEDTalk. 😊

  • @alwega2923

    @alwega2923

    9 ай бұрын

    Man, well put! So many of us simple folks are just starting to realise this... giant scam. Thanks for putting up your thoughts here

  • @MartinHadek

    @MartinHadek

    9 ай бұрын

    Your views are deeply flawed and seem to be based on lack of understanding. How are loans free of risk? Borrower can always default while collateral's value can always decrease and there is therefore always risk. Hence the interest. Also, countries regularly owe more than the value of their GDP and yet are still comfortably paying back their debt, nothing's collapsing - practically all of G7 has been in this position for decades. Economic growth is essential for this to work though. It is not how you survive without growth (you can't) but how you define its value components.

  • @Danny_6Handford

    @Danny_6Handford

    9 ай бұрын

    @@MartinHadek Thanks for your reply but, I think you need to review and do some homework on the current economic models and how modern money is created, controlled and managed. ”How are loans free of risk? Borrower can always default while collateral's value can always decrease and there is therefore always risk. Hence the interest” Please correct me if I am misunderstanding this. If the lender creates the money by entering numbers into the borrower’s account and then the money being paid back is eliminated from the lender's account, how can the lender have any risk if the lender did not have the money on the first place? And to add insult, the lender gets to keep the interest! And if the borrower defaults, regardless of what value it may have, the lender also gets the collateral! “Also, countries regularly owe more than the value of their GDP and yet are still comfortably paying back their debt, nothing's collapsing - practically all of G7 has been in this position for decades.” Not true. Why do you think one of the major reasons was for introducing the Euro back in 1999? Most of the currencies the Euro replaced were headed for a default and the Euro was a way to reset them. Also, when all was said and done, the cost of living relative to incomes was higher with the Euro than it was with the currencies it replaced. The cycle of debt increasing much more than the GDP resulting in money becoming worthless has been repeated continuously throughout history from the Chinese Dynasties to the Roman Empire to Germany after World War One and to Argentina, Venezuela and to many African, Asian and Middle Eastern nations in the 21st century. If America with the US Dollar can avoid this cycle, they would be the first”. ”Economic growth is essential for this to work though. It is not how you survive without growth (you can't) but how you define its value components” This may have worked well in the past when communities and societies did not know the scale of the planet and the environment. I think there needs to be some new economic models developed along with some new types of financial systems focused on sustainability not on growth! I also hope that you can understand that any type of biological life or ecological system here on earth cannot continue to keep growing. When life exists in a space that uses resources that cannot be renewed, when the space and the resources become contaminated and toxic, life will not be able to exist. This is how cancer cells eventually end up killing themselves in the human body. They use up all their resources for life and end up destroying the environment they live in which unfortunately also kills the human body that they were living in. I am sure that I still have a lot to learn and maybe it is not possible for humans to live sustainably on this planet and are destine to become extinct sooner without the time needed to possibly learn how to avoid this outcome. Maybe the advancements in technology such as artificial intelligence can figure out how the paradox of growth can be solved. Maybe the bigger challenge is for our leaders along with our wealthiest and brightest and smartest among us to start learning how to be much more truthful, honest and trustworthy so that the level of respect can rise to a point where humans will no longer be inspired to lie, commit crimes and make up stories about magical authorities that live in the sky and nations will no longer feel the need to spy on each other and to continue manufacturing weapons that can wipe out most of the life on this planet and from there start working towards reducing and eventually stopping the manufacturing of any weapons of war.

  • @MartinHadek

    @MartinHadek

    9 ай бұрын

    Let's end this here. If you think money to cover public debt are just numbers entered on keyboards then we don't have much to discuss (as any self-respecting Greek would tell you - Euro has little to do with it other than keeping a few macroindicators in check ;-). I agree with this TED lady that deficits may not necessarily be a bad thing if spent on good long-term investments that will generate treasury incomes as they're essentially covered with uncollected taxes (and thus correspondingly advantageously priced as bonds in money markets - they're low risk when issued by big economies) but stretching it into magical thinking is dangerous and this is where I'm afraid you've already ventured.

  • @jakub.anderwald
    @jakub.anderwald2 жыл бұрын

    There was a good question asked but not answered. Who does the extra money go to? Usually it goes to friends of people in the government, or to things that buy government it's voted in the next election. Or to stock market to people who know inflation is coming and want to protect their capital (just look at s&p index in the last years). I would prefer the money to go through free market to whoever does the best job and provides the best service, rather than who knows the most influential people.

  • @joemetcalf2235

    @joemetcalf2235

    2 жыл бұрын

    Maybe the additional money could go to care workers, social workers, teachers, nurses, paramedics the police and other service providers so that they can finally sustain a decent standard of living. Adam Smith's conception of capitalism doesn't exist anymore so stating that the free market simply rewards whoever "does the best job" or "provides the best service" is a nonsense.

  • @MendicantBias1

    @MendicantBias1

    Жыл бұрын

    Does the free market always select the most deserving people? Is it immune to special interests and insider knowledge?

  • @Mooja12

    @Mooja12

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MendicantBias1 No but the good part of the free market is only the people involved in the bad financial decisions are affected. They bear the full responsibility of their bad decisions. The people who make good financial decisions are not affected. This encourages people to make better financial decisions. This does not happen when government makes bad financial decisions because the people who make those decisions are not affected. The financial responsibly is shifted to people who had nothing to do with making those decisions. "Government is like a baby-it’s got an alimentary canal at one end and no sense of responsibility at the other."

  • @ChannelMath

    @ChannelMath

    10 ай бұрын

    I think everyone, including Kelton, would agree with that. Government spending should go either to all of us (like Covid checks, or maybe education - although that's complicated), or to volunteers (the military) or to the best contractor for the job we want done. I'm not sure what you mean by "go through free market" though. All money comes from the government, and then goes around free market, until possibly being removed by the government via taxes. But the government has to choose who to give it to initially. No way around that. Unless you're talking about a fixed money supply, which we used to have, which is now seen as a bad idea by almost all economists

  • @ChannelMath

    @ChannelMath

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Mooja12 "the good part of the free market is only the people involved in the bad financial decisions are affected. " where is God's name did you hear that? Just think about it for a minute. You'll realize it's obviously not true (unless by "involved" you mean "live on the same planet"). We are all connected. Someone pours money into an oil project that doesn't pan out, not only did they mess up a nice piece of land (there's an absolute loss right there), but they wasted people's labor and assets that could have been used to create profits that would have gone back into the economy, making everyone richer. Just think of the real economy: it's buildings, machines, the skills of people, etc. Those are the REAL assets of the nation (or world). If someone with financial power makes a bad decision, we end up with LESS of those real assets in total. If they make a good one, we end up with more. That's a NET total gain or loss, which

  • @SiemaZiomek
    @SiemaZiomek Жыл бұрын

    You will all feel the effects of implementing MMT- very soon.

  • @JGS2295

    @JGS2295

    Жыл бұрын

    MMT isn't a policy proposal, it's a descriptive economic model which aims to explain modern monetary systems in terms of how they actually work rather than the artificial concerns of orthodox economics.

  • @dave9547

    @dave9547

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@JGS2295 how's that inflation treating you?

  • @johnb.1020

    @johnb.1020

    Ай бұрын

    @@JGS2295 It's a model, therefore it's every bit as fallible as those associated with "artificial concerns".

  • @JGS2295

    @JGS2295

    Ай бұрын

    @@johnb.1020 Yes, and Einstein's general theory of relativity is a model of gravity. It does not make it just as inaccurate or fallible as any other model.

  • @ChrisAddis
    @ChrisAddis Жыл бұрын

    I've read her book the deficit myth. The problem you have is Kelton talks about inflation as being the watchword.....now look at our our current position; the government in the US and UK have issued currency to prop up their ecconmies and as a result inflation is through the roof. It's simply ignoring the problems of inflation and pittingbthe public and private sector against each other. It's already been proven as a non starter as inflation is through the roof globally as a result of measures like this.

  • @coolioso808

    @coolioso808

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, but look at where the government spends the money. Does it spend it to make Education free for all? Daycare guarantee for all parents? Comprehensive, full healthcare including vision, dental, hearing and MENTAL HEALTH? Does it use the money to make a Housing First guarantee? Basically, do single-payer for housing like it is done for healthcare. Government pays the developer or land owner directly the cost of the housing unit and because it is done 'in bulk' can also negotiate lower costs for housing and free people of one of the largest debts they have. People could still pay for and own a home, if the housing is heavily subsidized. Wouldn't that do a whole lot to reduce inflation? Inflation, if you don't know is just when 'prices go up' and why do prices go up? Because corporations are encouraged to be greedy to raise prices as high as they can get away with. This isn't directly tied to taxes, social spending and Federal deficits. Now, understanding MMT and how it can benefit the people more doesn't solve the structural instability of the monetary-market system. But it does give a lens for people to view it and advocate for policy that actually helps people live better lives, rather than hurts it. I think we need community, grassroots alternative systems to rise up from people volunteering to do something better, more collaborative and cooperative to create sustainable abundance and prosperity where they live. Something like what has already started with the One Small Town movement.

  • @ChannelMath

    @ChannelMath

    10 ай бұрын

    a one-time money creation creates a one-time inflation (assuming we are already at productive capacity, otherwise it could cause no inflation). Now inflation has already come down. So the question is: is the change to higher prices (and higher wages) worth whatever we got for the money? It's a question about the real world, not just economics. If it saved enough lives from coronavirus, then it's be worth it. If it secures our freedom, it's worth it. If it vastly improves our economic outlook in the long term (infrastructure, education) it's worth it.

  • @ChrisAddis

    @ChrisAddis

    10 ай бұрын

    @coolioso808 ok so yes, I do know what inflation is and what drives it. Firstly inflation is a supply vs demand issue. For example if the government subsidised the cost of property it would vastly increase the supply of houses and in the short term prices would come down.....but then the bill lands when the supply of labour is short, so suppliers raise wages, building supplies become harder to come by, causing an increase in demand and therefore price; this ultimately at one point or another ends up with hyperinflation at its most extreme or stagnant growth in the long term. Germany in 1923 saw how bad goings can get when the government just printed more money to pay striking workers... There are no easy answers and governments printing more money to ease temporary issues is not the answer.

  • @ChrisAddis

    @ChrisAddis

    10 ай бұрын

    @coolioso808 respectfully the UK funds healthcare...not perfect but then no-one dies in the gutter waiting for treatment or is left with a lifelong debt afterwards....but this has its limits. The best way for people to thrive is to seek opportunities and start small businesses...the government printing money devalues currency and makes life harder for the man on the street...not easier. It is not the job of any government to wholesale take care of those that can fend for themselves.

  • @coolioso808

    @coolioso808

    10 ай бұрын

    @@ChrisAddis You are going back 100 years to find a fear-mongering example of hyperinflation? That's not very relevant, I'm afraid. There was more to the hyperinflation incidents in Germany 1920s, in Zimbabwe, and other places that had it. The real issue isn't even money printing, it is money itself. Combined with a market economy and private property used for maximizing profit, it's a totally unsustainable train ride off a cliff. Leave that big issue for a second ... Go back to MMT and government 'printing money' which is mostly a misnomer, because very little money is actually printed. Governments create money out of thin air by the Central Banks, it is digitally created, going straight to the accounts of the parties involved in whatever legislation or funding bill was passed. Taxes come out later, deleting some money from the economy. The only limit in this case is the real resources to do something. Subsidizing houses so nobody has to live homeless is extremely rational and has no indication it would lead to hyperinflation in and of itself. Just like Government Funded Universal Healthcare makes sense, so nobody dies in the gutter, or goes in debt or bankrupt due to medical treatments. I hesitate to even use "Universal" because in Canada, for example, it's really just basic treatment and doctor visits that are free (government paid) because dental, hearing, vision and mental health services are out of our own pockets or perhaps part of a work-related healthcare program that reduces some of those costs. All this does not magically make everything more expensive. Most expensive cost of living items currently are food and shelter. Your concern about government subsidizing housing so people can access their first home and not live on the streets or in a crowded apartment or basement suite or whatever, is that costs will go down but then bounce back up to hyperinflation? Not necessarily. If private land owners continue to exist, especially foreign land owners and they still drive to maximize their profits, under the rules and incentives of capitalism, then yes, costs may go up. But that can be mitigated with regulation AND community co-operatives that also build housing and it is for the people, by the people for the NEEDS of the people, not for some maximum profit game. Also, Japan has been in deflation for years, even though they have 'printed' so much money to activate projects. Why do you think they are in deflation and not hyperinflation? Canada, USA, UK, etc. can all do better with a modern monetary theory in practice to reduce inequality and dignify people with basic needs being more easily met and also community-driven co-operative networks that localize the means of production as much as possible, reducing costs.

  • @diananovak8029
    @diananovak8029 Жыл бұрын

    This didn’t age well.

  • @btcberg3615

    @btcberg3615

    2 ай бұрын

    BITCOIN OR GO DOWN WITH THE SHIP

  • @kstark2298
    @kstark22982 жыл бұрын

    THIS hasn't aged well as economic reality is crushing this new world thought process. Recession is the new reality as is fiscal irresponsibility, outsized inflation and deficits now matter. Time to retool the model Stephanie as the free/cheap money injected into the economy is now showing the contra results...welcome to the reality check!

  • @janh245

    @janh245

    2 жыл бұрын

    Read my mind, K Stark..too bad our gov't (both dems and rinos) and electorate are peopled with the mindless...only emotions count, and thier digitized virtual reality..where the elite would like us all to habitate...

  • @johnbertram1537
    @johnbertram15372 жыл бұрын

    This lady will put the most powerful countries in the poor house

  • @joecraven2034
    @joecraven20348 ай бұрын

    Doesn't the US Treasury sell bonds ie borrow money from bond buyers? Aren't some of these lenders foreign countries? So we pay these countries interest right?

  • @karabardin
    @karabardin2 жыл бұрын

    She says that we don't need to raise taxes to pay for everything and then proposes to "print money" (digitally). Printing money leads to inflation. Inflation is literally hidden taxes for everyone.

  • @joemetcalf2235

    @joemetcalf2235

    2 жыл бұрын

    She would agree that issuing additional currency in certain circumstances would be inflationary. However she would also say that it entirely depends on where the money is going, what it is to be used for and what type of environment the money is going into. Spending more into an economy than you take back out doesn't automatically lead to inflation.

  • @Rob-fx2dw

    @Rob-fx2dw

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@joemetcalf2235 And who is best to decide where money goes ? Politicians with a politically based agenda or the people who actually have needs?

  • @illiiilli24601

    @illiiilli24601

    2 жыл бұрын

    Spending it to make labour more productive isn't inflationary …not that that'd happen with the corruption in our governments

  • @colbycalabrese8417

    @colbycalabrese8417

    Жыл бұрын

    Not inflationary if there is capacity for growth

  • @rookiej5587
    @rookiej55872 жыл бұрын

    I could destroy all her arguments. 💪

  • @Rob-fx2dw

    @Rob-fx2dw

    2 жыл бұрын

    Her argument is pathetic- and anyone who has an IQ of over 85 and is not a gullible fool and is willing to actually think could also do it. But I guess her usual audience don't quite get to an IQ of 85.

  • @CaptFoster5

    @CaptFoster5

    8 ай бұрын

    Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaand, its a whole year later. Plenty of time to have a video. radio interview, article, or fully researched paper showing off your "destroying" all her arguments ready to share by now, yes?

  • @dave9547

    @dave9547

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@CaptFoster5you're completely lost.

  • @rickniles6056
    @rickniles60569 ай бұрын

    I do not understand why she didn't address the principal concern about the national debt and deficit spending. That an increasing portion of the budget every year is paying interest on the debt and at some point people and organizations around the world will not be willing to keep buy our T-bills if it appears we can not pay the interest. When the budget becomes 90% interest on the debt and only 10% other things how does that make sense? Look I really want to believe what she's saying because it sounds great, but she completely avoided the reason most people worry about the national debt. It's most definitely NOT that the word "debt" and "deficit" sound bad. It's that IRS pie graph that shows that something like 30% of the budget goes to paying interest on the debt. That doesn't seem good to any tax payer. Please tell me why I shouldn't worry about that.

  • @AaronLance
    @AaronLance3 ай бұрын

    This is why we have had such high inflation for the last few years and the environment and infrastructure are still degrading. The environment and resources are limited, but they printed tons of money for PPP loans and to stop job losses during Covid. You can spend / print money, but if production is the same, inflation goes up. People have more money to spend on what they want, but there's not more to buy. If production increases, the environment suffers from increased energy and resource consumption. Either way, through debt, environmental damage, and disinformation, we're screwed for generations.

  • @garretttjordan
    @garretttjordan2 жыл бұрын

    None of her work is published by the way. Bc if she had it peer-reviewed, it wouldn’t pass

  • @drakekoefoed1642

    @drakekoefoed1642

    2 жыл бұрын

    the establishment economists would not sign off on it because they tell lies lies lies

  • @TyrianHaze

    @TyrianHaze

    2 ай бұрын

    Even peer reviewed work can be bullshit even if it "passes." Just look at all of the junk science being put forth over the last few decades. Tons of bullshit to be found, and lots of scientists are in on the scam.

  • @ianfryer

    @ianfryer

    2 ай бұрын

    Wrong: She is an empirical economist, a professor at the Levy Economics Institute, and has published many papers and books, notably "The Deficit Myth" which is very much worth reading. Oh, and she was an economic advisor in the White House.

  • @pugnate666
    @pugnate6662 жыл бұрын

    It sounds like bullshit at first, but she actually makes a valuable statement. -> The sum of money a government spends is not important, but the impact on inflation and how it is spent are. Although the first half sounds like "the government can throw money around without consequences", that's not the point she's trying to making (I hope)

  • @l3ailey2

    @l3ailey2

    2 жыл бұрын

    Correct, that is not her point. There are consequences, but she's arguing we're looking too strongly at the 'consequences' of deficits, instead of the more important consequences of inflation.

  • @MovieViking

    @MovieViking

    2 жыл бұрын

    Agreed. Sadly, most comments show that getting the point is difficult for blinkered people.

  • @garbonomics

    @garbonomics

    9 ай бұрын

    Your hope is in the wrong place. That is in fact what she’s ultimately arguing. Essentially she’s claiming that we do not live in a world of finite resources. And that there are enough resources to ignore basic economic principles.

  • @MrMarinus18

    @MrMarinus18

    7 ай бұрын

    Indeed. Government spending is a soft limit, not a hard one. If we spend money on productive things then inflation won't happen as the economy will grow alongside the money. If the government makes profits from it's spending then government spending can even be deflationary.

  • @MrMarinus18

    @MrMarinus18

    7 ай бұрын

    @@l3ailey2 But also many seem to be working on the assumption that government spending just means givng money to people. What she's pushing is for the government to be more proactive. Inflation doesn't matter if you take away costs for people. Like for example nationalized healthcare would save the US economy hundreds of billions a year and massively reduce people's cost of living. Even if it would cause some minor inflation that is more than counteracted by the reduction in living costs.

  • @muhammadm4582
    @muhammadm45822 жыл бұрын

    They have not even tried this, the inflation is already at 8.6%. Lol

  • @janh245

    @janh245

    2 жыл бұрын

    M&M ,we've been doing this for decades... started with LBJ ;'roided-up with G-dub;set ablaze with 'Bama...fanned with Trump..gasoline topper with Joe Blow Too bad took us rubes so long to notice...may God and some collective common sense save us ...US..... Please direct your friends and relative to a short version of Kelton's insane rantings..don't waste your money or time on her book..I did;truly pukeable crap!

  • @harryturnbull1884
    @harryturnbull188411 ай бұрын

    Have you ever heard a mainstream politician talking about QE or MMT? No, except that switched on Greek fella Yanis Varoufakis. As for pandemic spending - in the UK the government is saying that costs have to be cut to pay for the stimmy/furlough cash that was thrown at people. Heck even in the past year the government was giving millionaires £400 towards their energy bills. Yep, you heard. Millionires got free cash to pay the electricity bill.

  • @bradyeshleman1318
    @bradyeshleman13182 жыл бұрын

    She’s asking us to think in terms of our resources not our dollars. My issue is that the government doesn’t typically allocate those resources efficiently toward whatever noble goals it sets out. I think the dollars printed couldn’t be spent efficiently enough to reach full employment without causing severe inflation first. That’s my suspicion anyways.

  • @Matt-vm6jv

    @Matt-vm6jv

    Жыл бұрын

    I think that’s a healthy suspicion. Efficient spending is key here

  • @schadowizationproductions6205

    @schadowizationproductions6205

    Жыл бұрын

    The government doesn't allocate resources for what it spends. Private business does. The government has the power to make private business allocate the resources for their spending to the degree that private business have growing interest to lobby for government spending so that they can produce more of what the government wants to be produced. The problem is not so much that production doesn't know how to allocate resources (it's the same people without government money). The problem is that the products itself do not help people. An M1 Abrams does what he's supposed to do but the average American doesn't get richer because American tanks are high quality. Apart from inflation being an important component of a functioning economy if there was the danger of hyperinflation because of the amount of money we should have seen it by now a long time ago.

  • @angus7278

    @angus7278

    Жыл бұрын

    Clearly the government of China HAS allocated the country’s resources efficiently and that’s why China has been able to grow at an tremendous rate. China’s huge high speed rail network is just one example that simply can’t be possible under capitalism.

  • @MrMarinus18

    @MrMarinus18

    7 ай бұрын

    Okay and that's touching on the real problem. It comes down to government trust.

  • @MURipp
    @MURipp9 ай бұрын

    Excellent! I never laughed so hard.

  • @Harbinger57

    @Harbinger57

    9 ай бұрын

    You laugh at what you don't understand. It's just an immature defense mechanism when your views are challenged.

  • @ApolloBabade

    @ApolloBabade

    8 ай бұрын

    No he's laughing because what she's saying is ridiculous@@Harbinger57

  • @Harbinger57

    @Harbinger57

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@ApolloBabadeJust your inexpert opinion. It has no effect on the subject.

  • @dave9547

    @dave9547

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@Harbinger57you're ridiculous and so is this clown of a lady

  • @kentw.england2305
    @kentw.england23059 ай бұрын

    A constant deficit leads to a linear expansion of debt and debt interest. When does the interest due constrain further spending and how can you reduce govt debt without a recession? The answer must involve inflation and who pays for that?

  • @harryturnbull1884
    @harryturnbull188411 ай бұрын

    and btw, once ratings agencies adn other countries dont like seeing bills being paid this way they lose confidence and that affects markets and that means bad news for everyone.

  • @alexmauri5449
    @alexmauri54492 жыл бұрын

    This aged well....

  • @Rob-fx2dw

    @Rob-fx2dw

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's like that cream cake I baked forty years ago. - The cream has just gone off bit. - Just a tiny little bit tooo long in the panty. But it is still cake. I wonder if Kelton and her fellow MMters would like some to eat ?

  • @ProfessorJayTee
    @ProfessorJayTee2 жыл бұрын

    Includes a brief but excellent explanation of exactly WHEN governments need to be careful of spending too much. And when they can (and should) be spending much more.

  • @roughhabit9085

    @roughhabit9085

    2 жыл бұрын

    The only time she spoke any sense was when she quoted Margaret Thatcher. If monetary growth outperforms the real world then inflation is not a possible outcome, it’s an absolute outcome. The only way out of inflation is hardship, except for the rich. Sound familiar? Constitutional amendments on restricting how much governments can spend is the only way forward.

  • @roughhabit9085

    @roughhabit9085

    2 жыл бұрын

    Furthermore such amendments would have a much needed dilution effect on partisanship.

  • @ProfessorJayTee

    @ProfessorJayTee

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@roughhabit9085 You need to learn much more about MMT if you think so. And that applies to all the other naysayers in their own comments. I don't intend to educate you here.

  • @xyzzy4567

    @xyzzy4567

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ProfessorJayTee Inflation is very high now, so we should be reducing spending?

  • @Empowerman

    @Empowerman

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ProfessorJayTee Yup! Mindsets...

  • @captainfutur3
    @captainfutur36 ай бұрын

    Yes. Not how do you finance that but how do you RESOURCE that?

  • @pedsermd
    @pedsermd3 ай бұрын

    A renowned economist on Michael Shermer's podcast had a great comment, "It's not 'modern', has nothing to do with 'money', and does not qualify as a 'theory' '".

  • @CajunWolffe
    @CajunWolffe3 ай бұрын

    Inflation is taxation; I mean, come on, man!

  • @TyrianHaze

    @TyrianHaze

    2 ай бұрын

    "the government has infinite money guys, they don't need to tax you." Meanwhile, when they double the money supply, you end up paying twice as much for everything. Then they hit you with the "we tax you to keep inflation under control lol."

  • @ianfryer

    @ianfryer

    2 ай бұрын

    @@TyrianHaze The causes of the recent inflation spike are well known: a spike in commodity prices (due to conflicts and crop failures), a surge in the global demand for goods and services post-pandemic, the post-pandemic labour shortage, impaired supply chains... Pretty much nothing to do with MMT or the money supply.

  • @TyrianHaze

    @TyrianHaze

    2 ай бұрын

    @@ianfryer Sounds like a bunch of bullshit made up by the government. Pro tip: printing trillions of dollars leads to massive inflation, regardless of your excuses.

  • @Motivation2Invest
    @Motivation2Invest2 жыл бұрын

    One word which puts a spanner in this theory, "INFLATION", more money printing devalues the currency and raises asset prices that is the issue....

  • @RES1978

    @RES1978

    2 жыл бұрын

    Exactly.

  • @billycaiger8376

    @billycaiger8376

    2 жыл бұрын

    Have we seen inflation during COVID where the US has printed trillions to help ride the wave of the pandemic? No. We are led to believe printing money always leads to inflation but this really Ian not the case and why this theory is so radical

  • @RES1978

    @RES1978

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@billycaiger8376 the current spike of inflation is due to the rising fuel prices. The USA has once again become an importer of fossil fuels and killed its own pipe line. All while promoting and helping Russia with their pipe line. High fuel cost equals higher product prices. . . Let’s Go Brandon.

  • @jogb9515

    @jogb9515

    2 жыл бұрын

    She states that inflation, not the deficit, is what throttles money printing and spending.

  • @blackerpanther3329

    @blackerpanther3329

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@billycaiger8376 inflation doesn’t happen in a day champ

  • @jimkelly1613
    @jimkelly16139 ай бұрын

    I truly hope everyone understands the meaning of gaslighting.

  • @vshah1010

    @vshah1010

    9 ай бұрын

    I didn't hear any arguments for her position on government deficits. It was just assertions. It needs evidence, examples, and tie this with logical arguments.

  • @leroysewell7515
    @leroysewell75152 ай бұрын

    I have been trying to understand the deficit for a long time. This is a solid start for me.

  • @Rob-fx2dw

    @Rob-fx2dw

    Ай бұрын

    Dream on ! It's a total garbage fairytale defies historical and present reality.

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