MMT & Positive Money Are Converging. That’s a Good Thing

Many common views on macroeconomics are of little use and even harmful because they do not recognize basic facts about the economy. That limits useful macroeconomics to the minority who recognize that loans create deposits, that there is no money multiplier, that the household analogy is false, money is not just a veil over barter etc., and the profound implications of these facts.

Because it is, unfortunately, a minority that understands meaningful macroeconomics, and because of the enormity of the welfare issues that are at stake, it is of the utmost importance that the lucid minority support each other and sort out their differences in order to find the strength in numbers needed to implement sane macroeconomic policies that have the potential to greatly increase the public well being.

Perhaps the two greatest current macroeconomic problems are

  1. a failure to optimally use resources (including people)
  2. the design and/or manipulation of the financial system to divert real resources from producers to a financial class

The logical approaches to these problems are functional finance in the first case and changes in and/or enforcement of regulation of the financial system in the second case.

Two groups that have gained visibility (academic, policy, and/or popular) on these issues are Modern Monetary Theory and Positive Money.

MMT scholars largely focused on the first problem, how functional finance can increase the public’s well being. Positive Money’s main worry has been the second and suggestions for changes that might make resource diversion more difficult.

However, the simple point I want to make is this: in recent years the two groups have moved towards each other’s positions and interests to a significant extent, probably much more than either group or the heterodox community recognizes.

Positive money originally wanted to eliminate bank credit-money creation altogether. Crucially, however, they have modified their plan to allow for a tightly regulated system of credit money creation for individuals and businesses. (see Would a Sovereign Money System Be Flexible Enough?  also Would There Be Enough Credit in a Sovereign Money System? )

MMT, as mentioned, traditionally focused on functional finance solutions to the first problem above. However, after the 2007 financial crisis especially, they addressed the second problem above (which caused the crash) and subsequently Warren Mosler, Bill Mitchell and Neil Wilson all proposed far reaching (and similar) changes to the banking sector (here: Mosler, Mitchell, MitchellWilson )

Crucially, there is now very little difference between the banking system that MMT (or at least Warren Mosler, Bill Mitchell and Neil Wilson) propose and the banking system that Positive Money now propose.

Additionally, Positive Money has always been a proponent of the state spending for the public welfare; indeed, they had to be as this would be the only way money would be introduced into the economy under their proposals. As Positive Money has matured they have continued to develop their ideas on how the government would spend into the economy for the public good – in other words, functional finance perfectly in line with traditional MMT views.

So in short, Positive Money is fighting for functional finance and a banking system like the Mosler/Mitchell/Wilson proposals. MMT is proposing (or at least Warren Mosler, Bill Mitchell and Neil Wilson) a banking system like the one PM has evolved towards (tightly regulated credit-system) and MMT has of course long supported the state spending directly into the economy for the public purpose just as PM has.

Both groups have achieved significant political and popular support as well as media attention. This attention has often been in different places. Combining their message is a win-win and an important step in educating the business, political and internet community and thus eventually winning votes and changing real policies.

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March 28, 2019  UPDATE: The Intro to Economics textbook is finished! Live on Amazon here –

1000 Castaways: Fundamentals of Economics

Why lately I write more on sane economics (MMT, MCT) than good urbanism & the social sciences

I have mainly focused in recent months on MMT (Modern Monetary Theory) & MCT (Monetary Circuit Theory, also see here, esp. credit-money & stability), not the other things mentioned in this blog’s tagline.

The reason is fairly simple: It is where I see the most good can come about now.

In this blog I am most interested in addressing what I see as three main problems in the social sciences and their use for the real world:

(1) The highly destructive impact on society brought about by high-modernist architecture/planning on our cities (later aided & abetted by postmodernism; Kunstler is good on this point)

(2) The undermining of the social sciences by postmodernism (Sokal & Bricmont is still a classic on this) diverting attention from real problems. This has served to turn many away from the social sciences, which is particularly destructive in the political realm, when those responsible for funding looked at the results and content of (often postmodern dominated) social science, and understandably rejected it.

(3) Neoclassical “economics”. Economics is the most expensive discipline by far. That is, its undercurrents of thought influence the trillion dollar decisions, actions and policies of governments probably more than any other social science. Whole societies and generations end up essentially as lab rats for the theories of an earlier generation’s “academic scribblers” as Keynes so rightly stated. Incidentally – I see the refuge of neoclassical economics in meaningless equilibrium formulas as the same response as postmodern babble in other social sciences: giving up on understanding in the face of the incredible complexity of the social realm.

 Of these three, I think at the moment it is economics that is most important. Fortunately the tide has changed significantly with the first two. “New urbanism”, which is nothing more than a return to common sense and the normal urbanism of the last 11,000+ years, has pushed the absurd notions of high-modernism (and its subsequent nihilistic, postmodern apologists) more and more out of the picture. It will take generations to undo the damage done by the imbecilic building methods of modernism, but we are on the right path.

More or less the same can be said of postmodernism in academia, although mercifully with a much quicker time-frame for how quickly the puerile, self-serving prattle of the postmodernists and their ilk is being left to gather the dust it deserves: contentless, unreadable, and unread.

THE CASE WITH ECONOMICS is different for several reasons. The Great Financial Crisis (GFC) continues, so the time for change is as urgent as ever, and the political possibility greater. The bad economics of recent decades remains as entrenched as ever, dismayingly illustrated by the policies of most Western governments in response to the GFC.

Additionally, it is not as if the answers aren’t there. This is not an attack on something with nothing constructive to replace it with. There are true descriptions of the economy (e.g., MMT, MCT, Post-Keynesianism in general, The Other Canon), and with them, functional policies that empower the citizenry to optimize its well-being.

So it seems that of the three scourges on intelligent discussion of society mentioned, that somewhat or completely arose from academia – high-modernism in planning and building, postmodernism in the social sciences and humanities, and neoclassical economics – that it is most timely to attack the latter, and strive towards supplanting it with the sane, functional economics of MMT and other heterodox approaches.

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