Abstract

This paper shows that so-called modern monetary theory (MMT) lacks a sound economic foundation for its far-reaching policy recommendations. This paper’s main contribution to the literature concerns the theoretical foundation of MMT. A simple macroeconomic model shows that MMT is indistinguishable from the Keynesian cross model, as well as a neoclassical macroeconomic model, even when taking account of money in the sense of MMT. This result is in stark contrast to the claims of MMT proponents. Accordingly, it is asserted that MMT is a fundamentally new theory of money and monetary economics. However, MMT is admittedly based on the functional finance concept of the 1940s and money is modelled as an accounting identity. In addition, the fundamental connection between government expenditures for goods and services and the steady state equilibrium value of the national income, the so-called fiscal stance, is a well-known result that is not only consistent with MMT. The interpretation of the fiscal stance, in combination with the accounting identity for money, is a major issue because an equilibrium condition should have a certain causal direction of effects. Based on this reading of the equilibrium condition, policy recommendations encompass the fiscal dominance of monetary policy via monetization of public debt, a job guarantee by the state, along with a so-called Green New Deal. According to the results of this paper, these policy recommendations cannot be justified with MMT.

Highlights

  • A macroeconomic theory, modern monetary theory (MMT), has become a hot topic in United States (U.S.) politics

  • According to MMT, government expenditures for goods and services, G, in combination with a public budget deficit financed by creation of additional money, ΔMG, determines national income, Y*

  • The main contribution of this paper to the literature on MMT concerns the theoretical foundation of MMT

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Summary

Introduction

A macroeconomic theory, modern monetary theory (MMT) ( dubbed modern money theory), has become a hot topic in United States (U.S.) politics. Stephanie Kelton, a proponent of this theory, was among the advisers of Bernie Sanders in the 2016 U.S presidential campaign Her contemporary, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a popular member of the Democratic Party in the U.S, seems to adhere to MMT. Post-Keynesian economics (Arestis 1996; Lavoie 2009) is the general heading for very different economic concepts and theories that rely on Keynesian economics, but that do not accept New Keynesian concepts (Dixon and Rankin, 1995) Economists of this tradition formed a group whose common feature is a socalled coherent financial stock-flow accounting framework As will become clear in the following, ex post accounting identities play a crucial role in MMT

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