Beyond Labels

A 360° Discussion of Foreign, National and Local Policy Issues

Mike Wolf

Modern Monetary Theory going mainstream (kinda)

English: Portrait of Milton Friedman
English: Portrait of Milton Friedman (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Article also posted online here.

Modern Monetary Theory, operating under other brand names, is starting to gain traction, interest, and legitimacy. Not just me and a couple of crazy academics who think there’s something there.

From this article in Bloomberg View, “Milton Friedman’s Helicopter Money is Looking Less Crazy.”

…the claim of Modern Money Theory that governments shouldn’t be afraid of deficit spending is gaining traction with some of the smartest people in the financial room.

What’s driving the conversation is a resurgence of interest in Milton Friedman’s idea of “Helicopter Money.” From an article “What is Helicopter Money” in World Economic Forum.

In the now famous paper “The Optimum Quantity of Money”, Friedman included the following parable:

Let us suppose now that one day a helicopter flies over this community and drops an additional $1,000 in bills from the sky, which is, of course, hastily collected by members of the community. Let us suppose further that everyone is convinced that this is a unique event which will never be repeated.”

Friedman’s goes on to explain how doing such a seemingly insane thing  would not necessarily lead to hyperinflation; that it might have beneficial effects on an economy. But the silly name guarantees it won’t be implemented. Friedman was no marketing guy. Or maybe he was an antimarketing guy.

MMT’s mechanics are different than HM. MMT does not suggest dropping money from helicopters, notably. But in most practical respects, helicopter money seems entirely consistent with MMT. The differences are  mainly semantic, but there is a practical difference as well: Friedman defined helicopter money as a one-time event. MMT defines its equivalent as one of the ongoing tools of fiscal and monetary policy, and has a well developed theory (along with historical examples of use) to go along with it.

The nutty idea of “helicopter drops” was brought back into the mainstream by Ben Bernanke, who spoke about it in 2002. It was further legitimized in 2014, by a paper, “The Simple Analytics of Helicopter Money: Why It Works — Always” 
by Willem Buiter, chief economist for Citibank. Buiter’s paper argues that when applied “properly” it will increase demand and production and GDP and not lead to hyperinflation. The conditions for proper use are spelled out in his paper.

A 2014 article, “Send In The Helicopters,” in the Economist, also discusses it as a legitimate option.

Bernanke has recently published an article at Brookings on the subject. “What Tools Does the Fed Have Left? Part III Helicopter Money.” and that seems to have  prompted the latest spike in in interest in “helicopter money” as shown here in Google Trends.

HelicopterMoney

Bernanke gives it a new, less stupid name: “Money-financed fiscal actions” or MFFAs and distinguishes between “money financed fiscal policy” policy as distinct from “debt financed fiscal policy.”

Whatever.

He’s pretty much accepting one of the wacko policy prescriptions of MMT. People are taking this seriously because  a) it’s originally Milton Friedman’s idea, and Milton’s not a wacko and b) Ben Bernanke is behind it, and he’s not a wacko, and c) the other tools of fiscal and monetary policy have failed just as MMT had predicted, and in the way that MMT had predicted. So maybe?

It seems that the time is nigh to start the discussion that leads to this as a real option as the suffering of “fiscally responsible austerity” is becoming unbearable for many.

Greg Ip in the Wall Street Journal writes “A Time and a Place for Helicopter Money

Helicopter money merges QE and fiscal policy while, in theory, getting around limitations on both. The government issues bonds to the central bank, which pays for them with newly created money. The government uses that money to invest, hire, send people checks or cut taxes, virtually guaranteeing that total spending will go up. Because the Fed, not the public, is buying the bonds, private investment isn’t crowded out.

Unlike with QE, the Fed promises never to sell the bonds or withdraw from circulation the money it created. It returns the interest earned on the bonds to the government. That means households won’t expect their taxes to go up to repay the bonds. It also means they should expect prices eventually to rise. As spending and prices rise, nominal GDP goes up, so the debt-to-GDP ratio can remain stable.

Technically, the government is not running the printing presses, a criticism of MMT. Instead, a Treasury issues bonds to its Central which then gives the Treasury money to spend. The bonds would bear interest which the government would have to pay to the Central Bank, but the Central Bank returns the interest to the government, so the net cost of the money ends up zero.

And the notion that this is not a guaranteed disaster is gaining credibility. The article continues:

In his book “Between Debt and the Devil,” which advocates helicopter money, the British economist Adair Turner cites Pennsylvania in the early 1700s, the U.S. Union government in the 1860s and Japan in the early 1930s as examples of governments that used monetary finance without triggering hyperinflation.

An even better example is World War II. The federal government had to borrow heavily to finance the war effort and the Fed helped by buying bonds to keep their yields from rising above 2.5%. Between 1940 and 1945, the Fed’s holdings of debt rose from $2.5 billion to $22 billion, an increase roughly equal to 9% of annual GDP. Though this only financed a fraction of the war, it was still debt monetization: most of those purchases proved to be permanent.

Discussion continues.

Links from discussion 4/25

Sports commentators divide their duties: one calls the play-by-play, the other it the color commentator. This is my color commentary,

From earlier discussion on prediction markets for climate change, I had said that the cost of money was such that the market would not work. I was wrong. Long bets changes that dynamic. They take public bets on predictions. The rules include:

Minimum period of Predictions and Bets is 2 years; There is no maximum period.

The subject of the Prediction or Bet must be societally or scientifically important

One of the interesting bets was a ten year, $1,000,000 bet made in by Warren Buffet on the one hand, and a hedge fund on the other.

“Over a ten-year period commencing on January 1, 2008, and ending on December 31, 2017, the S&P 500 will outperform a portfolio of funds of hedge funds, when performance is measured on a basis net of fees, costs and expenses.”

Mandatory voting in Australia, from the electoral commission:

Electors who fail to vote at a State election and do not provide a valid and sufficient reason for such failure, will be fined. The penalty for first time offenders is $20, and this increases to $50 if you have previously paid a penalty or been convicted of this offence

Article by E.J. Dione about voting (re Trump)

No wonder that after the Nevada results were known, Trump offered one of the most memorable sound bites of the campaign: “I love the poorly educated.

Maine Bear Bating ballot initiative on Wikipedia says.

My contribution to electoral humor: Donald Trump running for pope.

Primary results in New York, graphically from NY Times.

Hillary Clinton gets a large donation from one of the Walton family.

Money and elections. “Big money can’t buy elections – influence is something else

More analysis. (Source data.)

Since 2000, the average winner in contests for open House seats has outspent the average loser by at least $310,000, according to figures compiled by the nonpartisan Campaign Finance Institute. In races for open Senate seats, winners outspent losers, on average, in every year except 2002.

Popular election of US Senators was the result of the 17th Amendment, in 1914.

Superdelegates:

After the 1968 Democratic National Convention, the Democratic Party made changes in its delegate selection process, based on the work of the McGovern-Fraser Commission. The purpose of the changes was to make the composition of the convention less subject to control by party leaders and more responsive to the votes cast during the campaign for the nomination. Some Democrats believed that these changes had unduly diminished the role of party leaders and elected officials, weakening the Democratic tickets of George McGovern and Jimmy Carter.

John Adams on “faction” from here:

There is nothing which I dread so much as a division of the republic into two great parties, each arranged under its leader, and concerting measures in opposition to each other. This, in my humble apprehension, is to be dreaded as the greatest political evil under our Constitution.

Argument against parties from Federalist 10.

George Wallace ran as candidate of “American Independent Party”

Party split of votes in Germany, 2013. Only five parties gained seats:

Christian Democratic Union (CDU)[a] 16,233,642 37.2 Increase5.2 191 Increase18 14,921,877 34.1 Increase6.9 64 Increase43 255 Increase61 40.5
Social Democratic Party (SPD) 12,843,458 29.4 Increase1.5 58 Decrease6 11,252,215 25.7 Increase2.7 135 Increase53 193 Increase47 30.5
The Left (DIE LINKE) 3,585,178 8.2 Decrease2.9 4 Decrease12 3,755,699 8.6 Decrease3.3 60 ±0 64 Decrease12 10.2
Alliance ’90/The Greens (GRÜNE) 3,180,299 7.3 Decrease1.9 1 ±0 3,694,057 8.4 Decrease2.3 62 Decrease5 63 Decrease5 10.0
Christian Social Union in Bavaria (CSU)[a] 3,544,079 8.1 Increase0.7 45 ±0 3,243,569 7.4 Increase0.9 11 Increase11 56 Increase11 8.9

Shirley Chisolm. Among other things, first woman to run as a Democrat for President. In 1972. Margaret Chase Smith the first Republicans, in 1968.

First woman to run for President: Victoria Woodhull.

How do electors get chosen: from archives.gov:

There is no Constitutional provision or Federal law that requires Electors to vote according to the results of the popular vote in their States. Some States, however, require Electors to cast their votes according to the popular vote. These pledges fall into two categories—Electors bound by State law and those bound by pledges to political parties.

The U.S. Supreme Court has held that the Constitution does not require that Electors be completely free to act as they choose and therefore, political parties may extract pledges from electors to vote for the parties’ nominees. Some State laws provide that so-called “faithless Electors”; may be subject to fines or may be disqualified for casting an invalid vote and be replaced by a substitute elector. The Supreme Court has not specifically ruled on the question of whether pledges and penalties for failure to vote as pledged may be enforced under the Constitution. No Elector has ever been prosecuted for failing to vote as pledged.

Today, it is rare for Electors to disregard the popular vote by casting their electoral vote for someone other than their party’s candidate. Electors generally hold a leadership position in their party or were chosen to recognize years of loyal service to the party. Throughout our history as a nation, more than 99 percent of Electors have voted as pledged.

Faithless electors, there have been 187 so far.

42,000 signed petition for open carry at Republican convention.

It’s possible that the petition began as a prank, judging by the Twitter account allegedly run by the petition’s creator, who describes him or herself as “speaking truth to stupid.” Said troll seems to enjoy retweeting people who support the poll, if only to participate in the trolling itself.

But guns will be permitted at the Republican convention in Texas, according to this.

Genetic correlation to violent behavior from this:

Average Number of Violent Crimes Committed
Annually in the United States

Offense                With the genes   Without the genes

Aggravated assault        3,419,000                    435,000

Homicide                                   14,196                         1,468

Armed robbery                 2,051,000                    157,000

Sexual assault                       442,000                        10,000

Gun laws in Tombstone Arizona.

Topic 11 April Pro Choice/Pro Life

This week’s topic is the Texas abortion clinic case currently before the Supreme Court.

I did my homework, and since the dog didn’t eat it,  I posted it online.

You can find it here.

Or below.

Next week’s topic in our local discussion group, Beyond Labels, was triggered by discussion of the Texas abortion clinic case currently before the Supreme Court. The case, known to its friends as “Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt” revolves on the following legal point:

Continue reading “Topic 11 April Pro Choice/Pro Life”

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