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Ram's avatar

Stumbled on to this -- great read. Unfortunately, this MMT rubbish is only gaining traction. Seems like people are unwilling to accept the simple fact that you can’t solve tough problems with money printed out of nothing.

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Free Hat's avatar

"Adam Smith, in The Wealth of Nations examined the experience of tax-backed fiat currency in British North America... he said the quantity of paper money “was in all the colonies very much above what could be employed in this manner.”

I think that we are conflating separate things as though they were one.

What we are virtually ignoring is that the US speculatory markets collapsed spectacularly - multiple times - during recent decades, and only continued in existence due to forced recapitalization sustained upon the public credit..

This is a different sort of bird than what Smith et al reference as relates to consumer economics.

In effect, the entire, vaunted, US 401k system imploded and was wiped out, due to episodes of speculation-induced GDP pumping, fake profit taking and subsequent market collapse.

The alleged 401k retirement 'profits' that exist today, are a God that failed - entirely the result of creating artificial funding against the general public credit to prop up a supposedly 'private' system that had gone down for the count.

To pretend that the problem consists entirely or even largely of handouts to the general public or currency printing to enable consumer purchases, ignores the multiple catastrophic episodes of the non-market participants being forced to recapitalize purely speculatory markets that -

produce nothing, extract the lions share of value, and have been prioritized for rescue when their own criminal activities actually brought about a global economic disaster.

Smith's treatise refers to sound currency policies, not what we currently face which is not specifically a failure of public policy but is instead capture of public policy by private interests that have developed a system to ensure the losses are socialized while the supposed profits are privatized.

If the Fed were willing to continue endless QE, you would maintain an appearance of normalcy, until the next meltdown. The captured 'markets' are not rebelling in favor of sound money policies, but against the milk and honey spigot being turned off.

Public monetary policy cannot repair private capture of rigged markets, but the former can and always will be subjugated by the latter - which Smith cannot address.

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