ECON MMT is now a reality (Modern Monetary Theory)

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment

MMT is now a reality

March 31, 2020

[This blog post is an excerpt from a recent commentary published at TSI]
Modern Monetary Theory (MMT), which isn’t modern and isn’t a theory (in the true meaning of the word), is now being put into practice in many countries, including the US. What’s happening isn’t being called MMT, but that’s what it is.

Under cover of the “coronacrisis”, we are now witnessing the introduction of MMT. Specifically, in an effort to alleviate the short-term pain associated with the economy-wide shut-downs that they are enforcing as part of history’s biggest ever over-reaction, governments are now promising to spend money as if they had access to an unlimited supply of the stuff. They can do this because with the help of the central bank they do have access to an unlimited supply of the stuff.

The US government and the Fed are leading the way and in doing so all lines that are supposed to separate these two organisations are being blurred or eliminated. To put it another way, the pretence that the Fed is independent of the government has been dropped.

First, there’s the $2 trillion “stimulus” package that was just signed into effect by President Trump. How could a government that supposedly had to limit the pace of its deficit spending suddenly decide to instantly triple its deficit? Where is the money coming from to do this? After all, nobody is talking about increasing taxes. On the contrary, there is talk of delaying and reducing taxes. Clearly, the plan is for the money to be created out of nothing by the Fed.

Even more tellingly, there are the programs introduced by the Fed over the past two weeks. These are:
a) The Commercial Paper Funding Facility (CPFF), via which the Fed will buy commercial paper from issuers.
b) The Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility (MMLF), via which the Fed will lend to financial institutions secured by assets purchased by the financial institution from money market mutual funds.
c) The Main Street Business Lending Program (MSBLP), via which the Fed will lend directly to small and medium-size businesses.
d) The Primary Market Corporate Credit Facility (PMCCF), via which the Fed will buy corporate bonds from issuers.
e) The Secondary Market Corporate Credit Facility (SMCCF), via which the Fed will buy corporate bonds and bond ETFs in the secondary market.
f) The Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF), via which the Fed will support the issuance of asset-backed securities.

Now, the Fed isn’t supposed to do any of the above, but it is getting around the existing regulations by creating Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) that will do the actual buying and lending. The US government will fund these SPVs with initial capital that the Fed will leverage 10:1. That is, for every dollar injected by the government into one of these SPVs, the Fed will create 10 new dollars via the traditional methods of fractional reserve banking.

The truly crazy thing is that the dollars that the government will inject into the Fed’s SPVs were previously created out of nothing when the Fed monetised Treasury securities. So, the Fed creates money out of nothing. This money then goes to the government. The government then deposits some of this money into the Fed’s new SPVs, and based on this injection of ‘capital’ the Fed creates a lot more money out of nothing.
The indirect costs, in terms of reduced productivity, higher unemployment and reduced living standards, of this money creation will be huge and long-lasting, but we’ll leave the discussion of these longer-term issues until after the immediate crisis has abated.

Our main point today is that the method of government funding appears to have changed in a permanent way. No longer will governments feel constrained by their abilities to tax the population and borrow from bond investors. From now on they will act like they have unrestricted access to a bottomless pool of money.
 

Hfcomms

EN66iq
All the Fed and Treasury can do is increase the debt and inject it into the economy and/or the banking system but they are pushing on a string now. Nothing that they do can produce goods, start up supply lines or put goods on the shelves. They can print into infinity and they will but people are going to soon understand the limitations of the debt based fiat currency system.


currency-life-cycle_image002.jpg
 

West

Senior
Wish I could payoff my credit card bill with the same credit card. Every month. That would be sooo cool.

:D:
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
They've been posted here, several times, by some nutty Austrian school guy.

I can post 'em again if you want.
 

Seeker22

Has No Life - Lives on TB
As long as people are kept fat, dumb, and happy on the plantations- they don't care where the money comes from or why. We do because we know it is necessary.

When it starts to impact whether or not they have a cell phone, food, a roof over their head, or a safe space to just be- then, things get spicy.

The GSM will change many things including how governments govern and how bankers steal. Most people do not know what that is and can't tell you what GSM stands for if somebody screwed a loaded .45 in their ear. All they hear is Greta and Climate Change.

We had problems planting and harvesting last year, I predict the same this year. The reality is fixing to byte. Buckle up.

I watched a Chris Martenson vid last night that said oil (West Texas crude, I think) was down to $7 bucks a barrel. He said the barrel costs more now than what is in it.
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
Someone said distilled water at wallyworld was more expensive than crude at the time … didn't run the numbers myself but wouldn't be surprised. I'd guess fracking is over for good at these prices though.
 

Seeker22

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Someone said distilled water at wallyworld was more expensive than crude at the time … didn't run the numbers myself but wouldn't be surprised. I'd guess fracking is over for good at these prices though.

Yep. No way to ever break even, much less make a profit.
 
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