February 6, 2017

Rectification and generalization of MMT

Comment on Bill Mitchell on ‘That “old fashioned” MMT predicts well ― Groupthink in action’

Blog-Reference and Blog-Reference

Yes, MMT is superior to mainstream economics, a.k.a. Orthodoxy, a.k.a. neoclassical economics, a.k.a. Walrasian economics, a.k.a. the maximization-and-equilibrium world (Krugman), a.k.a. microfounded DSGE/VAR approach.#1

Yes, Orthodoxy is provably false according to the well defined scientific criteria of material and formal consistency. As a consequence, economics textbooks from Samuelson to Mankiw/ Rodrik/et al. are scientifically worthless.#2 Entirely new textbooks are needed and they have to be macrofounded instead of microfounded.

Yes, Orthodoxy is no longer defensible.#3 Mainstream economists face a dishonorable discharge from the sciences.

As the spokesperson of MMT Bill Mitchell concludes: “The Global Financial Crisis demonstrated beyond any doubt the poverty of the mainstream, free-market economic approach ... The failure of the system to self-regulate exemplified what Marx, Keynes, Kalecki, and other heterodox economists have known for a long time ― that the Capitalist system is inherently unstable and requires strong government oversight.”

Does this leave MMT “... as the only viable body of macroeconomic thought that can not only detail the operational realities of the monetary systems that nations employ but also explain why the mainstream approach is inherently misleading and erroneous.”?

No, because MMT, too, is ‘inherently misleading and erroneous.’ MMT is right in discarding Walrasian microfoundations and adopting macrofoundations but ‘Marx, Keynes, Kalecki and other heterodox economists’ are NOT acceptable as an alternative because they, too, got the macrofoundations wrong.#3

The foundational error/mistake/blunder of MMT is that it does not cut the economy at the joints: “MMT labels any transactions between the government sector and the non-government sector as a vertical transaction. The government sector is considered to include the treasury and the central bank, whereas the non-government sector includes private individuals and firms (including the private banking system) and the external sector ― that is, foreign buyers and sellers.”#4

For good methodological reasons, the analysis has to start at the most elementary level with the distinction between the household and the business sector which in turn consists initially of one giant fully integrated firm.#5

The functional (NOT historical) emergence of money now proceeds in two steps.
(i) The business sector creates IOUs and these are paid out as wage income Yw to the household sector. The IOUs flow back to the business sector in the form of consumption expenditures C. For a start it holds C=Yw. So, the stock of IOU-money is zero at the beginning and at the end of the period. IOU-money is a pure transaction medium that is created and destroyed during one period. There is no such thing as a given stock of money. What we have is a Wicksellian cashless economy or a Mitchell-Innesian credit economy.
(ii) In the second step, the central bank is introduced which generalizes the private IOUs and replaces them with the liability side of its own balance sheet. The business sector pays the wage income Yw no longer in private IOUs but in the central bank’s public IOUs which are called money.

The central bank is a functionally well-defined institution and money is, as Knapp had it ‘a creature of law’.#6

Entirely independent of the history of monies from the cowrie shell onward, what is analytically needed for the theory of money is the framework of a “monetary theory of production” (Keynes) and an institution that creates, transfers, and destroys money in the form of a generally accepted liability. Money is not a thing, not a good, not a stock, not a heap of metal or paper ― money is information that materialized historically on various data carriers.

Both the failed orthodox and heterodox theory of money has to be replaced by the macrofounded#5 theory of money.

Egmont Kakarot-Handtke


#1 The common denominator of mainstream economics is given by this axiom set: “HC1 economic agents have preferences over outcomes; HC2 agents individually optimize subject to constraints; HC3 agent choice is manifest in interrelated markets; HC4 agents have full relevant knowledge; HC5 observable outcomes are coordinated, and must be discussed with reference to equilibrium states.” (Weintraub) These microfoundations are forever unacceptable.
#2 The father of modern economics and his imbecile kids
#3 Heterodoxy, too, is proto-scientific garbage
#4 Wikipedia
#5 The true macro axioms are given with: (A1) Yw=WL wage income Yw is equal to wage rate W times working hours. L, (A2) O=RL output O is equal to productivity R times working hours L, (A3) C=PX consumption expenditure C is equal to price P times quantity bought/sold X.
#6 For details see Essentials of Constructive Heterodoxy: Money, Credit, Interest.


Related 'Why Bernie Sanders is unintentionally a godsend for the one-percenters' and 'Going beyond Wicksell, Keynes and MMT' and 'Economics as poultry entrails reading' and 'Rethinking MMT' and 'Economists still don’t get Econ 101 right' and 'The final implosion of MMT' and 'The magic circuit and how economists got it wrong' and 'Windmill economics' and 'E-money'.