Bernie’s Senior Economic Advisor Sees No Problem In Printing Unlimited Money

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I typically write about 20 letters of recommendations a year. Writing all of those isn’t easy, in part because most are due at the same time of year. To make matters worse, every student wants a strong recommendation, but few students deserve one. Sometimes I get a request for a strong recommendation and have to say no.

Q1 hedge fund letters, conference, scoops etc

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It seems mean on my part. My letter can get a student into their preferred school, putting them on a good path that will affect them for the rest of their life. And it doesn’t cost me anything to write a strong recommendation: I just have to add the phrase “I strongly recommend…” to the letter.

Of course, it’s not so simple. If I gave more strong recommendations than I have strong students, my recommendations, strong or not, would mean nothing. Even if it doesn’t physically cost me anything, I’m reputationally bound by the constraints of reality.

Modern Monetary Theorists (MMTers) should take note because this is an area they have a lot of trouble with.

The Boundless World of MMT

Much like I can create as many strong recommendations as I want, Modern Monetary Theory notes that a country has a god-like power to create its own currency. Therefore, they argue, countries that control their own currency shouldn’t bother budgeting. Budgeting is for us mere mortals.

The theory turns out to be little more than a recipe for hyperinflation, but that didn’t stop Stephanie Kelton, Bernie Sanders’s senior economic advisor, from sending out this tweet:

I bet all of her students get amazing recommendations, too.

Numbers Aren’t Scarce, but Resources Are

Kelton conveniently does not mention that carpenters can run out of wood, the stadium can run out of seats, and the airline can run out of fuel. The ability of a country’s economy to grow restrains the government’s ability to print money without causing inflation. Money is spent to buy resources; if money far exceeds resources, inflation follows.

Kelton’s analogies are particularly instructive because each of those items has to match what’s going on in the real world. They lose their usefulness if they’re not restrained by reality. If a carpenter used more inches than wood she owned, her measurements would mean nothing. If a stadium assigned more points than a team could justify with its actions, the score would mean nothing. If an airline offered more frequent flyer miles than it could possibly redeem with the planes and crews it has available, its frequent flyer miles would mean nothing.

And if a country created more money than its economy could possibly justify, its money would mean nothing (something too many countries have learned the hard way).

The Problem Isn’t a Lack of Money

MMTers typically respond by saying there are a lot of unutilized resources in the economy, so there’s a lot of room to add money.

They’re right that there’s a lot of slack, but it’s because of structural barriers like licensing requirements, land-use restrictions, and an excessive number of workers locked up in prison. Throwing money into the economy doesn’t change the fact that this growth is locked away. Reform is the key, not money.

So it’s true that the US can’t run out of dollars. It is also true that you can’t run out of zeros, which will be important if the nation has to measure inflation under MMT.

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David Youngberg

David Youngberg is an associate professor of economics at Montgomery College in Rockville, MD.

This article was originally published on FEE.org. Read the original article.