1. Institutional Focus
2. Global Perspective
On Jun 15, 2025, at 2:13 PM, Brian Flaherty <brianfl...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi all,
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Hi all,I'd like to start a discussion or gather thoughts on the connection between the Money View and Modern Monetary Theory.For anyone who is unfamiliar, the Money View is a school of thought developed by Professor Perry Mehrling, now at Boston University. In a nutshell, the Money View sees the economy as a web of interlocking balance sheets and promises to pay, disciplined by the settlement constraint. The best intro to the Money View is Perry's free MOOC hosted on Coursera.There are several strong overlaps between MMT and the Money View -- I view the two schools as fellow travelers:
- The Primacy of Money: Traditional schools largely view the economy as a barter system between aggregate supply & aggregate demand. Both MMT and MV reject this, recognizing the primacy of money, that money plays a crucial and unignorable role in mediating economic activity.
- The Endogeneity of Money: Both MMT and MV recognize that money is not an exogenous variable determined by some independent factor (ie interest rates). Instead, money is capable of being created endogenously, by actors inside the system.
On the other hand, there are also some significant differences between MMT and MV. Some of these are just a matter of emphasis, but they're worth pointing out:
- Balance Sheet Analysis: Both MMT and MV take an accounting-based framework to understand the economy -- one person's asset is another person's liability. This framework is essential for understanding what actually happens during monetary operations.
- Price Changes: It's tricky to summarize how each school views prices in general, but MV sees price as being determined by dealers quoting an 'inside spread' in light of some fundamental 'outside spread.' In contrast, MMT tends to rely on either gaps between AD and AS or state pricing.
- Credit vs. State Money: While MMT acknowledges privately created credit money, the school focuses largely on the role of state money.
- In contrast, MV is mostly concerned with different flavors of credit money, both in the banking and shadow banking systems. However, both state and private money are captured in the MV's 'hierarchy of money.'
- Real vs. Financial Crises: In terms of policy, MMT tends to focus on solving real crises, such as major drops in AD or increases in unemployment. MV is less policy-focused, but the school is more interested in analyzing financial crises, such as runs on the banking system.
It's also worth noting that MMT and MV have some common intellectual ancestors, including Minsky and Copeland.
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Hi Warren,
Who would you cite as some of you intellectual ancestors? Thanks!
Best,
Jason
> On Jun 16, 2025, at 6:22 AM, Warren Mosler <warren...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Those are not my intellectual ancestors.
On Jun 16, 2025, at 6:57 AM, Warren Mosler <warren...@gmail.com> wrote:
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