Let me tempt you to read this book by quoting two paragraphs from the Introduction to this book. First,
"Somewhere in the fall of 2001, while in our first years at graduate school [at University of Massachusetts-Amherst], the two of us drove in a typically rickety graduate student car (a third-hand Ford LTD, built around 1983) across the breathtaking Berkshire mountains of western Massachusetts to Bard College, home of a think tank called the Levy Institute. There, tucked in a small liberal arts campus in the Hudson Valley, the most important figures in the Post Keynesian school of economics gathered to celebrate the life and work of Hyman Minsky, an American economist whose work on financial crises -- and especially the role of debt and speculation in their formation -- was foundational to the Post Keynesian tradition. The conference featured leading lights from academia, policymaking, and business. For young graduate students, it was a fascinating and dizzying set of discussions. It also made clear how deep questions about money lay at the heart of other debates in economics -- and how contradictory and unsettled the answers were."
Then, relating to the later 2000s,
"The intellectual developments that flowed out of that period re fascinating, if also highly contested. ...
"On the other side of the political spectrum, some economists, including those of the Post Keynesian school, resurrected thinking about money a entirely an object of the state, something controlled and generated by the government. (This was not a new idea, but certainly a dormant one, though one well understood by scholars such as Jan Kregel, who preserved and disseminated these ideas for other economists in this century.) One particularly vigorous branch of Post Keynesian theory was what became identified as modern money (or monetary) theory. A group of scholars working decidedly out of the mainstream -- Randall Wray, Stephanie Kelton, Pavlina Tcherneva, and Nathan Tankus and others -- helped revive and popularize older Keynesian ideas, from Minsky and others, and creating a genuine movement that attracted young people in universities worldwide."
This is not an "MMT book" per se but it is an important work of contemporary heterodox macroeconomic thinking. I would describe it as an in-depth exploration of Keynes's concept of the "Monetary-Production Economy." If I were an undergraduate student in economics today, this work would be a challenging read. If I were a graduate student in political economy, it would be required reading. When I was a graduate student in Political Economy fifty years ago, this book would have enabled me to better understand post-Keynesian thinkers like Piero Sraffa and Axel Leijonhufvud who were then far above my head. At the same time, it draws upon thinkers like David Graeber whose impact has only come in this century.
Co-author Mason is head of a graduate program at John Jay College, part of the City University of New York, which is now one of the leading centers of heterodox economics in the city, if not the country. Co-author Jayadev teaches at Azim Premji University in India, a very new school in India focused on training professionals in the areas of education and development.
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Best,
On Jul 10, 2026, at 7:06 PM, James Keenan <jke...@pobox.com> wrote:
After writing this post, I learned that Jayadev and Mason commented on MMT at greater length in an INET working paper back in 2018: "Mainstream Macroeconomics and Modern Monetary Theory: What Really Divides Them?".