Modern Monetary Theory: How it Could Answer All Of Our Economic Problems

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  • čas přidán 1. 04. 2020
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    Modern Monetary Theory is something so simple yet so complex all at the same time, it does really involve divorcing your mind from how you personally interact with money to ultimately grasp how cash works at an economy-wide level.
    A lot of supporters of the theory push it as a cure-all to any economic ailments, and you know what with the money printers firing away like they are right now we may finally get a chance to find out if they are correct, but in reality, it’s not a prescription to fix a broken economy as much as it is an insight into how modern economies work.
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    📚 Want to learn more about Modern Monetary Theory? We recommend reading "Modern Money Theory: A Primer on Macroeconomics for Sovereign Monetary Systems, Second Edition", by L. Randall Wray 👉 amzn.to/2A6AGVl (as an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases)
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    Sources & Citations -
    Luther, W.J., 2018. Is bitcoin intrinsically worthless?. AIER Sound Money Project Working Paper
    Duffy, J. and Ochs, J., 2002. Intrinsically worthless objects as media of exchange: Experimental evidence. International Economic Review
    Ritter, J.A., 1995. The transition from barter to fiat money. The American Economic Review
    McCabe, K.A., 1989. Fiat money as a store of value in an experimental market. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
    Palley, T.I., 2015. Money, fiscal policy, and interest rates: A critique of Modern Monetary Theory. Review of Political Economy
    Visser, H., 1991. Modern monetary theory
    Tsiang, S.C., 1989. The monetary theoretic foundation of the modern monetary approach to the balance of payments. In Finance Constraints and the Theory of Money
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Komentáře • 3,7K

  • @EconomicsExplained
    @EconomicsExplained  Před 4 lety +84

    Thanks for watching EE nation! ❤️ If you enjoyed, please consider supporting the show on Patreon! 😎
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    • @pebblepod30
      @pebblepod30 Před 4 lety +5

      Thanks for this video, but just one think: at 13:00 you didn't explain that such cases of hyperinflation always came with first a massive breakdown of the supply of goods & resources (esp the food supply). Such as huge reparations, or civil war & farms stopping production; or a centrally planned communist style economy which then was then badly mismanaged (free market crushed).
      This this huge restriction in the supply of necessary goods means "more and more currency chasing less & less goods" PLUS printing currency a lot instead of fixing the breakdown (which is pretty hard in their circumstances such as civil war).

    • @Buzz-Of-Craze
      @Buzz-Of-Craze Před 4 lety +6

      Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) are illegal and failed!

    • @pebblepod30
      @pebblepod30 Před 4 lety +8

      If anybody else read Geospilik's comment:
      MMT is primarily aiming to describe a Soveriegn Fiat Currency as it already is.
      This doesn't apply to Nations which gave up their Currency Soveriegnty, like European Nations They must or do borrow from am external source which they then give their power to.
      Think about it:
      Why would a Country borrow in the currency only it can legally create (although when Private banks create credit, it is also behaves the same way).
      If people understood MMT, private banks & bankers would have wwwwaaaaayyyyyy less influence over Govt or public Economic discussion.
      They would not really be so necessary. The bank bail outs would probably not have been so necessary or made much sense and the public could have been bailed out instead.
      But "it's all a conspiracy theory". There is no arguing with someone once they have decided something is a conspiracy and they are angry.
      It means everyone else is either stupid (& they are so clever, rather than angry & demanding ppl listen) or must be part of the conspiracy.

    • @pebblepod30
      @pebblepod30 Před 4 lety +6

      In my own experience, if I ask someone who is angry and shouting and condemning MMT as all a conspiracy.......I have never yet once found someone who could actually fairly represent what MMT was claiming and why.
      It is Ethical and reasonable to represent a claim & it's evidence accurately before dismissing it.
      Otherwise it is technically the strawman logical fallacy.

    • @pebblepod30
      @pebblepod30 Před 4 lety +3

      Btw, MMT Economists actually tend to predict Economic events much better than Conventional Theory Economists, who continually predict something and then the opposite happens.
      E.g. 2008 financial crisis, Eurocrisis (very early); Japan's Economic situation.

  • @LetWable
    @LetWable Před 4 lety +1416

    Shout out to economics explained for keeping stock video producers afloat in these dire times.

    • @EconomicsExplained
      @EconomicsExplained  Před 4 lety +302

      Just doing my part.

    • @samcarli3637
      @samcarli3637 Před 4 lety +73

      @@EconomicsExplained Some of these videos are truly hilarious...I imagine just a whole day a company will spend walking in the park, blowing bubbles, hopscotch games...all to record for stock videos.

    • @pebblepod30
      @pebblepod30 Před 3 lety +5

      @@EconomicsExplained
      I love your work, but could you please correct the false info you given here?
      At 17:18
      There is literally no well known MMT Economist or Founder of the theory that claims that supports the current solution of creating govt or bank money (credit) recklessly & putting most of it into asset bubbles like property. I'm pretty sure all the ones i have heard of call that inflationary (which it is, by careful logic).
      If I'm wrong, name one, please? I have never heard any of them claim that.
      Yet your video supported this myth, despite the rest if it being an accurate representation (thank you 🙏🙏🙏 for that btw)

    • @matthewbradburn3747
      @matthewbradburn3747 Před 3 lety +2

      @@pebblepod30 @economicsexplained yeah can you visit this, just curious

    • @pebblepod30
      @pebblepod30 Před 3 lety

      @@matthewbradburn3747
      Yeah I know, and thank you , the video has false info in it in this part.

  • @EconomicsExplained
    @EconomicsExplained  Před 4 lety +1876

    Last time I was this early we had a gold standard...

    • @ImJustAoife
      @ImJustAoife Před 4 lety +72

      reestablishing the gold standard time

    • @johnchase7163
      @johnchase7163 Před 4 lety +2

      Print money

    • @borisorlov9880
      @borisorlov9880 Před 4 lety +14

      it's coming back... sooner than you think

    • @itssteve6018
      @itssteve6018 Před 4 lety +36

      Gold Standard wasn't a failure. Complete misunderstanding of why the gold standard "failed". Every-time the gold standard "failed", the United States had actually *SUSPENDED* the gold standard just prior to the "failure". Substantial deviations from the gold standard were the "failure".

    • @deansolomon3066
      @deansolomon3066 Před 4 lety +4

      If it wasnt for you I wouldve never gained an interest in economics. Thank you for making your channel

  • @ThoughtStimulator
    @ThoughtStimulator Před 3 lety +303

    If the fed were to give me an unlimited line of credit, with a 0% interest rate, I'd be happy to do my part, to stimulate the economy.

    • @javiervillacorta3847
      @javiervillacorta3847 Před 2 lety +31

      if you were a top richest guy, with that option you could take a loan and use half the government´s budget to buy yourself a massive spaceship and drive it away, knowing they would send someone to your front door and arrest you for not paying them back.
      Good thing that isnt happening
      wait.

    • @gjvnq
      @gjvnq Před 2 lety +2

      Lol

    • @trixn4285
      @trixn4285 Před 2 lety +3

      Likely if they gave it only to you you wouldn't even be able to cause some significant consumer price inflation because you couldn't buy enough consumables fast enough (at least not if you also want to use it). But you may cause some crazy asset bubble if you start buying all the stocks.

    • @mattheweraci5502
      @mattheweraci5502 Před 2 lety +3

      -1.5%*

    • @mattheweraci5502
      @mattheweraci5502 Před 2 lety +4

      @@trixn4285 did the banks buy back their stocks?

  • @kasendekevin4772
    @kasendekevin4772 Před 3 lety +147

    I am a Congolese national. You spoke about my country just when I thought you would have! LIKED AN FOLLOWED!!! Our sketchy currency comes as a result of the fact that all of us Congolese always say that our country is mineral rich as if that's all it takes to build economies!!! oh and the taxes paid by the multinationals are sucked out and looted by corrupt officials!!

    • @MD-uu5nt
      @MD-uu5nt Před 3 lety

      TIA!

    • @cnrspiller3549
      @cnrspiller3549 Před rokem +2

      It sounds as if your country could use some stronger property laws and a more stable government. It's a shame. Best of luck.

    • @LinasVepstas
      @LinasVepstas Před rokem

      @@cnrspiller3549 I'm guessing they need a a managerial class -- prosecutors, lawyers, judges, a police force, to track down the corruption and looting. But that only works if the managerial class is itself not corrupt. And that only works if people are educated enough, smart enough, to know how to deal with corruption. And a powerful set of leaders to "do the right thing". Its a tangled trap. It's a hard trap to get out of.
      And if the Congo has the Wagner PMC and their sledgehammers, well. you're screwed.

  • @emperorsblade2786
    @emperorsblade2786 Před 4 lety +747

    I was expecting an April fool's joke but rather i got a lecture about modern monetary theory even in today am still confused.

    • @NatoriousGamePlay
      @NatoriousGamePlay Před 4 lety +74

      Don't worry. It's a terrible idea anyways

    • @Felipe07121999
      @Felipe07121999 Před 4 lety +7

      Dont worry, is a terrible idea anyway

    • @manictiger
      @manictiger Před 4 lety +58

      It's pretty simple. Money printer go brrr.

    • @henrygustav7948
      @henrygustav7948 Před 4 lety +8

      If you really want to understand it you gotta get your hands dirty and learn about it from actual MMT economists not channels like this. Here's a few links.
      Basics of modern money czcams.com/video/TDL4c8fMODk/video.html&t
      Prof. Stephanie Kelton czcams.com/video/ZKIBpKL2xoQ/video.html&t

    • @Mythhammer
      @Mythhammer Před 4 lety +11

      If you replace the middle M with Magic, it all makes sense... ^^ What? You didn't know that the world runs on unicorn farts? ^^

  • @arbra5934
    @arbra5934 Před 4 lety +163

    To quote Remmy "They got a monetary plan and it involves a lot of toner"

  • @JozuaSijsling
    @JozuaSijsling Před 3 lety +58

    Just missing two important points about MMT. First, MMT was theorised based on how the world currently works, not as a proposal to change all of international economics. The author noticed that various conventional wisdoms about printing and inflation did not hold up in practice. He generalised his findings when he presented MMT. Second, the indefinite money printing proposed should always target productivity, always stimulate the broader economy and nothing else. If it does that effectively inflation won't enter into a death spiral, or so the theory goes.
    Now if you ask me, the whole theory is born from primarily US' economic perspective and translates poorly to other nations, who run much higher risks of their currency taking off in the wrong direction. There's also the added danger that politicians around the world use MMT as an excuse to boost popular policies that are not beneficial to the long term productivity of their society.

    • @trixn4285
      @trixn4285 Před 2 lety +5

      Every nation that has its own non-convertible free floating currency and no debt in a foreign currency has unlimited spending capacity. So it translates to a whole lot of other countries. And even if a country doesn't meet one ore more of those criteria that doesn't mean that MMT doesn't apply, just that the fiscal space of those countries is somewhat limited. Orthodox economic theory is mainly built upon barter economies and even if they add money, they treat it as if it is scarce (which applied to the times of gold standard). MMT is simply the model for free floating non-convertible currencies (which is what many countries have today).
      But I agree with you in the sense that a government can only buy what is for sale in its own currency. If your economy doesn't produce enough good and services to satisfy the needs of your own population then you might be dependent on imports that you might not be able to buy with your own currency. This is where the US indeed has the advantage of having the most demanded currency, basically the world reserve currency. But this is very much in accordance with MMT that states that the real constrains of spending are what is for sale in your currency. But then on the other hand you could export more goods and services so it is not a one-sided coin. Countries like UK, Japan or the Eurozone do have a big enough and flexible economy to enjoy quite a big fiscal space.
      And for the other countries there are still valuable insights that MMT provides, mainly that they have to get independent of certain key-goods and services to increase their fiscal space. MMT doesn't claim that it will be easy for them the moment they realize it but it's still better to know what your restrictions are and why you have them.
      _"There's also the added danger that politicians around the world use MMT as an excuse to boost popular policies that are not beneficial to the long term productivity of their society"_
      I've seen this argument before and I kinda dislike it. We''ll simply have to work on building a better democracy with measures to prevent that. And ultimately governments can be and have been able to do lots and lots of terrible stuff completely without acknowledging what MMT teaches us about free floating currency systems. And ultimately MMT is just a body of knowledge. You can't really prevent it from being used in the sense that you must prevent politicians from being aware of it. Most of the central banks are already well aware of some of the implications MMT provides, mainly that crowding out does not exist in a free floating non-convertible currency. I believe they even think about interest rates very differently than pre GFC and Covid. So the knowledge is already spreading.

    • @theflagguy7704
      @theflagguy7704 Před 2 lety +2

      Who is the author or creator of MMT?

    • @drewh8264
      @drewh8264 Před rokem +2

      You answered the question Id been racking my brain for almost a year now: the money MUST follow productivity. In theory this could work but i agree, super risky. All you might need is a string of a few bad investments before collapse.

    • @jeronimo196
      @jeronimo196 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Great theory...

    • @Dr.RiccoMastermind
      @Dr.RiccoMastermind Před měsícem +1

      Your first paragraph is perfectly true. Although there are many countires beside the US that can fully "implement" or rather accept MMT. For less currency sovereign countries much depending on US Dollar e.g., it is much harder but still beneficial. MMT helps to understand what elemental ressources you better keep in your own hands.
      The second paragraph merely reflects the purposeful misinterpretation of MMT as a kind of gift card printer for everyone.
      You should not assume that MMT is free of spending limits, it's just other standards like ressources, employable workers, machines and such, and of course still prioritization is essential

  • @shaunbrender
    @shaunbrender Před 4 lety +72

    April 1st was yesterday.

  • @run4ever102
    @run4ever102 Před 4 lety +465

    MONEY PRINTER GO
    BRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR

    • @Winged_Snek
      @Winged_Snek Před 4 lety +2

      Top meme

    • @LovesGrilling
      @LovesGrilling Před 4 lety +1

      BRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR

    • @ThePredator32
      @ThePredator32 Před 4 lety +1

      *A-10 Warthog has joined the chat*
      Did someone say BRRRRRRRRRRR!?

    • @johndoe70770
      @johndoe70770 Před 4 lety

      A10 would be proud

    • @marcuschamp9881
      @marcuschamp9881 Před 4 lety

      Did you actually see the video, or just sleep through it then put out this inane comment? Maybe do some actual reading on the subject first BEFORE making non-contributions.

  • @runcandy3
    @runcandy3 Před 3 lety +33

    Didn't change how I view money, but it just made me more nervous.

  • @leeoswald668
    @leeoswald668 Před 4 lety +924

    "maximum prosperity" - economical crisis every 10 years

    • @itisakubrow6361
      @itisakubrow6361 Před 4 lety +167

      Capitalism never fails (in between recessions)

    • @olivercuenca4109
      @olivercuenca4109 Před 4 lety +69

      Lee Oswald Despite the recessions each decade, generally speaking, the global economy has been on a consistent upward trend for a very long time. It’s not saying “infinite prosperity”, just maximum according to capacity. Of course, given how such things are increasingly distributed, it can feel like it’s not prosperous for many.

    • @leeoswald668
      @leeoswald668 Před 4 lety +15

      @@olivercuenca4109 I think we should think about something new, change something
      To bring the real prosperity, for all the countries, equally, balanced system that grow proportionally
      You got the idea
      We need to change something, make the system more sustainable, stable, whole

    • @gabe752
      @gabe752 Před 4 lety +32

      Lee Oswald This is very possible and we had this before Reagan. When the government doesn’t shoot its economy in the foot through tax cuts for the rich it can afford strong social programs and investment into education and healthcare which lead to a healthier and more productive population.

    • @leeoswald668
      @leeoswald668 Před 4 lety +8

      @Elijah Feuerstein shake things up?? Like some plague? Or government collapse?
      The way that we have everything now- just stepping on the same rake, again, and again

  • @jordanreeseyre
    @jordanreeseyre Před 4 lety +474

    Monetary theory, the crazy quantum mechanics of economics.

    • @gorgecunth1581
      @gorgecunth1581 Před 4 lety +38

      No, it's String-theory

    • @johnercek
      @johnercek Před 4 lety +17

      @@gorgecunth1581 no! it's M-theory! (the "m" stands for money!)

    • @jumpinjaxs
      @jumpinjaxs Před 4 lety +64

      Just like in the double slit experiment. Oberved money moves in a straight line. Unobserved money disappears and never makes it to the other side.

    • @declannewton2556
      @declannewton2556 Před 4 lety

      @@gorgecunth1581
      String theory is not that complicated.
      In fact, it solves many issues with quantum mechanics.

    • @Petr75661
      @Petr75661 Před 4 lety +14

      Don't confuse scientific theories with economic theories.

  • @L0stEngineer
    @L0stEngineer Před 4 lety +118

    Hyper inflation and modern monetary theory don't scare me. Paper money will always have intrinsic value. For example, I'm out of toilet paper.

    • @MrPhilsterable
      @MrPhilsterable Před 4 lety +10

      The true horror of surviving an apocalypse would certainly be a suddenly finite supply of toilet paper.

    • @nhandahooker
      @nhandahooker Před 4 lety +10

      Just shower. First world problems

    • @tylerdurden3722
      @tylerdurden3722 Před 4 lety +13

      Exchange some cash for Zimbabwean dollars. You'll have enough toilet paper for several apocalypses.

    • @therealcool1144
      @therealcool1144 Před 4 lety +8

      paper money doesn't have intrinsic value, it has extrinsic value, that is one of the points of MMT. And hyperinflation is from productive capacity loss, not really from printing money. Money printing comes after the hyperinflation, not the other way around. Look at history.

    • @Cyphlix
      @Cyphlix Před 4 lety +1

      Those plastic notes will have more intrinsic value to the plumber you hire to fix the blockage

  • @ivankenobi1033
    @ivankenobi1033 Před 3 lety +117

    Also, being a bank sounds like a pretty good gig: you create debt by typing digits in a computer, and you get to pocket the interest for no work at all

    • @derekmcdaniel6029
      @derekmcdaniel6029 Před 3 lety +2

      indeed.

    • @Metalhed1300p
      @Metalhed1300p Před 2 lety +17

      And if it all fails the government will bail you our by creating debt that the people themselves have to pay back. It's a win win win

    • @raoulduke8340
      @raoulduke8340 Před rokem +17

      the lender can borrow against the debt it issued, as once it's issued, debt becomes an asset of the lender...they can sell derivatives off the debt they've issued...it's legalized high plunder

    • @richardouvrier3078
      @richardouvrier3078 Před 8 měsíci +1

      A currency user.

    • @richardouvrier3078
      @richardouvrier3078 Před 8 měsíci +1

      And a dollar demander. Demand control.

  • @khanfauji7
    @khanfauji7 Před 3 lety +360

    something about MMT just feels like its just a massive house of cards that will eventually come crashing down

    • @diegoflores9237
      @diegoflores9237 Před 3 lety +93

      It is. Its like saying we have a magic wand that makes our wishes come true. Mmt is the biggest scam ever created.

    • @TroutAmbush
      @TroutAmbush Před 3 lety +19

      if we have an electromagnetic crisis that erases the internet & all digital files across the world, thus eliminating digital money from the global market, sure

    • @PegasusTenma1
      @PegasusTenma1 Před 3 lety +6

      @@TroutAmbush that’s not what he meant.

    • @christianmoore7109
      @christianmoore7109 Před 3 lety +9

      That’s because it is.

    • @alex-rx9ci
      @alex-rx9ci Před 3 lety +12

      @@TroutAmbush lay off the acid for awhile

  • @pushkarlakhe13
    @pushkarlakhe13 Před 4 lety +283

    "Lenin is said to have declared that the best way to destroy the Capitalist
    System was to debauch the currency. . . . Lenin was certainly right. There is no subtler, no surer means of overturning the existing basis of society than to debauch the currency. The process engages all the hidden forces of economic law on the side of destruction, and does it in a manner which not one man in a million is able to diagnose."
    ... Quote By John Maynard Keynes

    • @hauntologicalwittgensteini2542
      @hauntologicalwittgensteini2542 Před 4 lety +20

      @Michael Defibaugh Capitalism will destroy itself to the point where it assimilated every threat to itself

    • @hauntologicalwittgensteini2542
      @hauntologicalwittgensteini2542 Před 4 lety +20

      @Michael Defibaugh which it wont

    • @hauntologicalwittgensteini2542
      @hauntologicalwittgensteini2542 Před 4 lety +55

      @Michael Defibaugh "its almost done" 1918 oh wait 1930 no no 1945. I got it 1969, 1989, 2001 ok 2008 wait I got it 2020 !

    • @hauntologicalwittgensteini2542
      @hauntologicalwittgensteini2542 Před 4 lety +26

      @Michael Defibaugh yeah who wouldve realised making absurd predictions will result in failure and capitalism getting stronger

    • @MooShaka89
      @MooShaka89 Před 4 lety +51

      @Michael Defibaugh funny enough Socialism has already killed itself dozens of times over while capitalism still lives

  • @lucasbrant9856
    @lucasbrant9856 Před 4 lety +658

    Printing is effectively a tax though. When you print money, you increase demand for the good you're going to buy with said money, this leads to higher prices, reducing the purchase power of the people who did not get the printed money.
    So basically, each time the printer goes brr, you're the one paying for it.

    • @gordonjohnson2497
      @gordonjohnson2497 Před 4 lety +205

      this broadly increases all prices.
      and lowers the burdens of all dollar denominated debts. it is a wealth transfer FROM savers. to the printer holder and ALL debtors.

    • @muhammadsaqeeb5298
      @muhammadsaqeeb5298 Před 4 lety +22

      @@gordonjohnson2497 so the earners who were probably in debt also lowers their price of labor too, so you end up devaluing your production, so its really an IOU for yourself that someone else collects interest on.

    • @henrygustav7948
      @henrygustav7948 Před 4 lety +40

      When you create money you can increase demand yes, but that does not mean higher prices if more people are hired and supply of products and services increases. Then prices stay the same or goes lower.

    • @gordonjohnson2497
      @gordonjohnson2497 Před 4 lety +66

      @@henrygustav7948
      you can create dollars out of air but assets take time.
      printing money doesn't make more iron, gold, oil, coal.
      it inevitably and historically creates higher prices.

    • @henrygustav7948
      @henrygustav7948 Před 4 lety +24

      @@gordonjohnson2497 1. Most currency is digital so we don't really print money unless its to satisfy a physical demand for notes.
      2. Creating money does not cause inflation and taxes control/regulate the value of currency by destroying money & deleting it out of the economy.
      3. Money directs economic activity which depending on how you spend it can create new resources. For example Fed govt can try to get more iron by spending money, hiring more people to mine the iron.

  • @AlvinJing
    @AlvinJing Před 3 lety +151

    The reason printing money didn't cause inflation is because the money printed was used to fill holes for big corporations and financial market. If you think stocks, bonds and houses as every day products, yes, there is inflation.

    • @MrCher2
      @MrCher2 Před 3 lety +13

      We should also take into account that the dollar is an international reserve currency, and can export part of its inflation. Also, as other countries are also applying inflationary policies, dollars are still being demanded internationally. "Bad" is better than "very bad".

    • @mehrshadvr4
      @mehrshadvr4 Před 3 lety +3

      That inflation is not because of printing money. That inflation is because of demanding more profit and return on investment.

    • @legendfighter310
      @legendfighter310 Před 3 lety +4

      @@mehrshadvr4 probably a mix of both, but u can see in theory why there would be inflation mostly just in the stock market. When we lower interest rates, that will effectively lower the demand for gov. securities by reducing the yield, and even more obviously, because the gov purchases them to lower the rates. This means that capital that was used for treasuries will most likely go towards other asset classes, and this will inflate those assets

    • @mehrshadvr4
      @mehrshadvr4 Před 3 lety +1

      @@legendfighter310 of course supply and demand also cause inflation but we are talking about money printing inflation. If printing money causes inflation, everything gets more expensive not just a few things.

    • @legendfighter310
      @legendfighter310 Před 3 lety +4

      @@mehrshadvr4 Yes if you print too much money you will feel the effects of inflation everywhere, but the point is that inflation is generally used to curb the deflation felt in recessions, but the problem is not all markets deflate at a constant rate meaning some areas will have inflation, and others won't. This is especially true in the stock market, since prices are incredibly reactive to market conditions, will absolutely inflate faster than many other goods and services because an increase in the money supply will increase investor confidence, and pair that with the effects of a decline in treasuries, it will absolutely cause disproportional inflation.

  • @neilg5270
    @neilg5270 Před 4 lety +79

    A simple cure all to all our economic worries!! How could this go wrong?

    • @alexsch2514
      @alexsch2514 Před 2 lety

      It's not a silver bullet, but a step in the right direction.

    • @francescoghizzo
      @francescoghizzo Před rokem +12

      A really simple solution to really really complex economic problems! It must be correct, right? Right?

    • @Alex-fm5ke
      @Alex-fm5ke Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@francescoghizzoit’s not very simple

    • @oskars1419
      @oskars1419 Před 5 měsíci +1

      china laugh in the corner :D

  • @joshebarry
    @joshebarry Před 4 lety +215

    Most of the channels I watch are the likes of Wendover Productions, Real Engineering, Mustard, ReallifeLore, etc. Huge channels with millions of subscribers, I hold Economics Explained in the same regard - so it always surprises me when I look and only see 321k subscribers. Seriously guys get this man more views he deserves it!!!

    • @EconomicsExplained
      @EconomicsExplained  Před 4 lety +70

      All fantastic creators that have been doing this for much longer than me. Hopefully I will get there some day but in the meantime I am just glad people are enjoying my little videos

    • @elios2296
      @elios2296 Před 4 lety +3

      You should also check out Kraut :)

    • @VipinYadav-np6oo
      @VipinYadav-np6oo Před 4 lety +2

      @@EconomicsExplained don't forget us 🥺

    • @luism5514
      @luism5514 Před 4 lety

      joshua Barry Hi we share a brain

    • @jimmydyurko
      @jimmydyurko Před 4 lety +1

      This and real engineering are at the top of my favorites list.

  • @thiskal
    @thiskal Před 4 lety +67

    3:51 *hopefully very secure excel spreadsheet.
    There are to many companies out there still using some legacy database from the early days of computing with barely a thought about security what so ever.

    • @AA-ou9et
      @AA-ou9et Před 4 lety +1

      @Jorge MESA PEREZ IRS, I shit you not

    • @XxxTheGoldenApplexxX
      @XxxTheGoldenApplexxX Před 4 lety +2

      @@AA-ou9et really? Can you please hack the irs and change my tax filings so that it'lls say that i payed all of it.. thx

    • @thiskal
      @thiskal Před 4 lety +2

      @Jorge MESA PEREZ
      Firefox marked a companies website as being unsecure. The company pubically complained about that and their complaint got noticed. Causing their website to get hacked. www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/60jc69/company_with_an_httpserved_login_form_filed_a/
      Here's the article about the event: arstechnica.com/information-technology/2017/03/firefox-gets-complaint-for-labeling-unencrypted-login-page-insecure/

    • @Otzkar
      @Otzkar Před 4 lety +2

      @@fealdorf storing Passwords in cleartext isn't something you say it "works". Sure it works bit once it gets hacked all your users loose all their accounts and maybe even different accounts

  • @BastiatC
    @BastiatC Před 3 lety +35

    update: it didn't work

    • @Dr.RiccoMastermind
      @Dr.RiccoMastermind Před měsícem +5

      MMT was never applied yet, it's not equal with dumb money printing

    • @thechadgonehamm
      @thechadgonehamm Před měsícem

      Seems to be working... still..

    • @thomasriggins1299
      @thomasriggins1299 Před měsícem

      If you take a bunch of shrooms it's even more confusing

    • @LovableBongo
      @LovableBongo Před 28 dny

      It actually worked pretty well

    • @bjorn2625
      @bjorn2625 Před 16 dny

      Eh, what? No one has actually run it like this. The closest you could come to it is the furlough schemes most governments ran during Covid. And that DID work.
      Also, MMT isn’t a belief, really. Instead it’s a set of facts and some conclusions. Fact is we do have a fiat currency. Fact is that slack does exist in the economy. Fact is that we are primarily concerned with inflation. Then you can choose to believe that the state might or might not be able to adequately judge where the slack exists and therefore where printing money to remove that slack would help.

  • @DrewofAnd
    @DrewofAnd Před 3 lety +11

    Good video. I think the biggest criticism of MMT was actually left out though. MMT put in to practice essentially removes the independence of the central bank and puts politicians (rather than central bankers) in charge of the money supply.
    Incentive structures in a democracy are such that politicians will continue to spend in order to get re-elected and therefore can't be trusted.
    MMT would likely lead to a massive increase in the size of the state with greater and greater spending and higher and higher taxation.
    For socialists, who trust in governments to make good decisions on behalf of their citizens, this may be an appealing idea.

    • @Rob-fx2dw
      @Rob-fx2dw Před 3 lety +4

      Of course you are right. It is grab for more power for politicians. Nothing more.

    • @PeakedInterest
      @PeakedInterest Před rokem

      Is it? Because of you think logically the only way they would stay in power is if they spent that money on things which the people benefited from.
      If they don't they will not get enough votes at next election.
      So it's win win for the people, either the government will spend money on things that benefit people or they get a new government that will.
      In fact it's the only system where the people will always get what they want.

    • @drewh8264
      @drewh8264 Před rokem

      Super interesting counterpoint for sure

    • @WYNNBETS
      @WYNNBETS Před 9 měsíci

      Look where we are now in 2023. lol.

  • @joaovitormatos8147
    @joaovitormatos8147 Před 4 lety +100

    when you realize the stereotype of "the average economist" is the same as "the classical music enthusiast" you start to understand EE's fixation with Beethoven in his videos

    • @jonathanbauer2988
      @jonathanbauer2988 Před 4 lety +13

      See I think that the average economist actually supports MMT, because almost every college teaches and supports it. How many economists out there didn't go to college? far to few

    • @user-hf2dr7sh4y
      @user-hf2dr7sh4y Před 4 lety

      You start noticing things you like everywhere you go?

    • @crysanthiumvega
      @crysanthiumvega Před 4 lety

      @@mystisification I'm marking this comment down so I can read it later when I'm not so tired and need to go to work

    • @indiana-dani
      @indiana-dani Před 4 lety +1

      MMT is just the same centralised crap managed by the designated money masters. More incentivized moral hazard like Keynsianism on steroids. Because most economists of today does not understand economics and the only thing they do know is printing money to fuel a fakeonomy. A fever dream for MMT addicted enthusiasts and ultimately a nightmare for the people suffering the whims of their reckless actions.

  • @jp-hs8hu
    @jp-hs8hu Před 4 lety +191

    I'm amazed how much money EE spends on hiring actors and filming these nonvebal sets.

    • @sriramm6824
      @sriramm6824 Před 4 lety +17

      He uses stock images and videos

    • @jp-hs8hu
      @jp-hs8hu Před 4 lety +106

      @@sriramm6824 I doubt it, considering the number of actors crew and locations and post production costs he must spend about 5 million minimum per video. He must make about 50 million in advertising. Where does he get time, let alone plan the logistics of travel and shipping film equipment. He must have his own production team of atleast a 100. His work ethic is impressive.

    • @BenthiccBiomancer
      @BenthiccBiomancer Před 4 lety +40

      @@jp-hs8hu He clearly just adds more numbers to his spreadsheet, then pays others to do the legwork and organizing for him.

    • @jp-hs8hu
      @jp-hs8hu Před 4 lety +27

      @@BenthiccBiomancer You may be onto something. Yes...it's starting to make cents.

    • @RaffySonata
      @RaffySonata Před 4 lety +10

      @@jp-hs8hu He just make those actors and crews out of thin air as credits

  • @Warssawwa
    @Warssawwa Před 4 lety +419

    "Modern Monetary Theory" more like "New Keynesian Theory"...

    • @CStrik3r
      @CStrik3r Před 4 lety +45

      Well actually it's just Post-Keynesian and Chartalist economics regurgitated as public policy

    • @Soleilune1995
      @Soleilune1995 Před 3 lety +63

      It's also consistent with Marxism. It's pretty obvious that it favors leftist economics.

    • @lubu2960
      @lubu2960 Před 3 lety +11

      @@Soleilune1995 how ?

    • @Soleilune1995
      @Soleilune1995 Před 3 lety +91

      @@lubu2960 It's not like MMT is intentionally trying to be consistent with Marxism. It just happens to be that way. And, you could potentially argue that it is not a PERFECT fit, but it's pretty close. There are a few differences, but it depends on interpretation.
      Marx believed that there is an "intrinsic" value to things, because you are capable of determining how much of one thing is worth a different amount of something else. For example, 1 tomato might be worth 4 potatoes, or something. This is only possible to do if there is a middle term allowing for a direct conversion. 1 tomato is worth 4 potatoes, because there is something measurable about their values, and that measurable thing is equivalent between 1 tomato and 4 potatoes. Otherwise, it would be impossible to determine relative value.
      Marx thought that the thing underneath the relation was the amount of labor time that went into producing or acquiring the things. For society as a whole, it's the average amount of labor time that went into producing things of similar quality. So, if society pretty much agrees that 1 tomato is worth 4 potatoes, then it probably generally takes 4 times as much work to grow tomatoes as it does to grow potatoes. That's why they are worth more. It is harder to produce a tomato.
      Now, you can argue that value is actually about how much of something there is relative to other things, and how much people want it relative to other things, with demand being subjective. So, if there are a ton of potatoes and not many tomatoes, but people generally want tomatoes, then tomatoes will be worth more than potatoes. Marx would probably say that in order for there to be so many potatoes relative to tomatoes, it's likely just easier to produce them. So, again, supply and demand ultimately goes back to the amount of labor necessary to acquire different things. It's not that supply and demand is wrong. It's that supply and demand alone ignores the underlying material conditions for why the supply and demand is what it is, which is different amounts of labor needed.
      Natural resources, like rocks, which cannot be produced, are only useful to society if they are extracted by labor. The harder it is to extract, the more it will be worth. To some extent, the more rare it is, the harder it will be to extract, because it isn't abundantly accessible.
      Modern Monetary Theory says that the value of money is relative to the value of other things (1 tomato = $5 = 4 potatoes). Marx agrees with this. The supply of money in the system, relative to the supply of other things, alters how much money is worth. If $5 buys 1 tomato, and we increase the supply of money without increasing the supply of tomatoes, then since $5 is worth less now (due to inflation), $5 will no longer be worth 1 tomato. Prices will go up overall. 1 tomato might be worth $10 now. On the other hand, if we reduce the supply of money (due to taxation), then the opposite will happen. Money will be worth more relative to other things, because there is less of it, and it is harder to come across. $5 might buy 5 tomatoes now, assuming no additional tomatoes appear in the system.
      In addition, MMT also suggests that the solution to unemployment is for the central state to print more money and spend it on socially beneficial things, because a lack of employment is a sign that there is not enough money in the system, with which new jobs can be created (so long as there are enough raw materials and unused labor power available). If too much money is taxed out of the system though, resulting in less of it to go around, then money is harder to acquire. It is demanded too much for there to be so little of it in supply. People have to work harder or longer to make the same amount of it, and so, the same amount of labor is essentially worth less, because we measure the value of labor with labor time (one hour of labor = $10, for example). If there is less money, wages will be worth less.
      There is also an implication that doesn't get brought up much, that inequality has an effect on how much labor is worth, due to supply and demand for labor. If there is a ton of unemployment, and only a few people with the ability to hire for jobs, then the supply for labor is far higher than the demand, meaning the price for labor (wages) goes down then too. However, the price for other things may not go down relative to the price for labor, because supply may remain constant, and the demand for necessities will not decrease (people will just use credit or loans, with higher interest rates the more people there are in need of financial assistance). Since more capital investment generally produces more of a return on investment, and since debt results in more money owed over time, inequality will continue to grow, leading to lower wages, higher debt, higher profits for the rich, and less ability for people to participate in the market. More capital will accumulate into fewer and fewer hands (which can be empirically observed to happen).
      In other words, Marx was right.
      Marx, of course, also thinks exploitation is taking place, because profits go to the owners of capital, not the ones who actually do the work responsible for the extraction or creation of wealth via useful labor. MMT doesn't necessarily have much to say about this in particular. It doesn't care about whether there is exploitation or not. It's just describing how money works in general. It just happens to be, coincidentally, that the way money works implies Marx's description of exploitation.
      Regardless, MMT is not inconsistent with Marx. It is just going a step above what Marx said. It is effectively tying Marx's analysis in with modern economics. It's bringing Marxism back from the dead, in a way.
      Like, Bernie Sanders' economics advisers were modern monetary theorists, and one of his major policies was a federal job guarantee. Anyone who needs a job can have one through the government. If you were to combine MMT with worker cooperatives as the main form of business (workers are their own collective boss), then you would essentially have market socialism. It may be a mixed market system, but leaning towards socialism rather than capitalism. You can have high government spending as long as there is also high taxation, but you can have progressive taxation. Tax more from larger accumulations of capital, and less from smaller ones. If everything were a cooperative, then the government could just take its share from business, rather than individuals. That's more or less how socialism works. It just wouldn't be Marxism-Leninism. It would be actual democratic socialism, because the government is still democratic. We would have just switched economic systems.

    • @Soleilune1995
      @Soleilune1995 Před 3 lety +28

      @@lubu2960 I'll also add that MMT, if true, might suggest that the reason socialism has not historically worked has been due to inadequate access to resources or labor power required to meet the needs of the population. Or else, incompetent leadership.
      It's not inherently a problem with socialism, government spending, or even necessarily central planning. After all, China uses loose central planning, and it does fine.

  • @gb-dt3vk
    @gb-dt3vk Před 3 lety +70

    The old laws of monetary theory dating back to Hume still hold. One should be suspicious when a government makes a substantial increase in the money supply.

    • @mjdillaha
      @mjdillaha Před 2 lety +2

      Also, “modern monetary theory” is not modern or new, it’s been tried numerous times over millennia, and it always fails.

    • @fatrat600284
      @fatrat600284 Před 2 lety +4

      @@mjdillaha Problem with that statement is, unlike at any time in human history, we have never been more interconnected and the fact that most of our banking and financial system in mostly digital does, in fact change a lot. money can be created and destroyed in a blink of an eye.

    • @dm9910
      @dm9910 Před 2 lety +6

      ​@@mjdillaha Over millennia? The concept hasn't even existed for 100 years and the term is only a few decades old (even its precursor chartalism is only about 100 years old as a theory). So what attempts are you referring to here? I don't even know of any societies other than China which were using fiat currency more than 1000 years ago, it didn't make it to Europe until a few hundred years ago. It's not clear to me what you mean by it having been tried and failed either. MMT is primarily descriptive, not prescriptive. It's an attempt to explain how currency works in modern society, not instructions on fiscal policy. Its success or failure should be determined not by successful or unsuccessful governments, but by the accuracy of the predictions it makes.

    • @mjdillaha
      @mjdillaha Před 2 lety

      @@fatrat600284 I agree that that is a problem, I don’t see how it affects what I’ve said.

    • @JB48632pointfour
      @JB48632pointfour Před 2 lety

      @@mjdillaha let me guess… you’re a conservative Christian.

  • @dovesr0478
    @dovesr0478 Před 4 lety +95

    "...or my favorite, Eve Online."
    This explains everything

    • @laserlemons1577
      @laserlemons1577 Před 4 lety +9

      He's got a whole series about Eve Online's economy.

  • @ImJustAoife
    @ImJustAoife Před 4 lety +231

    who cares about economic theory, the only thing we need is *meme theory*

  • @lawsonj39
    @lawsonj39 Před 3 lety +39

    Nice simplistic overview. To go deeper, we need an explanation of the circumstances under which inflation takes place versus those under which inflation doesn't take place. It's not as straightforward as simply measuring the money supply against the total of goods and services.

    • @jeronimo196
      @jeronimo196 Před 8 měsíci +4

      This didn't age well...

    • @cwhit0110
      @cwhit0110 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@jeronimo196 How did this not age well? Just because inflation happened? The commenter said inflation takes place under certain circumstances.
      Giving money out via stimulus checks creates inflation because inflation occurs at the point of purchase. If the increase the purchasing power of all citizens, then you have inflation.
      If you were to stimulate the economy via another method, then you wouldn’t have the same inflationary effect. For instance, if the government spent the same stimulus check money on increasing public education infrastructure. There may be an inflationary effect of school supplies maybe construction (as new buildings are created) but not bread, milk, gas, ect.

    • @jeronimo196
      @jeronimo196 Před 6 měsíci

      @@cwhit0110 "There may be an inflationary effect of school supplies maybe construction (as new buildings are created) but not bread, milk, gas, ect."
      Until the construction workers and supply sellers start buying more bread, milk, gas, etc.
      It is as straightforward as simply measuring the money supply against the total of goods and services.

    • @cwhit0110
      @cwhit0110 Před 6 měsíci

      @@jeronimo196 why would construction workers buy more bread, milk, ect? Just because you have more money doesn’t mean you spend more on common goods. There are only so many loafs of bread a person can buy. Obviously giving more money to everyone would have a different inflationary impact than targeted stimulus. Also inflation is neither good or bad. Overall you want inflation, it means growth. Too much inflation means income inequality.
      My overall point is that mathematically it’s a lot more complex than just more money = drastic inflation. There are millions of factors in all of these markets. Placing stimulus money in certain markets would have different consequences regarding inflation.
      Think of QE, I’m not a fan btw, but QE in 2009 and the years following resulted in asset inflation, stocks, bonds, market securities etc. but had little to no effect on CPI. Why? Because of where the money was available. Banks buy assets and lend to businesses that buy assets. Whereas if the fed instead sent the trillions of dollars of QE money to individuals in a stimulus check, we probably would have experienced hyperinflation and the returns would be minimal.
      It’s not as straightforward as you suggest but rather a highly complex system if it was that easy, every investor beat the market.

    • @copernicus633
      @copernicus633 Před 4 měsíci

      MMT is a dangerous idea. Unlimited money creation can destroy an economy, even a civilization. When money supply outbids the availability of goods and services, inflation results. We’ve had a small, taste of this recently. South American countries like Venezuela and Argentina have had much higher inflation rates >100%. Socialist minded politicians never learn this lesson. Beware these here.

  • @trichtertus6221
    @trichtertus6221 Před 4 lety +90

    I love how the priciple of typing money into existence and how it effects our economy is so well shown in the GTA Online (Video game) world. Since hackers maxed out a substantial amount of peoples bank accounts, the ingame prices increased so much and almost every dollar you earn in the game is almost worthless, because there is so much existing.

    • @daniel_960_
      @daniel_960_ Před 4 lety +9

      True. But the game makes so much money selling gta dollars, but you barely can buy anything with it. I don’t get it.

    • @Emmet-sd8og
      @Emmet-sd8og Před 4 lety +23

      Grand Theft Auto is not an accurate measurement of modern economics... Are you taxed in GTA? Do you need to buy food? Do you need to have a job? Nope. In an MMT run economy, taxation is used to counter inflation.

    • @faust3530
      @faust3530 Před 3 lety +17

      @@Emmet-sd8og Exactly, his scenario actually goes further to prove MMT correct. Without the constraints of taxes or typical household expenditure, of course inflation will become bad. And MMT explicitly states that governments should only be introducing more money when production capacity of the country can handle it. So nice going Trichter Tus, you didn't say anything.

    • @buttlicker4438
      @buttlicker4438 Před 3 lety +7

      @@Emmet-sd8og It would never work out like that. I think MMT makes sense, but it would never work in the way its supporters envision. No government would raise taxes in an election year. I also doubt that they would be willing to raise taxes/ cut spending in the face of inflation. It's not exactly popular to raise taxes on groceries when the price of groceries doubles. So in all likelihood we would end up with a financial system with no safeguards when inevitable black swan events arise, and inflation even milder forms is a very scary consequence - see Japan. There's also the question of how you increase and decrease taxes in a progressive taxation system. Democrats would be very resistant to decreasing taxes on the wealthy even if they had increased them the year prior to counter inflation. Best thing would be to decouple taxes/government budgets from politics (like how the central bank manages inflation by changing interest rates), but that won't be popular. IMO the current system is much safer for managing the economy, although I do think the concepts of MMT can be used to augment it in a limited scope.
      I also think it's funny that there is a flip side to MMT that basically says that the government can print money to stimulate private sector growth through low taxes since debt doesn't matter. Very Reaganomics-like.

    • @gabbar51ngh
      @gabbar51ngh Před 3 lety +7

      @@Emmet-sd8og taxation is a bad way to counter inflation. Not only your currency is getting devalued, now you are getting taxed harder.
      You get churned out both ways by this. How exactly is this gonna benefit common man in anyway? It won't.
      Increasing Interest rates is better way to counter inflation or asking banks to increase reserves.

  • @loichenseen4658
    @loichenseen4658 Před 4 lety +226

    Common people: u can't make money out of nothing.
    MMT: allow me to introduce myself.

    • @eoghan.5003
      @eoghan.5003 Před 4 lety +24

      Thing is, the concept of making money from nothing isn't specific to mmt - it happens all the time, as this video explains. What mmt does is admit this fact and tries to use it for good.

    • @brianhelmuth9414
      @brianhelmuth9414 Před 4 lety +9

      @@eoghan.5003 Except like the video explains there is no reasonable expectation of scarcity, the government will just print more and more currency to satisfy its short-term debt obligations, further devaluing the currency. Gold, for example, is a real physical metal with actual scarcity. Gold is money. US Dollars are fiat currency. Quite the difference.

    • @henrygustav7948
      @henrygustav7948 Před 4 lety +15

      @@brianhelmuth9414 Anything can be money, toenail clippings can be money the problem lies in getting it accepted as payment. The reason the USD is in demand and accepted all over the world is because of the ability of the US to enforce tax laws. You can only pay your taxes in usd and not yen or euros or chicken feet. Creating more currency does not devalue it as money is not a store of value its a relationship between spending and supply of goods and services. If the US creating 100 trillion dollars, there would be no inflation if that money sat in a bank account not being spent. It is always spending vs supply.

    • @therealcool1144
      @therealcool1144 Před 4 lety +4

      MMT were the first ones to discover that government do create money out of thin air. Some MMT'ers are even from the Treasury and Fed so they have seen it first hand.

    • @rogersmith1408
      @rogersmith1408 Před 4 lety +2

      They really are not just printing money. They are printing you debt. For every dollar printed a treasury bill(or something) is sold to back it. Someone buys that to make safe interest rate, and you have money, that has to be repaid! No question countries that have it's own money have an advantage when things get bad like this. Where do you think that 2 trillion stim. bill came from? 2T loan against Treasury notes that are being sold now as we speak, and those will have to be paid one day!!

  • @matheuroux5134
    @matheuroux5134 Před 4 lety +654

    Modern Monetary Theory: Everything is rosy, except if you're from a poor country.

    • @SandhillCrane42
      @SandhillCrane42 Před 4 lety +12

      Yeah, it's fine because everyone's terrified of our brutality, so it's worth whatever we say! 🤗 That is NOT going to fix anything.

    • @SandhillCrane42
      @SandhillCrane42 Před 4 lety +59

      Modern Monetary Theory: We've got the guns, it's worth what we say.

    • @AlbyTheMovieCreator
      @AlbyTheMovieCreator Před 4 lety +10

      and except if you are an european country apparently ?

    • @AntoniousAutodidacticasaurus
      @AntoniousAutodidacticasaurus Před 4 lety +6

      ​@@AlbyTheMovieCreator hmm if we could only figure out what the ruling classes of those two countries have in common...

    • @andrewstabback4747
      @andrewstabback4747 Před 4 lety +3

      Thats actually where MMT will be most valuable and I include the US in that statement these days as well. Its a basket case!

  • @masterstacker2833
    @masterstacker2833 Před 3 lety +8

    Economy collapses from debt and we have equality at last.

  • @ianboard3555
    @ianboard3555 Před 3 lety +4

    My problem with MMT is that it is just too convenient. Now that our debts are huge - national, commercial and personal - along comes a theory that lends intellectual cover to just printing money to get out of it.

  • @drgabe2908
    @drgabe2908 Před 4 lety +89

    Money primers be like: "Bbbrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr"

  • @InsurgeGaming
    @InsurgeGaming Před 4 lety +201

    Everyone come back to this video in 12 months.

    • @wigglebot2368
      @wigglebot2368 Před 4 lety +1

      Why?

    • @elliottdennis2014
      @elliottdennis2014 Před 4 lety +6

      wigglebot23 to see if it works or not.

    • @workemail2188
      @workemail2188 Před 4 lety +21

      more likely 36months got to give it more time to play out.

    • @Reathety
      @Reathety Před 3 lety +4

      I agree. Time makes fools and sages of us all.

    • @GeoffreyVonbargen
      @GeoffreyVonbargen Před 3 lety +1

      Well it's been 4 months and the value of the USD has decreased significantly. Down ~10 percent compared to the Euro, and similar to the British pound.

  • @arizonanora3621
    @arizonanora3621 Před 3 lety +26

    Being 45, I’m so far behind in my savings and investments. I wish I had this financial knowledge right after college

    • @Admin-xr3hv
      @Admin-xr3hv Před 3 lety +3

      I think it should start when kids get money for doing chores

    • @lara6500
      @lara6500 Před 3 lety +3

      Still better late than never

    • @fawaz2996
      @fawaz2996 Před 3 lety +1

      It’s never too late you can do it

    • @fawaz2996
      @fawaz2996 Před 3 lety +1

      Remember your only half way through life and you know how important it is now so if I were you I would invest
      Invest as much as possible into the s and p 500 monthly teach your kids if you have any

    • @Admin-xr3hv
      @Admin-xr3hv Před 3 lety +2

      @Anurag Bisaria Yes they should
      🤨🙄

  • @WOok2a
    @WOok2a Před 2 lety +1

    Oh, so basically we are living in a Old School RuneScape economy? That’s like a dream come true and a nightmare at the same time.

  • @steins-bricks4957
    @steins-bricks4957 Před 4 lety +86

    finally i'm early enough to get a heart from my favorite youtuber.... right?

  • @lexdelaney2805
    @lexdelaney2805 Před 4 lety +388

    The most convincing lie is the one that is to complex to question.

    • @user-wn8mc1yc1g
      @user-wn8mc1yc1g Před 4 lety +2

      YOU KNOW LEX - YOU KNOW

    • @gabe752
      @gabe752 Před 4 lety +36

      Or you could, you know, read and learn.

    • @cryptomanual2920
      @cryptomanual2920 Před 4 lety +4

      The kind some ladies tell😂😂😂

    • @zse4cft6bhu8mko0
      @zse4cft6bhu8mko0 Před 4 lety +4

      Now this is the perfect comment for modern monetary theory lol

    • @gabe752
      @gabe752 Před 4 lety +1

      Colma B I agree that’s a thing that’s possible, but not when it comes to MMT, which this video explains pretty well

  • @TENNSUMITSUMA
    @TENNSUMITSUMA Před 3 lety +7

    18:00
    *WRONG!*
    My finite time and energy was used to get that money and it's being taken away from me against my will! That gives me the right to complain all I want!

    • @zackmaroon9162
      @zackmaroon9162 Před 3 lety +1

      I honestly couldn’t believe they made that statement. Sadly, people who think this are in charge of so much of our lives.

    • @008samurai
      @008samurai Před 3 lety

      He's not saying you can't complain about your money being taken by the govt. He's saying that money is not being taken in order to give to poor ppl as many conservatives complain about. The amount you are taxed doesn't depend on how much the government spends.

  • @christianmoore7109
    @christianmoore7109 Před 3 lety +10

    MMT is terrifying because of how truly unsustainable it is.

  • @josephlee9496
    @josephlee9496 Před 4 lety +109

    The whole world: "i can't work as hard as normal when I'm stuck at home"
    EE : "Hold my RedBull"

  • @peteh5636
    @peteh5636 Před 4 lety +34

    So modern monetary theory is promising the the same thing that the U.S. federal reserve has promised for a hundred years now.
    I’m not holding my breath.

    • @rconley95
      @rconley95 Před 3 lety +3

      If MMT actually worked, we could all be millionaires

    • @peterwiggett8197
      @peterwiggett8197 Před 2 lety +1

      @@rconley95 It does work, they are just lying to you about the results. The result is we all get poorer.

    • @rconley95
      @rconley95 Před 2 lety

      @@peterwiggett8197 Yup

  • @sexycooljulesverne
    @sexycooljulesverne Před 2 lety +3

    wow 2 years later this video aged well

    • @libiroli
      @libiroli Před 3 měsíci

      Sarcasm? Even Japan is turning off its brrr

  • @GD_Truth_and_Beauty
    @GD_Truth_and_Beauty Před rokem +2

    Argues that cash has intrinsic value outside of "because I said so"...
    Proceeds to explain that if you don't accept that the dollar has value you'll be arrested by the government.

  • @bullishonbullion
    @bullishonbullion Před 4 lety +16

    3:30 What a beautiful gold nugget!

  • @ImJustAoife
    @ImJustAoife Před 4 lety +42

    "We'll get everything you think you know about money and get ready to learn it all over again"
    *has school ptsd*

  • @pixelmasque
    @pixelmasque Před 2 lety +2

    FED 2020: MMT can answer our economic problems
    INFLATION 2022: hold my beer.

  • @simbaonsteroids8836
    @simbaonsteroids8836 Před 4 lety +4

    “Or my favorite eve online.” Somehow not surprised you love your spreadsheet video game.

  • @Makkovar
    @Makkovar Před 4 lety +35

    "...or my favourite, Eve Online"
    *sigh* of course it is

  • @JackW99
    @JackW99 Před 4 lety +42

    BRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR

    • @Nickator
      @Nickator Před 4 lety

      The money printer goes

  • @Kaiyening
    @Kaiyening Před 4 lety +6

    Now you’ve gotta make a video about EVE Online and... flatten the curve. The infamous learning curve, of course.

  • @michaborski7383
    @michaborski7383 Před 4 lety +4

    Wow, I knew parts of it. But you totally flipped it on it's head. Creating demand for currency. Never thought of that

  • @LancesArmorStriking
    @LancesArmorStriking Před 4 lety +353

    When people make fun of Nigerian politicians for wanting to make everyone rich by printing more money but then you-

    • @agett12
      @agett12 Před 4 lety +31

      I'm Nigerian but the answer is simple it's power in the global economy the US economy simply had more assets and political power to do the money printer thing. Nigeria just has oil and agriculture. edit: I'm expanding to state that of course Nigeria has other growing sectors in manufacturing and even IT but these are still in their early stages of growth and not fully competitive on global stage as the goods from oil and agriculture. E.g. palm oil used in many forms of foods processing.

    • @leifkhas7425
      @leifkhas7425 Před 4 lety +46

      Except they are trying to skip all the steps to get there. The USA was by any measure a 3rd world country until the late 19th century - early 20th century. 90% worked in agriculture and a lot of it was substance farming with the extra being sold for new farm equipment. Industry gradually built up from colonial times along the Eastern coastline and through savings eventually an industrial revolution began. Small businesses were started from the sons of farming families that had built up wealth. The government built railroads and a service industry popped up in small towns to meet the demand. Farming improved and started to be exported. Coal and oil and natural gas eventually became scaled up enough to be exported too and support service industries that were built around these industries and workers. And all the while wealthy European companies were investing in the US and even expanding there operations to the US. The difference between that and Africa, is that they don't have stable governments nor a stable society. Every few decades a militia group rises up and overthrows the government, or the military itself starts a coup. No one has any incentive to do anything with their productivity than the bare minimum. It's all about survival. Not to mention infrastructure and businesses being literally blown up. Or railroads built by former Colonial Powers being dug up and sold for scrap metal (this literally happens every day). That is why Africa is the way it is and why they can't simply print money. It's also how one can understand that sadly the only time Africa experienced growth is when stability was forced at gunpoint. And the only thing that can do that is European Colonialism coming in and enforcing a stable government and stable society. The worst things colonialism did was to abrubtly leave before installing stable governments that could last more than a few decades.

    • @iTuber012
      @iTuber012 Před 4 lety +9

      @@leifkhas7425 another arm chair expert on the country of Africa

    • @gameslayer404
      @gameslayer404 Před 4 lety +27

      @@iTuber012 silly man afrika isn't a country

    • @leifkhas7425
      @leifkhas7425 Před 4 lety +15

      @@iTuber012 I never said Africa is 1 country. But they are ALL in a state of decline sine the end of Colonialism.

  • @ultimatestoryteller
    @ultimatestoryteller Před 4 lety +203

    _we talking about printing more money_
    *Zimbabwe and Germany have joined the chat*

    • @albertlist8453
      @albertlist8453 Před 4 lety +2

      Saibal Republic lmfao

    • @Sataka23clips
      @Sataka23clips Před 4 lety +3

      Ey ey ey everyone be buying iphones for 1 0000000000000 00000000000

    • @vengefulspirit99
      @vengefulspirit99 Před 4 lety +4

      Vietnam would like to know your location

    • @ibejibenson1783
      @ibejibenson1783 Před 4 lety +2

      Germany ?

    • @ultimatestoryteller
      @ultimatestoryteller Před 4 lety +3

      @@ibejibenson1783 due to German hyperinflation of 1922-25 when their currency devalued equal to Zimbabwean dollars of today.

  • @Anamnesis
    @Anamnesis Před 3 lety +5

    MMT explained in one word versus the eighteen minutes this video took...
    "BRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR"

  • @PhilCallis
    @PhilCallis Před 3 lety +13

    It allows "Economic Policy" to develop into full on central planning without any way to determine definitively whether things are going well or not

    • @substanceandevidence
      @substanceandevidence Před 2 lety

      wait if you cannot tell things are going badly then how badly are they going, really?

    • @arne1021
      @arne1021 Před 2 lety

      Its not about centeal planning fot industries that already exists.
      MMT ist about using resources that arent used by the private sector like unemployed people

  • @phoeni3902
    @phoeni3902 Před 4 lety +38

    *["BRRRR"ing intensifies]*

  • @gunner2246
    @gunner2246 Před 4 lety +19

    Playing EVE Online, everyone's favorite space themed spreadsheet simulator. Love that game, and why am I not surprised?

  • @osalas36
    @osalas36 Před 3 lety +7

    Every time he says money or cash I keep hearing C.R.E.A.M by Wutang in my head

  • @jank3441
    @jank3441 Před 3 lety +1

    A couple of things you have to ask yourselves is why MMT may not be practical for us, since if no answer can be found, it is a sound path to embark on.
    MMT's core fundamentals derive in part from Keynes' theories, which many would argue were an ideal set of monetary & fiscal policies that could help revive economies that collapsed due to a decrease in aggregate demand. However, Keynes himself argued that his theories where to be applied only under specific circumstances where AD fell and AS (aggregate supply remained constant) in which case the Government should increase their spending and create a fiscal deficit to consume the extra surplus in supply that would remain available in the economy in order to cut the bottom & later on the top from the business cycle. In order to do this, Keynes argued that governments should run a fiscal surplus during the boom years, reducing the monetary supply in the economy that had been introduced during the bust period. This is of course a huge oversimplification of his theories, however, few economists outside of the classical schools of economic thought found much issue in these recommendations, for which they were implemented by governments all over the world. The issue of course was that economic assumes that people are rational, at least to some extent, and that politicians want the best for their country, but as we all know, it is not from the goodness of the butcher's heart that we get meat to eat for dinner, it is due to their own self-interest. This meant that nations all over the world took Keynes idea's and kept only the part that was politically profitable, at the end of the day, who cared about the business cycle when elections creeped up in the corner, right? This has led nations all over the world to create huge fiscal deficits that they will never pay off. This has created different consequences for different nations since each situation is different. For those that borrowed in other country's currencies, the risk of default grew exponentially, causing many economical collapse along the years. For others, welfare states where implemented with the best of intentions to ensure that the people found themselves better off regardless of their faith, & slowly but surely these nation's cultures and motivations to continue innovating, continue growing (in terms of REAL GDP) and continue prioritizing their liberties over their paper money has subsided.
    Now, where could MMT fail in the US? Let me start off by being clear, I am not sure whether it would work or not work, I am not sure whether it is desireable or not desireable, frankly, each individual's morality & ideology will lead them to a different conclusion, but I am sure that it is essential to question any theory or economical current that one seeks to adopt BEFORE doing so.
    Firstly, for MMT to work the Federal Reserve would need to be politically independent in order to act in response to the levels of inflation and not to the demands of a president or congress seeking re-election. We know that on paper they indeed find themselves in this position, however, just a quick look at present times and at what has been historically done to Keynes' ideas can tell you that this is largely an idealistic utopian belief.
    Secondly, The Federal reserve would need to have real time, exactly precise data on what the current monetary supply IN CIRCULATION is, the actual rate of price inflation in EACH AND EVERY INDUSTRY AND REGION since bubbles can form in all asset classes as well as all cities in the country, and one number reflecting all states and cities would not accurately do justice to the real situation on the ground. It would also have to find a way to inject or retrieve money from certain sectors of the economy and certain regions of the country without necessarily impacting all others, which would prove excruciatingly difficult in this era of special interests.
    Thirdly, the individuals at the federal reserve would not only have to have even more power than they currently do, they should be expected to exercise this power absolutely perfectly, making all the right decisions at the exact right time with no margin of error whatsoever.
    Fourthly, the currency value of the currency in foreign exchange markets would be expected to be analysed and controlled heavily to ensure that the country's exports remain competitive in the global outlook to ensure that more productive, supply generating companies and jobs are not lost as a result of government intervention, which would be considerably difficult since our currency follows the laws of supply and demand similarly to all other goods and services.
    Even more points: Unelected officials will be given the remote control to our economy not only with the ability to create money like they currently do, but with the ability to decide or directly guide the taxation imposed upon the population regardless of the will of the people, since imposing taxes is vital in MMT's regulation of Inflation.
    - In the event of that a given good's supply is reduced substantially, say Cars, the Fed would have to ensure that none of the money being introduced in the economy be directed towards the purchase of cars, since doing so would inherently become inflationary quite rapidly, for which they would have to greatly reduce the freedom independent adults have on what they want to do with the product of their work, going far beyond what we now consider the role of a government that believes in democracy and the will of the people.
    - In the event that a mistake is made and inflation arises, taxation will have to be increased to levels much higher than what we currently consider reasonable, which will decrease motivation of production in the private sector thereby reducing aggregate supply of goods and reducing the amounts of goods available in the economy for money to purchase, creating more unemployment and either worsening inflation if people are subsequently employed by the job guarantee that MMT's superstars prescribe only to bid up the prices of these goods which are collapsing in supply, or creating mass suffering amongst people who have no job, have no money, have high demand for money since their tax obligations are high and are forced to see prices rise around them.
    Many more things can be said about the theory but I've gotten quite tired as is. Again, I do not claim that these points are inherently valid or that MMTers cannot provide me an answer for them, as a matter of fact, that is exactly what I hope will happen as the reason I post this comment is to get some insight as to how you would combat these issues if MMT were to be implemented.
    Personally I find many elements of MMT really insightful and extremely useful, whereas I struggle to grasp other elements of the theory like any other theory out there. Apart from the Job Guarrantee, I attempted to leave out policy prescriptions since they are for the most part absolutely appalling from my point of view, and it serves no purpose discussing them until we have reached a consensus on how MMT would actually work.
    Whoever you are, & I plan to comment this on multiple videos to get more insight, I highly encourage to write your thoughts and comments on what I have just laid out, as well as any concern or alternative you have for the theory, please keep comments civil so we can learn and grow together, thank you!

  • @theYoutubeHandle
    @theYoutubeHandle Před 4 lety +28

    every time you print money, you are basically stealing the people's money who uses your currency, because in the end those people pay for it through inflation.
    Let's say you printed money and bought a bridge. You didn't just print a bridge out of thin air, the users of your currency paid for that bridge through inflation. Some of which may not even be your citizens.
    That's why a currency that can't just be printed at will is better for the users of that currency. And the public needs to be more aware on that issue.

    • @theYoutubeHandle
      @theYoutubeHandle Před 4 lety +5

      @@mystisification I'm saying whatever benefit you created by printing money, in the end, the holders of your currency paid for it through inflation. And maybe they benefited as well maybe they didn't. It's like a hidden tax everyone pays for using your currency, except some of your users may not even live in your country or are your country's citizens.

    • @burn_out
      @burn_out Před 4 lety +3

      @@mystisification well what you're trying to say is that the US government takes 2-4% of the entire world's population's wealth through the inflation to build some bridges and schools for the US citizens. And it's good because it could be worse.

    • @comeberza
      @comeberza Před 4 lety +1

      @@mystisification theres no such thing as a "cycle" and counter cyclical policies are just desperately trying to rewind the money printing process for previous years

    • @gallectee6032
      @gallectee6032 Před 4 lety

      @@mystisification Are companies taking absurd risks because they know they can rely on government bailouts also good for growth?

    • @comeberza
      @comeberza Před 4 lety

      @@mystisification I'd claim the opposite and say there are loads of economists that missunderstand (sometimes on purpose) the present and think they can predict the future because they are smarter than everyone else. When this people screw money up and make, by printing, buying debt or buying currency more profitable than investing, most of that printed money falls into a pit and the rest depreciate along with the new fresh cash. Why would someone invest for a 4% risky anual profit it if is going to be devoured by inflation and you are offered a 2% for buying stupid debt

  • @punditpounder5153
    @punditpounder5153 Před 4 lety +63

    This video coupled with your previous from Mar 26 is an amazing exercise of cognitive dissonance. In the other video all our woes are caused by runaway debt. Yet in this video, Modern Monetary police just has to be managed properly even tho the entire monetary system, the WHOLE thing, is founded on runaway debt because... we borrow money into existence. Why? You did a great job explaining it was not always this way, but you never explained what changed and why. Why do we borrow money into existence? If the banking system didn't create money, who would create it. How was it created in the past. You could even explore the rationale, and after 100 years of the current system, really contrast the two. Because the monetary system we have now was supposed to cure the ills of the previous system.
    Unfortunately your trashing of the "On a Desert Island with a $1m" story misses the true efficacy of the illustration. It has nothing to do with intrinsic value, because well, nothing has intrinsic value (another discussion). Money is useless (worthless) on a desert island because there is nothing to buy. Money is irrelevant when there is nothing to buy, so what is more important, money or stuff/things? This is not a chicken and the egg question of which came first, money or products. Money never comes first. That fact, illustrated by the desert island story, reveals the true nature of money, the constraints of which are the single biggest hole in the Monetary Theory of money.

    • @r-gart
      @r-gart Před 3 lety +5

      He's a hard keynesian, maybe even marxist idk, cognitive dissonance is therefore expected.

    • @punditpounder5153
      @punditpounder5153 Před 3 lety +4

      @@r-gart I've never seen a video on YT addressing this question: If a government or it's central bank did not print money, where would money come from?

    • @lastgiddon
      @lastgiddon Před 3 lety +2

      @@punditpounder5153 This right here is the problem I have with these cryptocurrencies. How will they create new money for the ever growing population?

    • @punditpounder5153
      @punditpounder5153 Před 3 lety +1

      @@lastgiddon In the case of crypto's like bitcoin that eventually become static/finite when the max number of coins are mined, by dividing them into smaller and smaller fractions. Today a loaf of bread could be 1 bitcoin, in 10 years it's 1/2 bitcoin, in 10 years its 1/4 etc as the products/services expand while the money supply remains static, until one day a single bitcoin buys a private jet and .000001 bitcoins buys a loaf of bread. Natural money (specie) like gold (whose supply is negligible enough to be essentially static) can't do this because, following the same progression, a spec of gold dust would buy a loaf bread when a 1 ounce coin buys a jet. When money is a product of the market like cell phones and ice cream (instead of a government monopoly), the free market adds another coin like silver to the money supply. Likely we will get multiple crypto's of varying value/buying power in the same fashion rather than buying bread for .000001 bitcoins.

    • @lastgiddon
      @lastgiddon Před 3 lety

      @@punditpounder5153 Hmm! Interesting. Another question, who makes or creates these silver money, who is the tusted appointee in charge of this task?

  • @femto02
    @femto02 Před 4 lety +8

    I love how he explains this concept of money without any grim undertones of other videos. He explains the concept very well and only uses facts , no assumptions or crazy conspiracy theories.
    Love your videos.

  • @AdityaKashi
    @AdityaKashi Před 4 lety +16

    This blew my mind: the government does not actually need your tax money so it can spend on programs, it only needs only needs them to create demand for money! At some level the two are still pretty much the same thing, but I never thought about the latter characterization.

    • @draunt7
      @draunt7 Před 8 měsíci +3

      No they're very different. One claims that you need taxes to fund a program. The other demonstrates that the govt is itself the backer of the dollar. We're not in need of Gold bars, for example, to back our purchase. So long as the nation continues to maintain it's population and continues functioning, we keep making money. Remember that money is just a representative for resources that we control through our govt's licensing and regulation.

    • @briskyoungploughboy
      @briskyoungploughboy Před 4 měsíci

      @@draunt7 Taxes are still necessary to counteract runaway wealth inequality, which leads to capital asset price speculation, which in turn leads to consumer price inflation as asset holders attempt to derive 'appropriate' returns from overinflated capital assets. This is why inflation followed the Covid relief payouts, because of lack of windfall tax for 'high-enders'.

  • @michaelpisciarino5348
    @michaelpisciarino5348 Před 4 lety +56

    2:15 Loaning out money
    7:25 What cash does
    10:32 Limitations
    13:00 Inflation
    16:48 Final Thoughts

    • @andrewstabback4747
      @andrewstabback4747 Před 4 lety

      Limitations = poor production. Fix the production problem , no inflation .There problem fixed as will be unemployment. What do you need fixing next?

    • @fachriranu1041
      @fachriranu1041 Před 4 lety

      @@andrewstabback4747 the only problem.
      Maybe if we already in full econ capacity then deficit budget is a big no no.

  • @michelbruns
    @michelbruns Před 4 lety +7

    Could you do some kind of summary at the end? You give us so much Information spread through the video with examples etc. and at the end of the Video we may already forgot the information from the beginning

  • @KarlFredrik
    @KarlFredrik Před 2 lety +2

    My main problem with MMT is that it's usually promoted by people that want to fund stuff I find destructive.

  • @adamroulston3473
    @adamroulston3473 Před 2 lety +1

    The fundamental flaw of MMT is that an economy is not the exchange of money, it is the exchange of goods and services, or more simply, labour. Printing money does not create new labour out of thin air, it just confuses the metrics as to who is owed labour (itt has money). When a government prints money to fund a school, it is taking the labour necessary to build that school out of your pocket.
    Friendly reminder that the Roman Empire collapsed, destroyed its middle class, and gave way to feudalism largely because of the belief that it could print however much money it wanted to fund projects.

    • @Rob-fx2dw
      @Rob-fx2dw Před 2 lety

      The other way of looking at what you said is they ignore the importance of prices in the economy which leads them to wrongly believe that prices are irrelevant when the reality is prices are the mechanism to make judgements about the relative efficiencies and outcomes of investments.

  • @joeychiappetta
    @joeychiappetta Před 4 lety +65

    Modern monetary theory- hyperinflation with fancier words to make it seem like insane government spending is a good thing

    • @anthonyderosa7757
      @anthonyderosa7757 Před 4 lety +10

      Joey Chiappetta nope, not that at all you just dont get it

    • @joeychiappetta
      @joeychiappetta Před 4 lety +6

      @@anthonyderosa7757 lol

    • @MKgamekanaal
      @MKgamekanaal Před 4 lety +9

      @@anthonyderosa7757 Yeah your right. Cause having a hiden tax (inflation) is a good thing. The middle class is getting fck over by this because there savings are losing their
      purchasing power year by year. The only way to stop this is by purchasing precious metals like gold or silver. Or having a well balanced porfolio with stocks, obligations, crypto etc
      But most people don't have the knowledge to invest in such things and end up losing their money, because its nothing different than going to the casino at this point.

    • @MKgamekanaal
      @MKgamekanaal Před 4 lety +5

      O yeah and from my observations, we will have really high inflation in the upcoming years. Maybe not hyperinflation because this is caused by capital escaping from the current place where the inflation is going. Which will result in switching to a new monetary system mark my words

    • @platypuss619
      @platypuss619 Před 3 lety +2

      Or you know. The government could tax the people with the highest marginal propensity to save and with the lowest marginal utility to raise funds. Simultaneously use the fact that a sovereign currency cant to bankrupt to help fund whatever is being targeted. That way there is little pressure on inflation, not to mention they can always restrict the money supply. Lol. But what do I know.

  • @Bad_Temper
    @Bad_Temper Před 4 lety +49

    This seems only really feasible if you’re a reserve currency...

    • @Jawshuah
      @Jawshuah Před 4 lety +7

      more like you make most things in your own country. its why printing money in venezuela went bad and not in america

    • @henrygustav7948
      @henrygustav7948 Před 4 lety +7

      Japan debt to gdp ratio 240% and NOT a reserve currency. Also no inflation.

    • @rhapsodosmusic
      @rhapsodosmusic Před 4 lety

      Ya pretty much

    • @Gorilder
      @Gorilder Před 4 lety +7

      Henry Gustav , the Japanese Yen is a reserve currency. Not anywhere approaching the USD what with it being 64% of all reserve currencies in the world.... but the Yen represents about 5% of all currencies held in reserve which is, respectable given that makes its tied for 3rd with the British Pound and just under the Euro at 20%

    • @tylerdurden3722
      @tylerdurden3722 Před 4 lety +6

      @@henrygustav7948
      1. the Yen holds 3rd place as a global reserve (the Pound is 4th btw(
      2. "no inflation" is a bad thing. (You want just enough inflation to deter hording of cash...to maintain liquidity and thus economic activity). Hording cash has upsides...it creates room for currency devaluation.
      3. The current debt to GDP isnt the highest Japan ever had. They've done this before.
      After WW2 they made massive debt (260% to GDP) knowing it would erode with inflation and currency devaluations. While at the same time using mercantilist policies to build up foreign reserves(their piggy bank)...which would not erode as fast.
      Modern Japan is doing the same thing. High debt to GDP....$1.35 Trillion in foreign exchange reserves. They still devalue their currency (which is great for the exports of a manufacturing economy).
      The "no inflation" situation, on the other hand, is not desirable.

  • @bipolarbear9917
    @bipolarbear9917 Před 2 lety

    The analogy at 17:30 into the video using business cards as 'fiat currency' is brilliant.

  • @MystiqWisdom
    @MystiqWisdom Před 3 lety +19

    Everything has a cost. Everything is awesome until the costs become apparent.

  • @kralexprofill4571
    @kralexprofill4571 Před 4 lety +18

    14:58 "Almost every country in europe..." Yeah like only two thirds actually
    Edit: Two thirds of the countries in the EU. In Europe way less than half the countries have the Euro.

  • @ktanner438
    @ktanner438 Před 4 lety +14

    [BRRRRRRRR INTENSIFIES]

  • @anchoDePulso
    @anchoDePulso Před 2 lety +1

    I think that nobody is really saying that money has no value. Is an oversimplification.
    More correct is that the value of money is determined by sociological and political factors.
    Is an objective value because the variables that determine the value of money are independent of the observer. But the value of money is more a social construct than a physical atribute.

  • @felixthebeliever3765
    @felixthebeliever3765 Před 3 lety

    @Economics Explained Firstly, there is a great sense of appreciation, joy, comfort, even clarity concerning matters I had less knowledge about, which comes from watching your content.
    I'd like to think I'm not alone in this, maybe even enough so that others mention it itoo, and it becomes worth it to consider and implement an alternative.
    I realize I'm a lot more sensitive to my memories and imagination than seems normal, but simply seeing chalk on a chalkboard (apparently just thinking about it, cause it happened again) is enough to send shivers down my spine

    • @77tigers26
      @77tigers26 Před 3 lety

      @PositiveMoney have videos on this. Check them out.

  • @alexm6811
    @alexm6811 Před 4 lety +6

    MMT is a joke that deserves to be discredited as such. It is neither modern, monetary or a theory and even fiat currency still has a intrinsic value.

    • @rmcewan10
      @rmcewan10 Před 4 lety +2

      It has exchange value, which is not the same as intrinsic value - intrinsic value itself is something of a wishy washy concept.

    • @alexm6811
      @alexm6811 Před 4 lety

      VatnsFjall it is linked to the economic output of the country and what people are willing to pay for it. Without the increase of economic output inflation would get worse.

  • @williamalfonso1373
    @williamalfonso1373 Před 4 lety +33

    Economics explained "money printer go brrrrrrrr"
    Noone:
    Argentina: Brrrrrrrr

    • @Bolizen
      @Bolizen Před 4 lety +1

      Why did you include noone?

    • @marcuschamp9881
      @marcuschamp9881 Před 4 lety

      if that is the ONLY thing you got from this basic introduction...not only is that sad, but also wrong. How about doing some actual research on MMT starting with lectures by Stephanie Kelton.

    • @rish4883
      @rish4883 Před 4 lety +5

      @@marcuschamp9881 You are such a disappointment.
      Have some chill in life

    • @the-selfish-meme7585
      @the-selfish-meme7585 Před 3 lety +2

      Argentina have their own version of MMT - they just defualt every so often.

  • @conchobar
    @conchobar Před 2 lety +1

    When people say "Money has no Value", they are referring to the fact that money's value isn't inherent, but arbitrarily attributed.

    • @Marcus-xb7le
      @Marcus-xb7le Před 8 měsíci

      Yup.He assembles a real straw man there. You could make the case that all assets values are circumstantial, but that disregards that currency is a non physical asset that attempts to represent goods and services, it's neither on its own.

  • @southernforestgypsy
    @southernforestgypsy Před 2 lety

    You're Australian. You make sense of something really complicated and you actually taught me a lot I didn't know and now I know it, I realise I should've known it sooner. Thank you very much from Northcliffe Western Australia

  • @TheHamoodz
    @TheHamoodz Před 4 lety +4

    I wish more people used symphony 9 in their CZcams videos, it's so powerful as background hype music.

  • @chrimony
    @chrimony Před 4 lety +4

    Now would be a good time to mention Federal Reserve requirements have gone to ZERO.

  • @samuelb4499
    @samuelb4499 Před 4 lety +1

    Awesome. These explanations are so well done. Thank you.

  • @tejasdeepsingh456
    @tejasdeepsingh456 Před 3 lety +47

    'You probably haven't even seen real gold coins'
    Indians: Hold my beer.

  • @unrulyObnoxious
    @unrulyObnoxious Před 4 lety +45

    Will you do a part 2 on MMT discussing the policy implications of MMT and how it relates to Keynesian (post-Keynesian?) thought? :-)

    • @henrygustav7948
      @henrygustav7948 Před 4 lety +1

      I think maybe its best to learn about MMT from MMT economists?

    • @henrygustav7948
      @henrygustav7948 Před 4 lety +1

      @Joakim von Anka I don't get it, why flat earthing and flat earthers? Who is sensible and who is an idjit?

    • @therealcool1144
      @therealcool1144 Před 4 lety +1

      @Joakim von Anka You don't know what you are talking about. I'm an MMTist and we don't think humans are rational, in fact it is one of our main points, humans are prone to make mistakes. Also if you look at it from a biological perspective, there's system 1 ( fast thinking, emotional, little effort) and system 2 ( slow thinking but more rational). Humans evolved to use system 1 most times because it is more efficient and uses less energy for our human body, system 2 consumes a lot of energy and it would not have been efficient for our human body to use it all the time. That was from my MMT economist teacher in university. Hence, why we are not rational humans. But according to monetarism, new keynesian, neoclassical or classical economics, we are. So i think you are confused.

    • @therealcool1144
      @therealcool1144 Před 4 lety +1

      MMT is post keynesian but some post keynesian are not MMT. Many post keynesians out there doesn't like MMT.

    • @therealcool1144
      @therealcool1144 Před 4 lety +1

      @Joakim von Anka Mark Blyth didn't destroy MMT, he doesn't understand it. He is like you, labeling and putting neoclassical ideas into MMT which does not work because MMT isn't neoclassical, you can't put neoclassical ideas into MMT.

  • @21stcenturycotyk
    @21stcenturycotyk Před 4 lety +32

    In the immortal words of buzz lightyear,
    Inflation #ToInfinityAndBeyond

  • @stevegrimson9554
    @stevegrimson9554 Před 15 dny

    Watching this video then reading about MMT blew my freaking mind. Until now I thought of government debt as basically similar to household debt, and that a government in debt desperately needed limited tax dollars to pay back some menacing overlord otherwise the country would be repossessed and we'd all be evicted. But this seems to suggest that debt and a balanced budget are pretty much irrelevant as long as a government is providing as much value as possible to its citizens while avoiding both runaway inflation and runaway unemployment. Beautiful in its simplicity. Thanks a bunch!

  • @superlugiaxd334
    @superlugiaxd334 Před 3 lety +2

    Knowing that money could be made with little effort for me kinda drives the passion for working

  • @theplaintiff5450
    @theplaintiff5450 Před 4 lety +48

    I never thought economics would turn into comedy.
    Hell is defined as a place where there is no reason. MMT has taken me to hell.

    • @henrygustav7948
      @henrygustav7948 Před 4 lety

      interesting, did you form that opinion while researching and learning about MMT?

    • @theplaintiff5450
      @theplaintiff5450 Před 4 lety +3

      Cropper What a brilliant response. You think of that yourself, or did your cuckold in the other room holding up cue cards tell you?
      I made no reference to it temporally, I just made the remark that MMT is batshit crazy.
      The laws of economics don’t disappear because of “muh strong western economies” or “muh printing press.” The day of inflation reckoning is coming.

    • @jimbarino2
      @jimbarino2 Před 4 lety

      @@henrygustav7948 Muh Austrian theory. Muh Peter Schiff. Muh GOLD!

    • @shriekinleada794
      @shriekinleada794 Před 4 lety

      the Plaintiff it’s just amusing that the MMT plane is flying straight into a cliff and everyone on board is boasting about how great the plane flies and how strong it is

  • @alfiestone14
    @alfiestone14 Před 4 lety +66

    Sounds like the quickest way to hyperinflation

    • @hurdur6828
      @hurdur6828 Před 4 lety +18

      That’s actually why there’ll be taxation, in order to reduce aggregate demand to counter inflation.

    • @Emmet-sd8og
      @Emmet-sd8og Před 4 lety +2

      @@hurdur6828 This.

    • @hamishcounsell5579
      @hamishcounsell5579 Před 3 lety +7

      @@hurdur6828 yea sure lets just decrease taxes on everyone but then when inflation happens dw the government will save you and tax you more again
      big brain play right there

    • @EconExistential
      @EconExistential Před 3 lety +4

      @@hamishcounsell5579 if it decreases aggregate demand, a tax would decrease inflation. If you crack open a macroeconomics 101 text book you'll find that.

    • @alessandronavone6731
      @alessandronavone6731 Před 3 lety +1

      @@TheTazzietiger so the government prints free money and then takes it back. What does that achieve?

  • @Ohsosweettango
    @Ohsosweettango Před 3 lety +1

    @Economics Explained...12:14: Money Printed by Treasury is backed by DEBT (ie. issuing Treasury Bonds) . *THIS IS THE MOST IMPORTANT FACT OVERLOOKED or MISUNDERSTOOD!
    I wish you, and other economists, emphasized this more when describing Money Printing, Stimulus, & Inflation.

  • @samuelmerkel2888
    @samuelmerkel2888 Před 2 lety +2

    Welp, looks like MMT doesn't really pan out due to the fact that inflation is too unpredictable and uncontrollable when printing money en masse

  • @allessandroable
    @allessandroable Před 4 lety +4

    EE: “ state is not a money consumer, rather money creator, and thus it should not be treated like a normal citizen when it comes to spending”
    Also EE: “ ...and that’s why Greece has been a naughty frivolous boy and didn’t save enough money for the hard time”

  • @HayenMill
    @HayenMill Před 4 lety +25

    Cullen Roche from Pragmatic Capitalism has good criticisms of MMT for anyone interested

    • @WMDistraction
      @WMDistraction Před 4 lety +2

      HayenMill
      The fact that he has a lot of self-promotion pages in his Google results, but doesn’t have an entry on Wikipedia, reaalllyy makes me doubt him. He also lacks any credentials that would make me believe he’d be an expert on this specific area of economics, having earned a BS, worked as a financial advisor for just short of two years, and then jumped into the fray of economic theory. If someone like Dr. Krugman thought that MMT was the best current macroeconomic theory available, I literally wouldn’t listen to Roche about anything he had to say.

    • @georgescotsdale361
      @georgescotsdale361 Před 4 lety +2

      Krugman self promotes quite a bit as well. Additionally while higher level specialization is a need for diving into the technical aspects of MMT,a general education in economic is sufficient for a general critique. As for your last point do keep in mind that 1.) There are always institutional biases, limitations, and culture which create limitations in their logic. 2.) Krugman has personal interests, must conform to aforementioned limits, and are simply wrong at times. 3.) Short of historical and empirical evidence a theory is just a theory regardless of proponent. I wouldn't say to simply be a contrarian and take the heterodox view,but neither should you take a view in its entirety just on account of it's proponents established nature or accreditation by said establishment.

    • @WMDistraction
      @WMDistraction Před 4 lety

      @@georgescotsdale361
      Having a doctoral degree directly relevant to the topic of study versus having an irrelevant BS degree and a topically relevant (and short-lived) job in the field doesn't make you an expert in anything. Paul Krugman is an internationally acclaimed scholar on macroeconomic theory. It would be like saying that some random Joe Schmoe who cooked at a nice restaurant for two years and studied online for a bit could hold a candle to recommendations from Gordon Ramsay. It's silly to think there's a legitimate comparison.

    • @comeberza
      @comeberza Před 4 lety

      Juan Ramon Rallo has a book called "Against the MMT" which is brilliant

  • @mgsharnhorst
    @mgsharnhorst Před 2 lety +3

    MMT is a very precarious house of cards

  • @lukebryant
    @lukebryant Před 4 lety +2

    Huh... Very interesting the more I look into MMT I start to understand it. Also love finding videos with a good Aussie accent 😎😎