| ▲ | jjk166 13 hours ago | |||||||||||||
> But what we saw in 2020-2022 was that we hit the ceiling at 100mph. The 2020-2022 inflation spike wasn't due to following MMT based spending policies though. Slamming the brakes at 100mph may certainly have bad consequences, but driving at 100mph in low visibility conditions was the problem, not braking before you hit something. The fact is everyone knew the combination of supply chain disruptions, remote work, and the changes in spending habits would eventually produce inflation, and yet we kept pumping money in. Every economic school would have advised against that course of action. MMT only calls for spending to keep pace with economic growth, not to run the money printers as fast as you can. Economic theories, like scientific theories, are successful if they correctly predict what will happen if you do X. If the theory of gravity predicts that you will fall to your death if you jump off a cliff, it's not a failure of the theory of gravity that it doesn't tell you how to levitate after you've already jumped. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | CWuestefeld 10 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
Economic theories, like scientific theories, are successful if they correctly predict what will happen if you do X. In addition, an economic theory can only be useful if the actions that they dictate can actually be put into practice; if nobody's going to follow what the theory tells you to do, then it's of little use at all. This is the big problem with both MMT and Keynesianism: they're both great figleafs for politicians to wear when they want to spend in order to pander. But when the theory tells them that the situation has changed and they need to change their actions accordingly, they don't heed the need to raise taxes (MMT) or slash spending (Keynes). Unless we really do the thing, then pointing at a given macroeconomic theory is just an excuse. | ||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | Obscurity4340 12 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
Why is remote working considered inflationary? | ||||||||||||||
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