Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)

White Paper: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)

by Warren Mosler 

The purpose of this white paper is to publicly present the fundamentals of MMT

What is MMT?

MMT began largely a description of Federal Reserve Bank monetary operations, which are best
thought of as debits and credits to accounts as kept by banks, businesses, and individuals.
Warren Mosler independently originated what has been popularized as MMT in 1992. And while
subsequent research has revealed writings of authors who had similar thoughts on some of MMT’s
monetary understandings and insights, including Abba Lerner, George Knapp, Mitchell Innes, Adam
Smith, and former NY Fed chief Beardsley Ruml, MMT is unique in its analysis of monetary
economies, and therefore best considered as its own school of thought.

via The Gower Initiative for Modern Money Studies (GIMMS)

New Zealand scraps world-first smoking ‘generation ban’ to fund tax cuts

in The Guardian  

Oh, FFS! Currency issuing governments do not — and as a matter of brute accountancy can not — "pay for" anything through tax revenue!

New Zealand’s new government will scrap the country’s world-leading law to ban smoking for future generations to help pay for tax cuts – a move that public health officials believe will cost thousands of lives and be “catastrophic” for Māori communities.

In 2022 the country passed pioneering legislation which introduced a steadily rising smoking age to stop those born after January 2009 from ever being able to legally buy cigarettes. The law was designed to prevent thousands of smoking-related deaths and save the health system billions of dollars.

The legislation, which is thought have inspired a plan in the UK to phase out smoking for future generations, contained a slew of other measures to make smoking less affordable and accessible. It included dramatically reducing the legal amount of nicotine in tobacco products, allowing their sale only through special tobacco stores, and slashing the number of stores legally allowed to sell cigarettes from 6,000 to just 600 nationwide.

via Sheepie