Monthly Archives: February 2023


The rise of US dollar imperialism, and why it failed – with Radhika Desai & Michael Hudson

YouTube has the video The rise of US dollar imperialism, and why it failed – with Radhika Desai & Michael Hudson.

Economists Radhika Desai and Michael Hudson explain the rise of the US dollar system, its central role in imperialism, and why it ultimately failed to accomplish Washington’s hegemonic goals.


This is a clear explanation of so much of what most of the neocons and neolibs do not want to know. Even if they do know this, they certainly don’t want you to know this. Even though the 99% of us need to understand this, we would prefer to pretend this isn’t true. We will fight the war against this truth to the last working class person.


Reversing 30 Years of Damage from the Clintons, the DOJ Closes A Price-Fixing Loophole Wide Enough to Drive a Truck Through

Naked Capitalism has the post Reversing 30 Years of Damage from the Clintons, the DOJ Closes A Price-Fixing Loophole Wide Enough to Drive a Truck Through.

Well, it took thirty years, but the DOJ has finally admitted this specific scheme started under the Clintons was a massive mistake, and it marks another sign that business as usual might be changing at the FTC and DOJ.

Here are some details on how the Clinton administration and the Obama administration opened the doors to inflation in health care and real estate.


America’s Real Adversaries are Its European and Other Allies

Michael Hudson has published the article America’s Real Adversaries are Its European and Other Allies.

Without subsidy from these countries, especially as China, Russia and their neighbors de-dollarize their economies, how can the United States maintain the balance-of-payments costs of its overseas military spending? Cutting back that spending, and indeed recovering industrial self-reliance and competitive economic power, would require a transformation of American politics. Such a change seems unlikely, but without it, how long can America’s post-industrial rentier economy manage to force other countries to provide it with the economic affluence (literally a flowing-in) that it is no longer producing at home?

I think this is in a nutshell why the current USA economic and political policies are not good for USA inhabitants,


We Need to Talk About the Original Sin of Economics

The Institute for New Economic Thinking has the article We Need to Talk About the Original Sin of Economics.

For Christian thinkers like Northcott, the pessimistic individualism that lives on in neoliberalism is the Original Sin of economics – a sin that has proliferated for the last two hundred years, culminating in the precarious situation of humanity of the twenty-first century. For them, as the welfare of people and planet are increasingly threatened, it is this stain that must be removed if we are to save ourselves and, as Wordsworth urges, “come forth into the light of things.”

I remember studying this topic in college. I don’t remember much detail of what I learned. I do remember some of these ideas expressed in this article.


Understanding money and the dollar system’s contradictions with Radhika Desai & Michael Hudson

YouTube has the video Understanding money and the dollar system’s contradictions with Radhika Desai & Michael Hudson.

Economists Radhika Desai and Michael Hudson explain the relations between money and debt, their role in imperialism, and the rise of the US dollar system.

This is the third episode of their Geopolitical Economy Hour” series.


Very educational talk. They introduced some ideas I had not considered despite years of reading Michael Hudson’s books. I certainly have some questions about some of the things they said. Questions to stimulate further research, not questions to challenge what they said.

I took some quick notes to use for that further research.

№116 Beyond the Dollar Creditocracy: A Geopolitical Economy .

We are Witnessing the birth of a new monetary order” – March 2022 article by a Credit Suisse expert. Zoltan Pozsar. “Great Power Conflict puts the dollar’s exorbitant privilege under threat” in Financial Times

Nouriel Rubini – “A bipolar currency regime will replace the dollar’s exorbitant privilege” – Financial Times

Kindelberger promoted dollar hegemony. I think I may have taken a course from Kindelberger when I was in college. The World in Depression, 1929–1939.
MIT Professor Kindleberger dies at 92

Indian Currency and Finance” John Maynard Keynes

Marcello de Cecco “Money and Empire


THE ECONOMICS OF THE UKRAINE PROXY WAR w/ MICHAEL HUDSON AND RADHIKA DESAI!

YouTube has the video THE ECONOMICS OF THE UKRAINE PROXY WAR w/ MICHAEL HUDSON AND RADHIKA DESAI!

Economists Michael Hudson and Radhika Desai join to break down the economics of the Ukraine proxy war between NATO and Russia as the one-year anniversary of the military operation approaches.


So far I have listened to the first 90 minutes which takes one to the end of the interviews with Radhika Desai and Michael Hudson. It certainly helps to have a background in the Geopolitics that Hudson, Desai, and Haiphong espouse. Of course you can develop that background by watching discussions like this. What I have come to realize is the weakness of MMT (Modern Money Theory) as practiced by almost all the rest of the MMT community (but Hudson and Desai) is the focus on sovereign currency issues. This focus tends to make MMT theorists downplay the importance of the international aspects of geopolitics. That makes MMT good as far as it goes, but it just does not go far enough.


Danger Ahead: Mike Pence Would Pick Up Where Paul Ryan Left Off

Stephanie Kelton has published the article Danger Ahead: Mike Pence Would Pick Up Where Paul Ryan Left Off.

She uses the following video clip of Alan Greenspan tying to explain Social Security to Paul Ryan:


Clearly Paul Ryan did not understand a word that Alan Greenspan said. The problem with Alan Greenspan’s answer is that you have to know the economics behind his answer to fathom what he is talking about. You can see that it went over Paul Ryan’s head completely.

You have to think of the basket of goods and services that the economy must produce (or purchase from foreign sources) that will support the life styles we want to provide for all the people living in the country.

Can our economy produce this in a way that can be paid for with USA money? That is the issue to worry about. The Federal Reserve is capable of creating an infinite supply of USA money. Will that be enough to purchase what will need to be purchased every year into the future?

If there are politicians who are worried that this may not be available in the future, they need to explain what will most likely go wrong, and how they are going to fix it. If the politician cannot even imagine how it will go wrong, how can we expect that politician to figure out ways to prevent the calamity? Why do we need people who can’t figure this out to be running our country?

Have I presented the issue better than Stephanie Kelton has? If neither Stephanie Kelton nor I can get ordinary people to understand this, then ordinary people should be complaining very loudly that they need a better explanation. Any comments? Please speak up.


The press versus the president

Columbia Journalism Review has the 4 part article The press versus the president.

Here is a quote from the Editor’s note on this 4 part article.

The result is an encyclopedic look at one of the most consequential moments in American media history. Gerth’s findings aren’t always flattering, either for the press or for Trump and his team. Doubtless they’ll be debated and maybe even used as ammunition in the ongoing media war being waged in the country. But they are important, and worthy of deep reflection as the campaign for the presidency is about, once again, to begin.

I have not read the article yet, but it has received high praise from The Grayzone.