SteveG


The Radical Imagination | Imagining the Economic Winds of Change Under Biden

This started out for me with a post by Naked Capitalism Michael Hudson Discusses the Economic Winds of [Non] Change Under Biden on Radical Imagination.

Yves here. Michael Hudson describes the fealty of Biden and the Democratic party to neoliberal policies and how, as Biden himself said, nothing fundamental will change. Hudson agrees nothing much will improve for ordinary citizens as long as the current Democratic party is calling the shots. He lays out a way to tackle rentierism by promoting building of moderate-priced homes and setting strict terms for FHA mortgages.

Here is the video of the interview from The Radical Imagination | Imagining the Economic Winds of Change Under Biden.


This is a new high for Michael Hudson in telling us what he has been holding back for so long. He has been trying to tell us this for years with a certain amount of tact and diplomacy. Ether he has gotten tired of putting on the semii-happy mask, or this interviewer and this not very well known medum has finally set him free.


Recovery Bonds – The very opposite of what is needed.

The Gower Initiative for Modern Money Studies has the article Recovery Bonds – The very opposite of what is needed.

As the economist John Maynard Keynes made clear at the time, the money the government removed from circulation through offering War Bonds did not go anywhere and did not fund the war. Furthermore, with the present-day economy in a depressed state, which is likely to continue for some time to come, maybe years as our experience with the GFC showed, and made worse by economically illiterate years of austerity, this is not the moment to encourage saving. We need the exact opposite to recover and grow.

Frequently I find myself repeating what John Maynard Keynes explained. I get the feeling that people just don’t believe it when I say it. Some people may be impressed by seeing it in print from another source on the web.


Is Now the Time for a Federal Jobs Guarantee?

The Gower Initiative for Modern Money Studies featured the interview Is Now the Time for a Federal Jobs Guarantee?. For those who do not have Facebook access, here is a link to the interview on SoundCloud.

On this episode Mark talks with economist Pavlina Tcherneva about a policy proposal that’s bubbling under in the US policy debate: the creation of a federal jobs guarantee. Pavlina is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Bard College and author of ‘The Case for a Job Guarantee.’ As Pavlina describes it, a federal jobs guarantee isn’t just a good idea; in the face of our economic, environmental, and epidemiological crises, it may be a necessary one.

The interviewer still doesn’t get MMT even though Pavlina tried to move his misconceptions a few times. It’s not a question of whether or not we have an MMT economy. MMT is just a description of the economy we have. The economy we have is what it is and was, long before MMT came along to explain it.

Despite the interviewer’s inability to understand MMT, this is a good discussion of the Jobs Guarantee. Another failure at the end is the discussion of the cost of the Jobs Guarantee. Pavlina fails to point out that when we pay for employing people, we actually get useful production from that employment.


Dr. Fadhel Kaboub: MMT Insights for the Biden Administration

YouTube has the video Dr. Fadhel Kaboub: MMT Insights for the Biden Administration.

While most policymakers believe that the federal government’s spending capacity is limited by tax revenues and borrowing capacity, MMT argues that our spending capacity is much larger than that (but it’s not unlimited). Professor Kaboub explains that the Biden administration can significantly expand its current spending plans without causing inflation, but only if we strategically invest in key sectors (healthcare, housing, energy, transportation, and higher education), if we tax and regulate abusive market power, tackle corruption, and enforce the democratic principles of a Government of, by, and for the People.


I have watched this entire video. It is an excellent presentation. Kaboub is one of the most effective proponents and explainers of Modern Money Theory. Kaboub has his own way of explaining MMT which you might find easier to understand than some of the other explanations I have posted.

The lecture part of this presentation is under 45 minutes. The there is a long Q & A session. The Q & A session is also very worth while to hear, but if you don’t have the time you could just do the first part and leave with many of your personal questions unanswered. It’s a matter of your personal priorities.

I only caught two of the web sites he mentioned – ReImagine Appalachia, and ESGX.

Reimagine Appalachia was born out of a broad recognition that the economy has not been working for most people and places in the Ohio River Valley. In response, a diverse set of economic, environmental and community leaders, and grassroots organizations, came together to find common ground and build the future we want to see — a 21st century economy that’s good for workers, communities, and the environment.

Except from ESGX.

ESGX is the community ​for information and education that inspires collaboration and action to help build a better, more resilient and more inclusive society.


Michael Hudson – Changes in Super Imperialism

Naked Capitalism has the post with transcript of the lecture Michael Hudson – Changes in Super Imperialism

This is another meaty talk with Michael Hudson, this time focusing on his classic Super Imperialism. Hudson has an updated and expanded version set to go to print soon.


I didn’t expect this video to be as enlightening as it is. I foolishly thought that I knew most of what Michael Hudson has explained over the years. There is just so much history that he knows (and participated in) that I have not heard before. He also talked about the history making work that he is now doing. On both ends of the history spectrum, he clarifies so much that I didn’t realize of how we got where we are and how the rest of the world will move on without us.


Monetizing Internet Content – Rokfin

I just heard about Rokfin as another example of an implementation of my idea for monetizing internet content.

MORE CUSTOMERS
BUNDLE YOUR CONTENT

Justify a subscription to more people at a higher price point and get paid for retaining other channel’s subscribers.

By pooling efforts with other relevant media companies, you’ll be able to reach a deeper audience with a broader package and keep your subscription base engaged during your “off-season.”
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RECEIVE TIPS FOR YOUR CONTENT
MAXIMIZE REVENUE

Maximize monetization of your content with tips and a subscription model. It is a way to opt out of the current system. More people join and tip because it’s one subscription for ALL premium content. Tips monetizes free live content.

Here are some examples that use Rokfin.

In searching for “monitiz” on my blog, I found more examples that I had forgotten about.


Economic Update: The Economics Lesson Taught by the Pandemic

Democracy At Work has the last episode of Economic Update: The Economics Lesson Taught by the Pandemic

On this week’s show, Professor Wolff explains where the government is respected and empowered, nations have effectively contained the Covid-19 pandemic. He gives examples including New Zealand, Taiwan, South Korea, Cuba, Vietnam, and China. Alternately, where the government is demonized, disrespected, distrusted, the pandemic has been devastating. Examples of this include the UK and the US. Wolff argues that a rational economy includes both less and more government-regulated private enterprises plus state-owned and operated enterprises according to which performs best to meet society’s needs. No fundamentalist “either/or” arguments are justified. Finally, he says how private and government enterprises are internally organized – hierarchical or alternatively democratic worker-co-op – is equally important.


My goodness, I think Richard Wolff is a closet “what worksist”. This is the closest I have seen him come to admitting that a mixed economy is probably best. Of course that doesn’t stop him from promoting his latest book “The Sickness is the System: When Capitalism Fails to Save Us from Pandemics or Itself” where he demonizes capitalism. He also has to end by touting his panacea of democracy at work. I like it best when he talks about “what worksism”. That gives you the freedom to think about what will actually work and how a system should evolve and adapt to circumstances.

When we were facing WW II, we needed to get strictly organized to fight a war. After the war, it wasn’t useful to maintain those strict organizing controls. When facing a pandemic there are some drastic actions we need to take that are not appropriate when we are not facing a pandemic.

When we are ideologically wedded to one “ism” or another, it hinders our ability to adapt to changing circumstances.


Michael Hudson: Finance Capitalism vs. Industrial Capitalism – The Rentier Resurgence and Takeover

Naked Capitalism has posted the article Michael Hudson: Finance Capitalism vs. Industrial Capitalism – The Rentier Resurgence and Takeover. Here is the original article on Michael Hudson’s Web site.

This explains so much of what I have been trying to explain by this whole blog that I have been writing for 15 years. It goes way beyond the mechanics of Modern Money Theory. This is a long article, so I have tried to extract some of key points. Even that makes a long post.

The economy as a whole has suffered. Debt-fueled housing costs in the United States are so high that if all Americans were given their physical consumer goods for free – their food, clothing and so forth – they still could not compete with workers in China or most other countries. That is a major reason why the U.S. economy is de-industrializing. So this policy of “creating wealth” by financialization undercuts the logic of industrial capitalism.
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Another reason for deindustrialization is the rising cost of living stemming from conversion of public infrastructure into privatized monopolies. As the United States and Germany overtook British industrial capitalism, a major key to industrial advantage was recognized to be public investment in roads, railroads and other transportation, education, public health, communications and other basic infrastructure. Simon Patten, the first professor of economics at America’s first business school, the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, defined public infrastructure as a “fourth factor of production,” in addition to labor, capital and land. But unlike capital, Patten explained, its aim was not to make a profit. It was to minimize the cost of living and doing business by providing low-price basic services to make the private sector more competitive.
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Under a regime of “burdenless taxation” the return on public investment does not take the form of profit but aims at lowering the economy’s overall price structure to “promote general prosperity.” This means that governments should operate natural monopolies directly, or at least regulate them. “Parks, sewers and schools improve the health and intelligence of all classes of producers, and thus enable them to produce more cheaply, and to compete more successfully in other markets.”Patten concluded: “If the courts, post office, parks, gas and water works, street, river and harbor improvements, and other public works do not increase the prosperity of society they should not be conducted by the State.” But this prosperity for the overall economy was not obtained by treating public enterprises as what today is called a profit center.
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For a century, public investment helped the United States pursue an Economy of High Wages policy, providing education, food and health standards to make its labor more productive and thus able to undersell low-wage “pauper” labor. The aim was to create a positive feedback between rising wages and increasing labor productivity.

That is in sharp contrast to today’s business plan of finance capitalism – to cut wages, and also cut back long-term capital investment, research and development while privatizing public infrastructure. The neoliberal onslaught by Ronald Reagan in the United States and Margaret Thatcher in Britain in the 1980s was backed by IMF demands that debtor economies balance their budgets by selling off such public enterprises and cutting back social spending. Infrastructure services were privatized as natural monopolies, sharply raising the cost structure of such economies, but creating enormous financial underwriting commissions and stock-market gains for Wall Street and London.
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Even if China and other Asian countries didn’t exist, there is no way that America can regain its export markets or even its internal market with its current debt overhead and its privatized and financialized education, health care, transportation and other basic infrastructure.


January 26, 2020

Found this article “Creating Wealth” through Debt: The West’s Finance-Capitalist Road – Michael Hudson, Peking University, School of Marxist Studies, May 5-6, 2018. This is what can be taught in Chinese Universities by USA scholars that cannot be taught in the USA.


Panquake

I just learned about a potentially world changing project that may change how we do social media. Their web page is Panquake Talk Liberation: Powerful, next generation messaging technology. Their about page is is a little too vague for me. After reading it all, and watching the video below, I started to get a better idea of what this is all about.


I still don’t know what the user interface will look like, so I have no way to judge the quality of the product. However, understanding the goals better, and looking at the stated qualifications of the software managers and designers, I have some faith that this could turn out really well.

Here is their Facebook page.

TECH DEEP-DIVE EVENT: SUNDAY 24TH @ 8PM EST. Press release


2021/01/24

I forgot to include a link to a very important website https://talkliberation.com/. This site is where the videos are published.