This article examines the misconceptions about modern money theory (MMT) put forward by Drumetz/Pfister (2021). The author divides her critique into three categories. First, the Drumetz/Pfister article erroneously indicates that MMT focuses exclusively on the means-of-payment function of money, that it considers money as a pure asset, that it does not distinguish between inside and outside money, and that it does not distinguish between money and the monetary base. Second, Drumetz/Pfister (2021) falsely represent MMT as leaving monetary policy to law and as belittling the impact of quantitative easing. Drumetz/Pfister misunderstand what is meant by government debt being monetized. Third, their article puts forward the incorrect idea that increased government spending could lead to increased long-term interest rates, and that a zero interest rate could suppo-sedly bring about macroeconomic instability and inflation.
CITATION STYLE
Leclaire, J. (2023). Modern money theory: some basics in response to Drumetz/Pfister. European Journal of Economics and Economic Policies: Intervention, 20(1), 34–42. https://doi.org/10.4337/ejeep.2022.0089
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