#601
COINTELBRO could you describe how what you are advocating is different from eg the BNP election manifesto, ie decent british jobs for british workers etc

i know as fascists they are liars and corrupt but i would like to hear how communists can embrace nationalism and so on. cheers
#602

xipe posted:

COINTELBRO could you describe how what you are advocating is different from eg the BNP election manifesto, ie decent british jobs for british workers etc

i know as fascists they are liars and corrupt but i would like to hear how communists can embrace nationalism and so on. cheers



are communists against workers having well paying jobs? is opposition to powerful transnational capitalist institutions and support for a retrenchment at the nation-state level the same thing as flag waving jingoism?

#603
I don't really understand why large sections of the left have rallied behind "people's quantitative easing" as an antidote to neoliberalism. Especially when both the US and UK have supported radical increases in the money supply and both are holding interest rates very low. If the culprit is profitability then these will have limited sustainability anyway.
#604

getfiscal posted:

I don't really understand why large sections of the left have rallied behind "people's quantitative easing" as an antidote to neoliberalism. Especially when both the US and UK have supported radical increases in the money supply and both are holding interest rates very low. If the culprit is profitability then these will have limited sustainability anyway.



it's a whole different thing. in normal quantitative easing increasing the money supply is just that, increasing the available supply, not its actual circulation. it's bottlenecked at the banks. the large supply/low interest rate is meant to induce lending and circulation, but can't force it because of low profitability. low profitability is in turn largely a function of low aggregate demand, which can't really increase without the money circulating, so it's a catch-22

pqe seems to be basically the same as social credit, MMT etc. the government just straight up prints (or types up) money and hires people to build public works or provide public services. interest rates and profitability are irrelevant as the newly created money goes directly into aggregate demand without going through the banking system in the normal way. you can print as much as you want, build as much schools, hospitals, and infrastructure as you want, but at some point you will run into supply constraints and start causing inflation.

it's a good idea

Edited by solzhesnitchin ()

#605
Yeah I still don't understand MMT I guess. I'll have to read a real book about it I mean, people have tried to explain it to me before and I don't understand why it wouldn't lead to accelerating inflation. I've also seen it promoted where they say that the solution is a "job guarantee" where people are paid below the (normal) minimum wage which seemed odd. One of the main guys who promotes it always seemed mental to me (yelling about "banksters") so I am wary. I have also had bad encounters with some people who promote similar things.
#606
In Marxist economics I don't think low profitability is (in general) caused by low aggregate demand. Destruction of wealth can create new demand by temporarily restoring profitability, and a dramatic increase in the money supply is a technique for diminishing the value of existing stocks of capital. This is obviously resisted by existing capitalists but also has no permanent way of sustaining a high level of aggregate demand, only deferring and shaping the crisis in a redistributive way. The only way to get out would be to direct investment by use instead of profitability on a general basis. If you simply spent in a massive parallel way to private investment then private investment would be crowded out. Especially if you deliberately tried to discourage private investment, by say raising taxes on businesses and investments.
#607
[account deactivated]
#608

getfiscal posted:

Yeah I still don't understand MMT I guess. I'll have to read a real book about it I mean, people have tried to explain it to me before and I don't understand why it wouldn't lead to accelerating inflation. I've also seen it promoted where they say that the solution is a "job guarantee" where people are paid below the (normal) minimum wage which seemed odd. One of the main guys who promotes it always seemed mental to me (yelling about "banksters") so I am wary. I have also had bad encounters with some people who promote similar things.



mmt is bunk and most of its supporters are crazy. they don't really understand how national accounting identities work and that leads them to make crazy claims. they don't seem to to have any theory on how to integrate the monetary and real economy, and don't seem to think they need one, so the slippage between the two (inflation) seems to get completely disregarded or dealt with using weird crank theories

the main crazy claim is that printing money will never cause inflation. it's true that it won't cause inflation in a depressed economy because the workers would otherwise be sitting unemployed, machines sitting idle and goods sitting unsold. you can spend the helicoptor money with no inflation up until the point where all those workers and machines are working full time (you've exhausted available supply), and at that point you will just be bidding up the price for the same amount of output (causing inflation).

i think it's a good idea because our economies are generally running way below capacity, and even if you go overboard, a bit of inflation is not such a bad thing. it's generally good for workers and bad for capitalists. it would be a good tool for countries like the uk or greece to use upon leaving a monetary union. it's just not the utopian panacea that the mmters think it is

#609

getfiscal posted:

Yeah I still don't understand MMT I guess. I'll have to read a real book about it I mean, people have tried to explain it to me before and I don't understand why it wouldn't lead to accelerating inflation. I've also seen it promoted where they say that the solution is a "job guarantee" where people are paid below the (normal) minimum wage which seemed odd. One of the main guys who promotes it always seemed mental to me (yelling about "banksters") so I am wary. I have also had bad encounters with some people who promote similar things.



easy, the central bank has to keep a careful eye on supply and demand of all commodities and industrial productivity so it can only extend credit to businesses whose goods or services fulfill a human need in the economy. they would probably have to come up with some sort of plan for this, maybe once every 5 years

#610

getfiscal posted:

I created a podcast to take down Chapo Trap House.

https://soundcloud.com/donald-hughes-229196019/the-peacethinker-the-chapo-trap

deadken just announced hes going on that show.w

#611
it was only a matter of time really
#612
dead ken should be on the gong show or mystery date
#613
[account deactivated]
#614
[account deactivated]
#615
dead ken is should go onto the bachelor
#616
[account deactivated]
#617
dead ken is gonna be an announcer for some british reality show within 10 years
#618
Sam is a bright young man and a pretty good communist, although not without his personal flaws. I'll be listening to his Chapo House Trap appearance and not solely so I can come back here and give him a good roasting. Have a nice night.
#619

solzhesnitchin posted:

mmt is bunk and most of its supporters are crazy. they don't really understand how national accounting identities work and that leads them to make crazy claims. they don't seem to to have any theory on how to integrate the monetary and real economy, and don't seem to think they need one, so the slippage between the two (inflation) seems to get completely disregarded or dealt with using weird crank theories

the main crazy claim is that printing money will never cause inflation. it's true that it won't cause inflation in a depressed economy because the workers would otherwise be sitting unemployed, machines sitting idle and goods sitting unsold. you can spend the helicoptor money with no inflation up until the point where all those workers and machines are working full time (you've exhausted available supply), and at that point you will just be bidding up the price for the same amount of output (causing inflation).



i've seen mmt folks repudiate this reading of them, though. it's not "never" without qualification. they might argue that despite its lack of budgetary limits, a job guarantee won't cause inflation, for example. but they've written loads of words (probably fuckin' millions, in the case of mitchell) affirming that beyond the point of full capacity utilization you just get more money chasing the same number of goods and thus a buildup of inflationary pressure. the point is to use automatic buffer stocks (like a JG) rather than arbitrary helicopter drops precisely because they connect in a reflexive and responsive way to the real needs of the economy.

i'm not sure what you object to in their reading of the accounts. is this about the "S = I + (S - I)" dustup some years ago? because yeah that was pretty dumb

honestly their emphasis on the accounting side of things has been a godsend in a profession that's otherwise buried in a ditch in the dead end of equilibrium modeling, game theoretical twiddling and other subjunctive-mood nonsense. (seriously, the economic mainstream factors opportunity costs into the definition of "economic profit." opportunity costs! it's "profit" that's literally impossible to aggregate!)

plus i suspect the mmt people have been a gateway drug for many, since a number of the main voices are either closeted or somewhat-out marxians (like forstater, wray, mitchell)

#620
i cant wait for deadkens Hitchensian later period. all sweaty and booze-bloated and talking about how he and the boys fondled each other in boarding school
#621
here's a podcast about mmt and marxism (catchphrase) http://fromalpha2omega.podomatic.com/entry/2016-07-15T13_47_16-07_00
#622

Constantignoble posted:

i've seen mmt folks repudiate this reading of them, though. it's not "never" without qualification. they might argue that despite its lack of budgetary limits, a job guarantee won't cause inflation, for example. but they've written loads of words (probably fuckin' millions, in the case of mitchell) affirming that beyond the point of full capacity utilization you just get more money chasing the same number of goods and thus a buildup of inflationary pressure. the point is to use automatic buffer stocks (like a JG) rather than arbitrary helicopter drops precisely because they connect in a reflexive and responsive way to the real needs of the economy.

i'm not sure what you object to in their reading of the accounts. is this about the "S = I + (S - I)" dustup some years ago? because yeah that was pretty dumb

honestly their emphasis on the accounting side of things has been a godsend in a profession that's otherwise buried in a ditch in the dead end of equilibrium modeling, game theoretical twiddling and other subjunctive-mood nonsense. (seriously, the economic mainstream factors opportunity costs into the definition of "economic profit." opportunity costs! it's "profit" that's literally impossible to aggregate!)

plus i suspect the mmt people have been a gateway drug for many, since a number of the main voices are either closeted or somewhat-out marxians (like forstater, wray, mitchell)



fair enough, i agree with most of this.. i came into contact with mmters back around 2009 because i like wynne godley, whom a lot of them cite as an authority and claim to base their theories on. i haven't read much of them since then, so i may not be fully up to date, but in my opinion, and the opinion of godley's collaborators and most other post-keynesians, they mangle the theories and promote a lot of misleading ideas. what's novel in mmt is mostly wrong or misleading, and what's correct in mmt is mostly just borrowed from elsewhere, so i tend to focus on the negatives as the distinguishing features of mmt. i can see the merit in it as a basic introduction to keynesian/leftist economics or monetary economics in general

if you look at the job guarantee proposal, i think that the limitations of mmt become pretty clear. so they backtrack from the declaration that there can be no insolvency crisis for a country by pointing out that a sovereign currency issuer can trade default risk for inflation risk by monetizing the deficit. then they argue that the inflation risk can be controlled by only using the printed money to support a counter-cyclical jobs guarantee program where the government hires the unemployed to work at minimum wage.

so.. a) they have admitted that either way there remains a de facto limit on government budgets
and b) their grand solution is... workfare. they have simply replaced the reserve army of the unemployed receiving government benefits that the current neoliberal economic policy (NAIRU) is based upon, with a reserve army of people working for the government as minimum wage temp labour. how is that desirable?

btw, did you happen to post elsewhere under a username starting with "v" a few years back?

#623
yeah, it's come in for criticism from post-keynesian/structuralist/institutionalist quarters (though the distinction between these schools is often less a question of theory than of clique IMO). i've read their takes on it -- especially palley, but i've skimmed sawyer's, and lavoie's more constructive one -- as well as responses thereto. honestly, i've never been impressed by these. the charge that much of it is repackaged old stuff is not a criticism, as they haven't denied or tried to obscure their pedigree (in a nutshell, it's basically Knapp on the taxonomy of money, Lerner on functional finance, and Minsky on employment/buffer stock policy, with an ecumenical left-heterodox overall bent). i find the claim that the new stuff is wrong to be overblown, since once you get into the actual arguments "wrong" quietly morphs into "oversimplified" -- which means we've shifted to a discussion of nuance, an all-too-common problem in the social sciences (pro-click). plus when you dig around it's not too hard to find them giving attention to balance of payments, inflation, etc.

the rest of what you're saying is apt, though i'd note that "a)" is hardly scandalous, since the idea that a sovereign government's limits are real rather than financial is kinda the whole point. i agree with the thrust of your your "b)" point. certainly, this is not revolutionary. if the workfare wage is set at a livable point, then the benefits over a classic reserve army are obvious, but the degree of organization the working class would need to muster to make that happen is probably not too far off from what it'd need to actually stage a revolution. usually the JG proposal is connected to calls for better wages, single-payer or nationalized healthcare, free education, etc, but at the end of the day we can't wish the class struggle away.

still, gotta wage that war on all fronts, though. that's why i don't write it off.

(also i've used a lot of names over the years but i'm fairly sure i'm not the person you're thinking of)

edit: relevant sum-up from a marx/mmt blog:

At the end of his 1943 essay, Kalecki wrote:

‘Full employment capitalism’ will, of course, have to develop new social and political institutions which will reflect the increased power of the working class. If capitalism can adjust itself to full employment, a fundamental reform will have been incorporated in it. If not, it will show itself an outmoded system which must be scrapped.



Kalecki’s argument here may not actually be incompatible with that of the MMTers. The MMTers argue that fiat money makes ongoing full employment feasible. Kalecki suggests that ongoing full employment will undermine capitalism over time. Perhaps both views will turn out to be correct.

Edited by Constantignoble ()

#624
Nostalgic memories of believing in left keynesian revolution...
#625
owen smith says britain needs nukes in case donald trump becomes president. sorry to all the corbynites, but smith's willingness to nuclear bomb the united states of america makes him the new leading anti-imperialist choice
#626
Inspiring willingness among other world leaders to nuclear bomb the united states of america probably also elevates Trump to the new leading anti imperialist choice too
#627

Constantignoble posted:

which means we've shifted to a discussion of nuance, an all-too-common problem in the social sciences (pro-click)


this isnt super crucial but i really hate that essay. its tedx pap imo

#628
tonally, i guess i can see what you mean (and for me his use of the qualifier "actually existing" to characterize something inherently negative kind of sets off alarms). but i appreciate the thrust that sociological abstractions are as averse to overfitting as any mathematical model. i see it as a useful supplemental argument when navigating around the naive "realism = more detail" that can come with the initial break from positivism

Edited by Constantignoble ()

#629
yeah. another thing is that i see nuance as how you get from self-contained assertions and analysis based on those to interacting with normal people and/or other scholars. you can only really show how larger scale concepts relate to other concepts and everyday life by paying close attention to the details and being careful about them. im sure this falls into the category of "nuance that isn't bad and not what he's talking about" but i think that's a really stupid way of approaching the problem.
#630
i agree with seman but i also like that the professor guy used the fuck word
#631

c_man posted:

Constantignoble posted:

which means we've shifted to a discussion of nuance, an all-too-common problem in the social sciences (pro-click)

this isnt super crucial but i really hate that essay. its tedx pap imo



it is.

#632

ilmdge posted:

owen smith says britain needs nukes in case donald trump becomes president. sorry to all the corbynites, but smith's willingness to nuclear bomb the united states of america makes him the new leading anti-imperialist choice



0B0sFtRTlx4

#633

ilmdge posted:

Sam is a bright young man and a pretty good communist, although not without his personal flaws. I'll be listening to his Chapo House Trap appearance and not solely so I can come back here and give him a good roasting. Have a nice night.


actually so far i havent listened to it because it appears to be behind a paywall. someone post it here, they said the rhizzone is allowed to pirate their content

#634

ilmdge posted:

nuclear bomb the united states of america



hey so hows this coming along, in the works or whats up with this. thanks -"Anonymous"

#635
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/nov/30/italy-referendum-all-you-need-to-know-about-renzis-crunch-vote

i dont think i have ever seen the western media try so hard to dispel the idea that the content of a vote has anything to do with the vote itself, even for a u.s. political horse race... its like, "investors like the stuff, so dont even worry about what it is because its good stuff" and then it lost so theyre like "a stunning blow for Something, which isnt real and didnt happen"
#636

ilmdge posted:

ilmdge posted:

Sam is a bright young man and a pretty good communist, although not without his personal flaws. I'll be listening to his Chapo House Trap appearance and not solely so I can come back here and give him a good roasting. Have a nice night.

actually so far i havent listened to it because it appears to be behind a paywall. someone post it here, they said the rhizzone is allowed to pirate their content





Episode 29 - London Falling feat. @Sam_Kriss (8/3/16)

#637

odobenidae posted:

ilmdge posted:

ilmdge posted:

Sam is a bright young man and a pretty good communist, although not without his personal flaws. I'll be listening to his Chapo House Trap appearance and not solely so I can come back here and give him a good roasting. Have a nice night.

actually so far i havent listened to it because it appears to be behind a paywall. someone post it here, they said the rhizzone is allowed to pirate their content



Episode 29 - London Falling feat. @Sam_Kriss (8/3/16)

You get an upvote for going through the 'ffort, but, no-click zone