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Renée Menéndez's avatar

"...but governments must first spend before they collect revenue."

This doesn't stand up to historical scrutiny. When the Federal Reserve was founded in 1913, the US government's share of the credit markets was approximately 3-5%. This means that more than 95% of credit creation was private and invested in numerous companies. The pool of private income generation was comparatively large, so there were sufficient tax collection options to finance the then-modest government needs.

Furthermore, the Federal Reserve is prohibited from directly lending money to the government, and purchasing bonds directly from the government is also forbidden. Businesses and households weren't waiting for the government to spend; reasonably functioning credit and money markets already existed when the Federal Reserve was established.

The chartalist view that the government is the origin of all economic development has never been true, is not true, and never will be true. It has always been the case that the state has appropriated existing instruments for its own benefit, but it has never been the origin of any development. The fact that this is now called MMT doesn't make it any better; it merely obscures the hidden agenda behind it.

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Tedder130's avatar

There is another function of Treasury bonds, an insidious one. Michael Hudson in SUPERIMPERIALISM relates how when the US ran out of gold to fund its Asian wars, it sold Treasuries for the same purpose. For years, dollars accumulated in the world due to America's overseas military adventures, from bases to wars to regime change ops. Foreign central banks then exchanged dollars for interest-bearing T-bills and other debt instruments. And while for many years, trade imbalances were entirely military, lately Treasuries work to fund all those imports that the US no longer produces.

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