Monetary and fiscal policy frameworks for Australia part 2 John Haly This is a continuation of my October 2022 submissions in accordance with the review…
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Why the conventional tools of the Phillips Curve, NAIRU, potential output, and money-supply growth are useless
const trinityScript = document.createElement('script'); trinityScript.setAttribute('fetchpriority', 'high'); trinityScript.src = 'https://trinitymedia.ai/player/trinity/2900011009/?pageURL=' + encodeURIComponent(window.location.href); document.currentScript.parentNode.insertBefore(trinityScript, document.currentScript);1. Introduction
The word “unemployment” has a precise technical meaning, with origins in the industrial economy of post-Civil War Massachusetts (Card 2011); to be unemployed is to be seeking paid work but unable to find it at the prevailing wage. The concept was developed for administrative purposes at particular stages of capitalist development; it has legal and social-welfare implications, and the word is not applicable in other settings, such as peasant-agrarian or informal economies.
Phil Armstrong ‘It’s the same each time with progress, First, they ignore you, Then they say you’re mad, Then Dangerous, And then there’s a pause, And then you can’t …
The post ‘Tombstone for a Tombstone’: Dealing with the ‘bad science’ behind mainstream criticism of MMT appeared first on The Gower Initiative for Modern Money Studies.
A new book from Edward Elgar Publishing in association with GIMMS. The Gower Initiative for Modern Money Studies is pleased to announce that its book “Modern Monetary Theory: Key Insights, …
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