Saturday, February 14, 2026

MMT Founder's comments (via AI) about China's economic approach

From Warren Mosler:
How about [MMT] in China?

Copilot said

China is a fascinating case because it hasn’t adopted Modern Monetary Theory in name, but many of its long‑standing institutional practices align closely with MMT’s descriptive claims. The influence is indirect, but real — and increasingly visible in China’s internal policy debates.
China’s relationship to MMT: not ideological, but structural

Several features of China’s system naturally resemble MMT’s description of a currency‑issuing government:

1. Central bank–fiscal integration is normal, not taboo

China’s People’s Bank of China (PBOC) routinely supports government-directed credit creation and liquidity management. One analysis argues that China effectively uses MMT‑consistent mechanisms by allowing the central bank to absorb or backstop local government debt, injecting liquidity without triggering destabilizing inflation Millbrook School.
 
2. China’s policy debates explicitly reference MMT

As China expanded fiscal deficits to record levels in recent years, economists inside the system split into “hawks” and “doves.” The doves increasingly cite MMT to justify higher deficit spending as safe and necessary for growth and employment, while hawks invoke Ray Dalio’s warnings about debt cycles to argue the opposite chinabankingnews.com.

This is one of the clearest examples globally of MMT entering elite policy discourse—even if only as a reference point in internal debates.
 
3. China’s historical practice resembles functional finance

From the 1940s through the early reform era, the PBOC acted as a direct fiscal agent—essentially financing government spending. Analysts note that if China were to “turn to MMT,” it would be less a revolution and more a return to earlier institutional norms, especially during periods of job‑creation priority and countercyclical stimulus anz.com.

4. China’s monetary framework differs from Western orthodoxy

China still relies heavily on quantity‑based tools (reserve requirements, credit quotas) rather than pure interest‑rate targeting. This structure makes fiscal‑monetary coordination more explicit and more aligned with MMT’s view that monetary policy is not meaningfully independent in a sovereign currency system Reserve Bank of Australia.

 So has MMT changed economics in China?

Where MMT has influence

  • It provides intellectual ammunition for pro‑stimulus economists inside China.
  • It helps frame arguments for higher deficits during downturns.
  • It validates China’s long‑standing practice of using state-controlled finance to pursue real‑resource goals (employment, infrastructure, industrial policy).

 Where MMT has not changed China

China does not identify its framework as MMT.

  • The PBOC does not adopt MMT language or policy prescriptions like a Job Guarantee.
  • China’s constraints are political and institutional, not theoretical — the leadership prioritizes stability, not doctrinal shifts.

The bottom line

China hasn’t “adopted” MMT, but MMT has become part of the vocabulary in China’s internal debates about deficits and growth. More importantly, China’s actual monetary‑fiscal architecture already embodies many of the operational realities MMT describes. In that sense, China is one of the clearest real‑world examples of MMT‑consistent practice — even if it never uses the label.

If you want, we can compare China’s system to Japan’s or the U.S.’s to see where MMT‑style operations diverge or converge.

Friday, February 13, 2026

Dollar Collapse? (good historical background to our present predicament)


 

Protecting yourself and your family from deceptive technology

 

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

What to do about wealth inequality

 

Friday, February 6, 2026

Just Ask

Ironman World Championship ... 

Several online videos show elders--often late '80s or older--competing in triathlons and "iron man" competitions. This typically means swimming, cycling and running a half marathon. 

When asked how he managed to do this at his advanced age, one man responded that you can ask your body to do things like stay healthy, and it will generally respond by doing it. You can ask your body to run a marathon or swim, cycle and run a triathlon, and it will do it. 

Your body does what you ask.

So all we have to do to maintain our strength, endurance and flexibility is ... ask? 

Obviously, the "asking" isn't always simple. Training to do physically stressful things like triathlons isn't trivial, but the persistent asking manages to improve even a natural process like aging. One elderly triathlete suggests "food, fitness and fun" are the keys to graceful aging.

Another question is, really, what are we asking our bodies to do now? A population of obese, out-of-shape humans, dying early of strokes, heart attacks and diabetes has been asking their bodies to adapt to unhealthy food and a lack of exercise. "The wages of sin is death," says Jesus. Amen, I say. 

Where's the fun in that?

 

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

The truth about bitcoin...

 

Realtor Baloney

(c) by Mark Dempsey

As a former Realtor, I was disturbed to read Tamara Suminski's, Sacramento Bee editorial (1/30/26 "California leaders can expand homeownership opportunities. Here's How"). She's President of the California Association of Realtors. In it, she promotes the "abundance" talking points, saying taxes and frivolous litigation are among the biggest obstacles to home ownership. As is common, the omissions are more important than the points she makes.

She makes no mention of the fact that, as of 2024, one in six homes purchased in the United States was bought by investment buyers and speculators, more than triple the number in 2000. In low-price homes, investment buyers bought one in four. Philip Pilkington says, "Housing in America is being treated as a financial asset from which investors extract wealth—this is not unlike how land and property were treated in the feudal era."

Ms. Suminski also ignores the fact that there are more vacant homes than our current, record-breaking homeless population, the biggest since the Great Depression. San Francisco has five times its homeless population in vacant homes.

Vancouver, Canada, had an epidemic of speculator-owned vacant homes, too. This reduced the supply of homes available for purchase, making home prices increase. Vancouver had some success keeping prices reasonable by by taxing vacant property, a measure that discouraged the speculators. Is there any discussion of that in the current housing "debate"? Nope. Taxes are always a problem, never a remedy. And rent control? Why that's completely taboo!

The home ownership problem comes down to affordability. Banks are partly responsible for the prices increasing. They love making homes ever more expensive, and, as the subprime/derivatives meltdown in 2007-8 proves, they will even accept fraudulent appraisals if it means they can make bigger loans. For banks, bigger mortgages mean bigger profits! Meanwhile, government financing underwriters and insurers (VA, FHA, FNMA, FHLMC) and the Federal Reserve, our central bank, do relatively little to penalize misbehaving banks. Instead, they excuse and bail them out.

Public policy matters when it comes to affordable housing, too. Nixon stopped the federal government from building affordable housing, and, as he was cutting taxes on the wealthy roughly in half, Reagan cut HUD's affordable housing budget by 75%. Clinton signed legislation with the Faircloth amendment, placing an upper limit on federal affordable housing programs. The attack on affordable housing has been a generations-long, bipartisan project.

Meanwhile, public policy was responsible for the possibility of home ownership in the modern era. The New Deal popularized 30-year mortgages and the FHA, a mortgage insurer that made such long-term mortgages safe for banks. More recently, government agencies like FNMA and GNMA have bought mortgages from the banks that originated them, creating a secondary market to encourage even more home-purchase lending. 

Ms. Suminski says that housing is "the most reliable engine of generational wealth...Over the past 33 years, California homeowners built approximately $165,000 in household net worth per capita..." This ignores the previous observation that "Housing in America is being treated as a financial asset from which investors extract wealth," and the fact that most of that "wealth" accrues in making housing unaffordable.

But did homeowners really build wealth with their homes? Never mind that the figure Ms. Suminski quoted favors the most expensive homes, not affordable ones; nobody "built" their equity. They passively let the asset inflation that has accompanied the financialization of the economy's productive activity do it for them. 

Such "wealth" is the definition of "economic rent," that is, money paid for nothing productive. Adam Smith observed that the wealthy feudal landowners who collect rent make money in their sleep. Home appreciation didn't create any new land, and didn't necessarily mean the homes were improved. Thanks to such omissions, the entire housing "debate" looks like Trump's declaration that he's going to make sure present homeowners keep the high values of their houses, while he'll make the homes more affordable. 

In related news, gambling is currently the second fastest-growing sector of the economy--an activity Warren Buffett called "a tax on ignorance." And ignorance sure looks like it's in the driver's seat when it comes to housing policy.

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The author was a Realtor for more than a decade and a half, appraising property and representing those buying and selling it. 

 




Update 2/22/26:

MMT Founder's comments (via AI) about China's economic approach

From Warren Mosler: How about [MMT] in China? Copilot said China is a fascinating case because it hasn’t adopted Modern Monetary Theory in ...