Is an Anti-Austerity Alliance of Left Neo-classicals and Post-Keynesians Possible? Is it Desirable? (Part 2)
By Michael Hoexter. Cross posted from New Economic Perspectives. Part 1 of this post is available here
United as they are in their critique of neoclassical economics, it
would be a mistake to portray post-Keynesians as united among
themselves, a further complication for the emergence of any unified
message from anti-austerity economists. Post-Keynesian Thomas Palley
has recently likened MMTers proposal that government institute a
WPA-style “job guarantee” program to the policies of the Tory Cameron government
that unemployment benefit recipients work for free. Palley’s concern
is that the MMT job guarantee will undermine public sector unions but
MMTers dispute that Cameron’s policy is a job guarantee program.
Palley’s objections to the job guarantee and MMT were also the subject
of a caustic review by Randy Wray,
a prominent MMT economist. Steve Keen, who calls himself as “Monetary
Circuit Theorist”, has shown an interest in finding points of
commonality with MMTers while maintaining at other times a distance from
it. MMT, perhaps because it has a popular following and momentum,
seems to be a particular target of criticism and self-differentiation by
non-MMT post-Keynesians. Perhaps this criticism is meant to be
constructive but at times the disputes are often conducted in relatively
heated exchanges in blogs and on Twitter, where ultimately outsiders to
these disputes will remain confused and will perhaps throw up their
hands.
Sunday, August 26, 2012
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