March 18, 2021· 54 min

Stephanie Kelton on How MMT Won the Fiscal Policy Debate

Orality
Model
89%
Highly oral (epic poetry, sermons, hip-hop)

Speaker Breakdown

HostJoe Weisenthal(2,227 words)
M:94%
HostTracy Alloway(1,286 words)
M:29%
GuestStephanie Kelton(5,309 words)
M:29%

Oral Indicators

Agonistic25%
literally, completely, very
Engagement88%
you, our, your
Memory Aids100%
listen, like, well
Repetition100%
know (156x), like (117x), think (81x)
Parallelism90%
And I'm Tracy Alloway...., But I I guess we haven't reall..., But today, we aren't gonna hav...
Sound Patterns79%
75 question(s), alliteration: "markets move", alliteration: "barclays brief"
Formulaic Phrases4%
you know what, i mean

Literate Indicators

Hedging8%
may, perhaps, might
Passive Voice7%
is defined, were when, be enacted
Abstract Nouns20%
investment, community, business
Subordination3%
because, though, until
Sentence Length47%
Avg: 16.8 words/sentence
Word Complexity46%
investment, analyze, anticipate
Academic Markers0%
Impersonal Style12%
832 personal pronouns found
Descriptive Style77%
apply, really, explicitly

Description

In a sense, Modern Monetary Theory has won. This is not because policy measures are necessarily in line with what MMT adherents would prescribe. Rather, the debate over economic policy, in particular fiscal policy, is happening on MMT terms. MMTers argue that the constraint on government spending is inflation and real resources -- not credit risk -- and that's exactly how even the critics of the stimulus bill have attacked it, that it will be inflationary. So how has the debate around fiscal policy changed so much over the last several years? Much of the credit goes to Stephanie Kelton, the MMT economist and author of the best-selling book The Deficit Myth. On this episode, we talk about their success. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.