The European Stability
and Growth Pact is based on the principle that stability
and growth are enhanced when government deficits are either minimised or
eliminated. I want you to dispassionately consider an argument that
reaches a different conclusion. It may sound like something you
have heard before from others and already dismissed.
But bear with me.
When considered from a strictly monetary point of view, an economy
can be regarded as having five major sectors: households, firms, the government,
the banks, and the external sector. To focus on money flows, I will diverge
from mainstream economic theory by treating households as consisting
exclusively of workers, while I will combine firms and their owners into
the firm sector, and do likewise with banks and their owners. I also treat
the central bank as part of the government sector, and I ignore capital
and income flows between nations in this simple exposition.
Neither households nor firms can produce money, while the other three
sectors are potential sources of money. As is now well known (though this
fact is still contested by academic economists), banks create
money by making loans:
Whenever a bank makes a loan, it simultaneously creates a matching
deposit in the borrower’s bank account, thereby creating new money. (Bank
of England Quarterly Report 2014 Q1, Money creation in the modern economy.)
Governments can also create money by running a deficit (if it is
financed by the central bank, or by bonds sold to banks in return for excess
reserves). Money can also be created by running a balance of payments surplus
(which in this simple exposition is exclusively a balance of trade
surplus).
In order to simplify my argument, I will assume that
- Government spending
goes exclusively to firms;
- Taxes are paid exclusively
by firms;
- Only firms borrow
money from banks;
- Banks charge interest
on loans but do not pay interest on deposits;
- Only firms trade with
the external sector, selling goods as exports and buying goods as
imports;
- Initially, the external
sector is in balance so that exports equal imports; and
- Initially, the government
sector is in balance so that government spending equals taxation
These assumptions lead to the pattern of monetary flows shown in
Table 1.
Table 1: Basic monetary flows
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