by Joseph T. Salerno
Mises.org
I recently viewed Finding the Money, a video aimed at persuading a popular audience of the putative merits of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). The video debuted this past May on several streaming platforms and theaters throughout the U.S. Whether it succeeded or not in its purpose, I will leave it for others to judge.
What I found most noteworthy in the 95-minute video was a brief clip of an interview with George Selgin, an economist of some stature in free-market monetary policy circles. When questioned about what MMT proponents get wrong or factually incorrect, Selgin waffles a bit and replies, “it’s a matter of emphasis and rhetoric.” He then goes on to give a more definite answer: “The MM theorists do say there is ultimately a scarcity of resources. But too often, they treat the world as if the norm is one of generally unemployed resources and plenty of ‘em.” Here, Selgin seems to be challenging MMT’s central claim that politicians and bureaucrats can costlessly conjure up real resources to expend on their favorite programs simply by creating and spending fiat money.