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A Reformatted Excerpt concerning Functional Finance and Purpose in the Use of Money copied from LERNER, Abba Ptachya
(1903-1982) Functional Finance has been subject to a number of misconceptions, e.g., that it promotes big deficits.
Thus, Functional Finance does not say anything about what the budget should be prior to economic analysis. If it is concluded that under particular circumstances, a balanced budget describes the best means to economic prosperity, then even a balanced budget is not inconsistent with a functional approach to public finance. Sound money is therefore only inconsistent with Functional Finance if the balanced budget is seen as an end in itself, rather than as a means to an end. If a balanced budgetor a surplus, to reduce the national debtis insisted upon, even if it may be shown to have negative economic consequences (or be impossible), then this is not Functional Finance (it is, actually, dysfunctional finance). Likewise, Functional Finance does not stipulate that bigger deficits are better or that deficits are good, in and of themselves; what concerns us are the effects. Such an approach has an immediate result that at first glance may appear shocking or surprising:
Decisions concerning taxation are to be made only with regard to the economic effects in terms of the promotion of full employment, price stability, or other economic goals, and not ever because the government needs to make money payments (Lerner, 1943, p. 354). Likewise, the government should borrow only if... the effects of borrowing are desired, for example if otherwise the rate of interest would be too low (Lerner, 1943, p. 355). These points of view were repeated and elaborated by Lerner in his 1951 book, The Economics of Employment:
What are the purposes of taxation and borrowing, if not to fund government spending?
Two extraordinary results follow from Lerners analysis here. First, the implication is that borrowing logically follows, rather than precedes, government spending. In fact, this analysis questions the accuracy and relevance of the term borrowing itself for discussing government bond sales. Second, note that the budget deficit is causing interest rates to fall, the exact opposite from what traditional theory has long predicted (i.e., deficits cause high interest rates). The role of taxation and borrowing, reserve management and interest rate maintenance will become clearer upon examination of two, less well-known, Lerner contributions, Money as a Creature of the State (1947) and his Encyclopaedia Britannica entry on Money (1946), which place him squarely in the Keynes-Knapp Chartalist school, and which is key to fully understanding the possibility and effectiveness of Functional Finance. The ability of the government to conduct fiscal and monetary policy according to the principles of Functional Finance is made possible by the fact that, as the title of Lerners paper states, money is a creature of the state: The governmentwhich is what the state means in practiceby virtue of its power to create or destroy money by fiat and its power to take money away from people by taxation, is in a position to keep the rate of spending of the economy at the level required to fill its two great responsibilities, the prevention of depression, and the maintenance of the value of money. (Lerner, 1947, p. 314) In adopting this view Lerner followed Keynes, who in his Treatise on Money accepted the main thrust of Knapps State Theory of Money (Keynes, 1930, p. 4, p. 6n1; Knapp, 1924). The state has the power not only to tax, but to designate what will suffice to retire tax obligations, that is, what it will accept at its pay offices. By determining public receivability, the state can create a demand for otherwise worthless pieces of paper, leading to general acceptability. The state can issue this currency, and use it to purchase goods and services from the private sector: The modern state can make anything it chooses generally acceptable as money and thus establish its value quite apart from any connection, even of the most formal kind, with gold or backing of any kind. It is true that a simple declaration that such and such is money will not do, even if backed by the most convincing constitutional evidence of the state's absolute sovereignty. But if the state is willing to accept the proposed money in the payment of taxes and other obligations to itself the trick is done. Everyone who has obligations to the state will be willing to accept the pieces of paper with which he can settle the obligations, and all other people will be willing to accept those pieces of paper because they know that taxpayers, etc., will accept them in turn. On the other hand if the state should decline to accept some kind of money in payment of obligations to itself, it is difficult to believe that it would retain much of its general acceptability...What this means is that whatever may have been the history of gold, at the present time, in a normally well-working economy, money is a creature of the state. Its general acceptability, which is its all-important attribute, stands or falls by its acceptability by the state. (Lerner, 1947, p. 313) Thus, a variety of state powers, such as government's ability to tax, declare public receivability, create and destroy money, buy and sell bonds, and administer the prices it pays for goods and services purchased from the private sector, constitute a menu of instruments with which full employment and stability of the value of the currency may be promoted. The importance of the Lernerian contributions of Functional Finance and money as a creature of the state are hard to overstate. Keynes called this second of the two books which you have placed within one cover very original and grand stuff:
Keynes does not trust that the heads of the Treasury can understand, because, as Lerner often noted, Functional Finance is seen to run counter to economic principles (1951, p. 142). Functional Finance, or Keynesian economics taken to its furthest logical conclusions (causing one author to ask, Was Keynes a Keynesian or a Lernerian? [Colander, 1984]), was, in its application to unemployment, Lerner admitted, topsy-turvy economics (1951, pp. 142-5). But this is no objection at all. Topsy-turvy economics is just what is appropriate for an economy that is suffering from unemployment. An economy suffering from unemployment is an upside-down economy for which only a topsy-turvy economic theory is of any use. (1951, pp. 142-43) By an upside-down economy, Lerner means an economy in which strongly held traditional economic principles, such as those regarding thrift and the economical use of scarce resources, do not hold. Lerner noted that when there is unemployment, efficiency becomes inefficient: an increase in efficiency in any particular productive process does not result in any increase in efficiency in the economy as a whole The savings due to greater technical efficiency merely go to waste in more unemployment (1951, pp. 143-4). Likewise, when there is unemployment a country has to suffer over its trade balance, because it must worry about rising unemployment stemming from an increase in the value of its imports over the value of exports. Since [t]he input of the foreign trade industry consists of the effort involved in the manufacture of our exports and [t]he output of our foreign trade industry consists of the imports which it yields to us for our use, exports are a cost and imports are a benefit (1951, p. 321). Thus, when a nation attempts to cure its unemployment problems by reducing its trade deficit, it is promoting costs and restricting benefits! One final interesting result of Lerners Functional Finance is worthy of note here:
Lerners promotion of Functional Finance led to his engagement in debates concerning the burden of the national debt and the harmful effects of large and persistent government budget deficits (e.g., 1961a). One point worthy of note here, is that Functional Finance not only opposes the deficit hawk view of government budget deficits as almost always and everywhere harmful (causing high interest rates, inflation, crowding out private spending, and/or a burden on future generations), but also the deficit dove view that if the Federal government kept a capital budget or measured deficits and the national debt differently, they would not look as big.
During the 1950s, and possibly as early as the late 1940s, Lerner began to become concerned with what he later called sellers inflation (e.g., 1961b). In his early versions of Functional Finance, inflation was seen as the result of excess aggregate demand, and therefore reducing spending and/or increasing taxation was seen as the cure.
In the face of these developments, Lerner dedicated himself to the study of stagflation, and the evaluation and formulation of various income policies, market anti-inflation plans (or MAPs), and wage-price controls (Lerner and Colander, 1980). These issues preoccupied Lerner for the rest of his career. He suffered a stroke while in Jerusalem in 1980, and although his speech was impaired he was able to continue working until shortly before his death in Florida in 1982. |
Posted April 18, 2006