Monday, December 12, 2011

Functional Finance: What, Why, and How?

Functional Finance: What, Why, and How?
by
Stephanie Bell
University of Missouri at Kansas City
November 1999
In 1943, Abba Lerner wrote an essay entitled
fourteen pages, the principles that Lerner believed should guide the government's budgetary policies. It opens with a
recognition that "[a]part from the necessity of winning the war, there is no task facing society today so important as
the elimination of economic insecurity" (1943, p. 38). Aware that what was to follow would strike his readers as
fantastically naive, he cautioned that it was essential to "grapple with this problem even if it involves a little careful
thinking and even if the thought proves somewhat contrary to our preconceptions" (1943, p. 38). The purpose of the
essay was to set out the principles by which the government could use its fiscal powers to maintain prosperity.
Lerner referred to "the new fiscal theory", which was "formulated by Alvin Hansen . . . and put forward in substantially
complete form by J.M. Keynes" as a somewhat less audacious rendition of his own theory (1943, p. 38). Thus, Hansen,
who argued that deficit spending was appropriate so long as the ratio of debt to national income remained at some
tolerable level, did not support the use of fiscal policy as unabashedly as Lerner did. From Lerner's more fearless
perspective, the government's budget was to be used to
Hansen of "appeasing" the opposition and claimed that in so doing, he "opened the way to an extremely effective
opposition to Functional Finance" (1943, p. 43). Rather than trying to appease his opponents, Lerner forcefully applied
his purely logical analysis, unleashing "all the unorthodox implications" which followed from it (1943, p. 39).
Functional Finance and the Federal Debt . The essay elucidates, in justpermanently maintain economic prosperity. Lerner accused
An Unstable System: Causes, Consequences and Solutions
One of the more unorthodox implications to emerge from Lerner's analysis was his indictment of the economic system
as inherently demand-constrained. Although he did not delve too deeply into the factor(s) causing the insufficient
demand until his 1951 book,
Institutionalists, Marxists, etc. -- The tendency for money-using (in particular, capitalist) economies to be plagued by
chronic deficiencies in aggregate demand derives from the inherent characteristics of such a system. This, as Keynes
(1946), Minsky (1986), Davidson (1982), and others have recognized is due to the existence of fundamental
uncertainty (a nonergodic world, in Davidson's terminology) and its implications for the financing of positions in capital
assets. Dudley Dillard recognized not only the reason for this instability but also its social consequences. Commenting
on these, he maintained:
[T]he motivation to production derives from the expectation of profit. Business men have the power, the
legal right, and often the incentive to withhold from use the means of production to which the labor of
the community must be applied in order to produce the goods and services that provide the basis of
community welfare. When businessmen decide to let their factories remain idle, they serve their own
interest but they do not serve the interest of the community. This is perfectly "natural." It is not in the
nature of business accounting to be directly concerned with what happens to the national income when
wages and salaries fall because of unemployment. (Dillard, 1948, p. 104)
Thus, it is in the "nature" of business enterprise to generate two related sources of instability: First, as a
consequence of the whims of the business man, the system tends to generate unemployment. Second, this
unemployment is likely to persist, because it is not in the nature of business accounting to generate self-correcting
forces.
Unemployment could persist, in Dillard's view, because of a persistent gap between total income and total spending by
the private sector. The reason for the gap, he opined, was the following:
At a level of income corresponding to full employment, the gap between total income and total
consumption is so great in advanced industrial economies that private investment is inadequate to fill it.
If unemployment is to be avoided, the gap must be bridged either by filling in with government expenditure
or by reducing the size of the gap by increasing the propensity to consume. (Dillard, 1948, p. 102)
Keynes was not optimistic about the likely success of policies designed to raise the propensity to consume. In
specifying the factors responsible for determining the propensity to consume, he distinguished the objective from the
subjective. The latter, he maintained "include those psychological characteristics of human nature which, though not
unalterable, are unlikely to undergo a material change over a short period of time except in abnormal or revolutionary
circumstances" (Keynes, 1964, p. 91). Although Keynes also recognized six objective factors, capable of altering the
propensity to consume, he did not believe that they could be manipulated easily enough to make targeting them an
efficient means of closing the gap. Thus, as Dillard notes, Keynes concluded that "the chief burden for maintenance of
high levels of employment falls on
consumption at full employment. (Dillard, 1948, p. 103; my emphasis).
It might be thought that simply 'priming the pump' could close the gap. Pump-primers suggested that it might be
necessary for the government to use its fiscal powers to stimulate demand but that
necessary. However, as Dillard noted, pump-priming "rests on the assumption that a
have a lasting tendency to raise the level of economic activity" (1948, p. 106). By the time he wrote the
Theory,
Implicit in the theory that the pump merely needs to be primed is the belief that the system has been in a state of
"
by some fortuitous event" (Dillard, 1948, p. 106). Keynes, of course, recognized that the system was characterized
by
[I]t is an outstanding characteristic of the economic system in which we live that, whilst it is subject to
severe fluctuations in respect of output and employment, it is not violently unstable. Indeed, it seems
capable of remaining in a chronic condition of sub-normal activity for a considerable period without any
market tendency either towards recovery or complete collapse. Moreover, the evidence indicates that
full, or even approximately full, employment is of rare and short-lived occurrence. (GT, pp. 249-50)
Lerner opposed pump-priming, for its formulation often implicitly called for the balancing of the government's budget
as an objective goal: a practice which (as we will see) is fundamentally at odds with the theory of Functional Finance.
Having rejected the use of pump-priming as an appropriate means of eliminating unemployment (i.e. closing the gap
between the full employment and the underemployment levels of aggregate spending), Lerner proposed his two "laws"
of Functional Finance. The first law placed upon the government the responsibility for maintaining the total rate of
spending on goods and services at the level necessary to purchase all of the output that it was possible to produce. In
elucidating this law, Lerner explained that when spending was at the requisite level it would prevent both inflation and
unemployment.
expenditures or reduce taxes so that private spending would increase. Similarly, the government could cut its spending
or raise taxes in order to reduce the total rate of spending:
By these means total spending can be kept at the required level, where it will be enough to buy the goods
that can be produced by all who want to work, and yet not enough to bring inflation by demanding (at
current prices)
The above should not be read as support for a non-accelerating inflationary rate of unemployment (NAIRU). Such a
reading, as Colander argues, would ascribe to Lerner a position which "is not inherent in the functional finance rules"
(Colander, 1997, p. 203).
Indeed, what Lerner advocated, in this essay, was the maintenance of true full employment (i.e. employment for all
who
While his views regarding the conditions under which inflationary pressures might begin to emerge initially differed
from Keynes', Lerner, in his
Keynes' view, inflation was not to be associated with price increases taking place
involuntary unemployment) had been reached. Indeed, expansionary policy was considered inflationary only if it spent
itself entirely on an increase in prices, with no further stimulus to output. In Keynes' words:
When a further increase in the quantity of effective demand produces no further increase in output and
entirely spends itself on an increase in the cost-unit fully proportionate to the increase in effective
demand, we have reached a condition which might be appropriately designated as one of true inflation. Up
to this point the effect of monetary expansion is entirely a question of degree, and there is no previous
point at which we can draw a definite line and declare that conditions of inflation have set in.
303)
Thus, Keynes recognized that prices were likely to rise before labor became scarce or capacity limits began to bind.
While Lerner did not initially believe that inflation would emerge before full employment had been reached, he later
recognized that prices might begin to rise before all resources were fully employed. He noted that:
[A]s long as it is possible for the supply of goods to increase along with the increase in spending, there
will be no (permanent) increase in prices. (Lerner, 1951, p. 8)
Although prices might begin to rise prior to the attainment of full employment, they would not
should not induce an abdication of the government's responsibilities with respect to the first law of Functional Finance.
The first law of Functional Finance is designed to eliminate a shortfall in total spending, while the second decrees the
specific
interest-bearing government debt only in the event that private spending would
aggregate demand. Under ordinary circumstances, Lerner argued, it is expected that capitalist economies will suffer
from insufficient rather than excessive aggregate demand so that it would not be necessary to offer bonds in
exchange for money as a means of tempering inflationary pressures. Instead, Lerner believed that bonds should be
sold to the central bank or to private banks "on conditions which permit the banks to issue new credit money based on
their additional holdings of government securities, [which] must be considered for our purposes as printing money"
(1943, p. 41).
In sum, capitalist economies are typically demand-constrained. This tendency to generate insufficient effective
demand for all output (even when the system is operating at less than full capacity) is the
instability; the
government to cover the shortfall by spending enough to bring about full employment.
Economics of Employment , the reasons are well known among Post-Keynesians,public expenditures designed to fill in the existing gap between income andrepeated stimuli were nottemporary new expenditure willGeneralKeynes, like Lerner, realized that pump-priming was not going to do the trick.unstable equilibrium before the injection of new spending pushes it back on the track from which it has been derailedstable under-employment equilibrium:1 In order to manipulate total spending, he suggested that the government increase its ownmore than can be produced. (Lerner, 1943, p. 40)want to work), which he believed could be attained without setting off inflation.Economics of Employment , appears to have moved closer to Keynes on this matter. Inbefore full employment (i.e. zero2 (GT, p.remain high and, thus,manner in which the deficiency is to be funded. Specifically, the second law calls for the sale ofotherwise generate excessivecause of the system'sconsequence is unemployment. The solution , according to Lerner, was to make it incumbent on the
Covering the Shortfall
The optimal method by which to finance deficit spending remains a controversial topic among many economists (see
Modigliani, 1992; Trostel, 1993; Ludvigson, 1996; and Smith et al., 1998). Although most would agree that
governments can finance their spending by imposing taxes, borrowing from the public, or printing money (or some
combination of these), there is often strong disagreement regarding the macroeconomic
choices.
The Barro-Ricardo thesis, for example, maintains that the financing choice is inconsequential. This, it is argued, is
because the knowledge that bond-financed government spending will require higher taxes in the future simply induces
households to save more now. The induced saving, which is just sufficient to purchase the new government debt,
leaves private net wealth unchanged, and thereby completely neutralizes the stimulative effect of government
spending. Similarly, as Tobin (1998) recognized, spending financed by issuing demand obligations (i.e. printing money)
might lead a monetarist Ricardian to suggest that a "money rain," like a "bond rain," will have no effect on aggregate
private wealth or consumption since adjustments in the price level will prevent the
changing. With the real quantity of money unaffected, decision-makers are said to have no reason to alter their
spending behavior. Thus, the macroeconomic consequences of bond- or money-financed deficit spending are thought to
yield results 'equivalent' with those that would have resulted if all spending had been financed by contemporaneous
taxation. In other words, it just doesn't matter whether the government chooses to tax, sell bonds, or print money;
each will affect the economy in an identical way.
In contrast, 'Keynesians' (Blinder and Solow, 1973, 1976; Buiter, 1977; Tobin, 1961), generally agree that the
economic consequences of borrowing and printing money can differ substantially from those obtained when
government spending is financed solely by contemporaneous taxation. Inspired by Christ (1967, 1968), Blinder and
Solow (1973) investigated the optimal method by which to finance government (deficit) spending, concluding that the
expansionary effects from borrowing would outweigh the stimulative effects of financing by creating new money.
Although 'Keynesians' recognize that there will be different macroeconomic consequences, depending on the
consequences of thesereal quantity of money frommanner
in which the shortfall is made up, they do not generally share Lerner's preference for printing money to finance the
deficit.
Post-Keynesians and Institutionalists, however, tend to be more amenable to Lerner's position. For example, Wray
(1998) discusses at length the possibility (and the desirability) of printing money to finance government expenditures.
Similarly, focusing on the macroeconomic consequences of alternative financing methods, Chick (1983) concludes:
Common sense, superior here, indicates that finance by new money, both because it introduces new
liquidity into the system and because there is no effect from the policy action itself on the rate of
interest, will have a greater expansionary effect than finance by borrowing. (Chick, 1983, p. 321)
On the same subject, Dillard (1948) recognizes that when the government simultaneously spends and collects taxes, it
is simply substituting public for private spending, whereas "the expenditure of funds raised by borrowing represents
mainly new expenditure and therefore an addition to total effective demand" (Dillard, 1948, p. 109). Elaborating on this
point, Dillard maintained that:
The greatest stimulation to employment will result when a public construction program financed by
borrowing replaces a public relief program which was paid for out of taxation. (Dillard, 1948, p. 109)
Thus, while 'Keynesians' typically conclude that the macroeconomic consequences of bond- vs. tax-financed spending
will differ, Dillard goes further, claiming that "there are significant differences between various
taxes" (1948, p. 110; my emphasis). Like Lerner, Dillard recognized that the expansionary effects would be greater
when bonds were sold to banks rather than to the non-bank public (i.e. when spending was financed by printing money):
In the former case, no one need restrict either his consumption or his investment. The bond is purchased
with new money created within the banking system in the form of new check-book money. The total
quantity of money is increased by the lending activities of the banking system. There is no transfer or
giving up of means of purchase by one party for expenditure by the government; there is merely the
creation of additional means of purchase. (Dillard, 1948, p. 110)
The least desirable method for financing spending involved the taxation of funds that would have been spent if left in
the hands of taxpayers. Thus, like Lerner, Dillard recognized that the consequence of taxing or borrowing from the
public was to leave private individuals with less money to spend. Because of this, Dillard proposed that the government
close the spending gap by creating additional money (i.e. a net injection) to finance its spending. Once the gap was
closed, Dillard, again siding with Lerner, maintained that the method of finance should shift in favor of taxation and/or
borrowing in order to forestall inflation (Dillard, 1948, p. 112).
Lerner, anticipating a knee-jerk opposition to his recommendation that the government 'resort' to printing money,
stated that:
The almost instinctive revulsion that we have to the idea of printing money, and the tendency to identify
it with inflation, can be overcome if we calm ourselves and take note that this printing does not affect
the amount of money
Again, the consequence of taxation and bond sales is to leave the public with less money to spend. Such a result would,
from Lerner's perspective, be "desirable . . . when they would otherwise spend enough to bring about inflation" (Lerner,
1943, p. 40). The idea, then, is to allow a private sector, unfettered by taxes, to come as close as possible to
satisfying Say's Law. In the absence of such robust demand conditions, however, Lerner advocated the printing of
money to finance the spending necessary for the maintenance of full employment. Again, the idea is to sell bonds to
banks (private banks or the central bank) as opposed to the non-bank public, so that funds which might otherwise be
spent are not lured away (or "crowed out") by the government. Thus, while most economists would argue that the
government should
excess of spending over taxation, Lerner believed that the government should do this "only if it is desirable that the
public should have less money and more government bonds" (1943, p. 40).
types of loans andspent . That is regulated by the first law of Functional Finance. (1943, p. 41)borrow 3 from the public (i.e. sell bonds in exchange for existing money) in order to finance the
How Can the Government Print Money?
How might a country print money in conformity with Lerner's second law? Economists typically apply the term 'printing
money' to the crediting, by the monetary authority, of the fiscal authority's checking account as a consequence of
purchasing its debt instruments. But Lerner wanted to broaden the application of the term. In his view, if
private
banks are capable of purchasing government debt by crediting a government account, this, too, should be considered
printing money. Thus, when either the central bank or a private bank purchases newly-issued government debt by
issuing credit or bank money, they are, in effect, printing money. Because printing money is essential for the adoption
of the principles of Functional Finance, it is, perhaps, prudent to devote some space to the balance sheet effects of
these two methods for printing money.
First, a government could create its own spendable balance by allowing its monetary authority to credit the account of
its fiscal authority. This, as Figure 1 indicates, can be accomplished through the purchase of the fiscal authority's IOU
(e.g. a government bond) by the monetary authority. Thus, if the central bank purchases a newly-issued security from
the Treasury, it will do so by crediting the Treasury's account. The balance sheet effects of this purchase/sale are
shown in Step A. Once the fiscal authority draws on this account in order to acquire goods and services, it can be said
to have paid for its purchase by 'printing' money. Asterisks indicate, in Step B, the amount of narrow
and
high-powered money that will have been created - both 'inside' and 'outside' money have increased (
Second, the government could sell bonds to a private bank.
printing money. The balance sheet effects of allowing private banks, as opposed to the central bank, to create
deposits for the Treasury are shown in Example 2.
ceteris paribus ).4 Lerner (correctly) characterized this as a means of
Figure 1
The sale of newly-issued bonds to the Central Bank
Step A: The sale of a Government bond to the Central Bank
TREASURY
+ Balance at Central Bank + Government Security
CENTRAL BANK
+ Government Security + Balance owed to Treasury
Step B: Drawing on the newly created balance
BANKS
+ Balance at Central Bank* + Balance owed to Public**
TREASURY
+ Asset - Balance at Central Bank
CENTRAL BANK
+ Balance owed to Commercial Banks - Balance owed to Treasury
* High-powered (or base) money created/'printed'
** Narrow money (e.g. M1) created/'printed'
Figure 2
The sale of newly-issued bonds to Note-Option Banks 5
Step A: The Sale of a Government Bond to a Note-Option Bank
NOTE-OPTION BANK
+ Government Securities + Tax & Loan Account
TREASURY
+ Tax & Loan Account + Government Securities
Step B: Transferring Funds from Tax & Loan Account to Central Bank
NOTE-OPTION BANK
- Balance at Central Bank - Balance owed to Treasury
TREASURY
- Balance at Note-Option Bank
+ Balance at Central Bank
CENTRAL BANK
- Balance owed to Note-Option Bank
+ Balance owed to Treasury
Step C: Spending from Account at Central Bank
BANKS
+ Balance at Central Bank + Balance owed to Public
TREASURY
- Balance at Central Bank
+ Asset
CENTRAL BANK
+ Balance owed to Commercial Banks
- Balance owed to Treasury
In this example, narrow and base money do not each rise by an equivalent amount. In particular, there is no net
increase in the quantity of base money as a consequence of the government's spending.
not generally refer to this form of government finance as having resulted in the printing of money. Under Lerner's
more general definition, however, whenever private or public banks, act "as agents for the government in issuing
credit or bank money," they may be said to be printing money for the purposes of government finance (Lerner, 1943,
fn., p. 41). Not only
Functional Finance, Lerner argues that they
purpose of borrowing existing funds
the adoption of so-called "sound" finance:
In brief, Functional Finance rejects completely the traditional doctrines of "sound finance" and the
principle of trying to balance the budget over a solar year or any other arbitrary period. In their place it
prescribes: first, the adjustment of total spending (by everybody in the economy, including the
government) in order to eliminate both unemployment and inflation, using government spending when
total spending is too low and taxation when total spending is too high; second, the adjustment of public
holdings of money and of government bonds, by government borrowing or debt repayment, in order to
achieve the rate of interest which results in the most desirable level of investment; and, third, the
printing, hoarding or destruction of money as needed for carrying out the first two parts of the program.
(1943, p. 41)
As Colander notes, "Lerner's purpose in proposing [the] rules of functional finance was to change the focus of thinking
about government finance from sound finance principles that made sense for individuals -- such as balancing the
budget -- to sound finance principles that made sense for the aggregate economy" (Colander, 1997, p. 202). Lerner
realized that a continually increasing national debt might be a consequence of rejecting the principles of "sound"
finance.
6 This is why economists docan they print money on behalf of the government, but, as dictated by the second law ofshould do so. In precluding the sale of government bonds for thefrom the private sector, Lerner unabashedly denied any intelligent grounds for
The Usual Objections
Today, economists from within and outside the mainstream typically object to a number of the implications that follow
from Lerner's proposal. Even Keynes is said to have initially "recoiled from" some of its more unorthodox implications
(Colander, 1997, p. 202). But he reconsidered his position, stating in a letter to Lerner:
It is a grand book worthy of one's hopes for you. A most powerful piece of well organized analysis with
high aesthetic qualities . . . I shall have to try when I get back to hold a seminar of the heads of the
Treasury on Functional Finance (quoted in Colander, 1997, p. 202).
Lerner dealt with some of the more common objections in his original essay, and a number of others have been
addressed by Wray (1998) and Forstater (1997). Because at least some of these objections are likely to creep into
the current reader's psyche, it is best to address (some of) them here.
First, and probably most obvious, is the belief that implementing Functional Finance will prove inflationary. Indeed, this
is a standard (i.e. mainstream) argument against expansionary fiscal policy. In the textbook story, however, a
employed
adds to a level of aggregate demand which is just sufficient to bring about full employment. As Figure 3 shows, the
result is an outward shift in the aggregate demand curve and a
fullyeconomy is usually taken as the point of departure. Thus, it is usually assumed that the additional spendingpermanently higher price level.
Figure 3
The Inflationary Effects of Deficit Spending 7
From the initial state of full employment equilibrium (point A), then, expansionary fiscal policy shifts the aggregate
demand curve from D
employers begin to adjust to the new (higher) price level, the aggregate supply curve shifts in (and to the left) until it
intersects D
price level has risen a full 12 percent from its original level.
As a basis for a critique of Functional Finance, the above is not very compelling. Indeed, it appears to be wholly
incompatible with the theory of Functional Finance, which precludes
otherwise) once full employment has been attained. Thus, expansionary fiscal policies are to be implemented
0 to D1. At this point (point B), the price level has risen by six percent. As workers and1 at point C, causing the price level to rise further.8 Equilibrium is reestablished at point C, where theany additional spending (government oronly
when the economy is operating
that:
Once full employment is reached, additional deficit spending will generate additional income that is likely
to cause inflationary pressures -- except in the unlikely case that all additional income represents desired
net saving. Beyond full employment, then, any further reduction of taxes or increase of government
spending (increasing deficit spending) is likely to reduce the value of money as prices are bid up. (Wray,
1998, p. 84)
Moreover, even if the CPI (or some other standard price index)
reached, it is not at all clear that the 'costs' associated with
moderate price increases would outweigh the (social and economic) benefits of reduced unemployment. Indeed, there
are even studies that argue that moderate inflation is itself a net benefit rather than a net cost.
below full employment. Echoing Lerner's sentiments on this subject, Wray contendsdid begin to rise before full employment had been9
Second, it might be objected that, owing to the existence of a
run the sort of substantial, persistent deficits that might emerge as a consequence of adopting the principles of
Functional Finance. Thus, it is standard practice to write:
financial (budget) constraint, the government cannot
G
- T = B + M
where
B represents the change in the quantity of outstanding bonds issued by the federal government and M
indicates a change in the quantity of newly-created money and to argue that beyond some point, the deficit (G - T)
cannot be increased further because there is no demand for additional government bonds or money. Equation 1 is
usually referred to as a government budget 'constraint' (or 'restraint').
The equation, itself, is not troubling. Indeed, it holds perfectly well as an
ex post accounting identity. As an ex ante
financial constraint, however, it seems, as Chick noted, "paradoxical," since:
[T]here are the possibilities of borrowing and creating purchasing power simultaneously with the
spending, and when the tax receipts are unknown at the outset: it is either a completely
between inflows and outflows of funds like an income statement . . . or it represents a consistent plan,
where the financial implications are recognised." (Chick, 1983, p. 319)
Thus, as Chick notes, it is awkward to refer to a government which is capable of creating money at will as being
subject to a
Another equation, which might be offered to support the claim that the government's debt cannot increase indefinitely
is given by:
Thus, when the deficit is financed by borrowing, some say that there is a finite limit to the quantity of government
debt that the public will willingly hold. From Equation 2, this "willingness" determines b
ratio, simultaneously constraining deficit spending beyond d
Lerner, while not sympathetic to them, spelled out his opponents' fears regarding 'excessive' indebtedness:
If the interest on the debt must be raised out of taxes . . . it will in time constitute an important fraction
of the national income. The very high income tax necessary to collect this amount of money and pay it to
the holders of government bonds will discourage risky private investment, by so reducing the net return
on it that the investor is not compensated for the risk of losing his capital. This will make it necessary
for the government to undertake still more deficit financing to keep up the level of income and
employment. Still heavier taxation will then be necessary to pay the interest on the growing debt — until
the burden of taxation is so crushing that private investment becomes unprofitable, and the private
enterprise economy collapses. (Lerner, 1943, p. 44).
If the entire system were likely to collapse as a consequence of adopting the principles of Functional Finance, there
would indeed be cause for concern. In response to this charge, three important points should be made. First, as Nell
(1999) notes, if there
debt-to-tax receipts), it is irrelevant, because:
For such upper limits to matter it must be shown that there are plausible and economically meaningful
circumstances in which those upper limits will be reached
1999, p.1)
Second, there can be no burden on society
made. While it is true that choosing among taxes, borrowing, and printing money will have distributional effects, any
burden must be measured "by the inconveniences involved in the process of transferring the money from the
taxpayers to the bondholders"(Lerner, 1943, p. 46). As Baumol and Blinder note, "[t]hese transfers may more may
not be desirable, but they hardly constitute a burden on the nation as a whole" (1997, p. 334).
Third, a growing debt (on which interest must be paid) is not a
But we have already seen that when the deficit is financed either by printing money or borrowing, it involves the sale
of interest-bearing debt, which naturally implies an increase in the quantity of interest-bearing debt outstanding. How,
then, would it be possible to run persistent deficits
deficits without issuing any interest-bearing debt at all? This question was asked by Dillard (1948):
Is not the creation of new money properly a government function, and if so, what is there to prevent the
government from issuing money directly, without paying interest on bonds to commercial banks?" (Dillard,
1948, p. 113)
Of course Dillard was not suggesting that the government should just print up mountains of cash and go around making
purchases with it. What he argued was that the default risk on government debt was so slight that it was unnecessary
to 'compensate' holders of this type of debt for parting with their more liquid (government) liabilities. Although he
recognized that a government's ability to adopt such a scheme depended on the "nature of central monetary
authority," (Dillard, 1948, p. 114), he explained that:
In the United States, the Treasury could issue non-interest bearing notes to the Federal Reserve banks
with instructions to increase the government deposits to the extent of the value of the notes. The
government could then spend its balances in the usual fashion for public works and other expenditures.
(Dillard, 1948, p. 114).
The balance sheet effects of this type of sale/purchase of non-interest bearing notes are shown in Figure 3.
ex post relationfinancial constraint.* , the sustainable debt-to-GDP* .is an upper limit (either of debt-to-GDP or its related ratio of interest payments on publicbefore full employment is reached. (Nell,as a whole as a consequence of the interest payments that have to benecessary consequence of continuously rising deficits.without generating a growing debt? Could the government run
Figure 3
The issue of non-interest bearing notes to the Central Bank
Step A: The issue of non-interest bearing notes to the Central Bank
TREASURY
+ Balance at Central Bank + IOU (non-interest bearing)
CENTRAL BANK
+ IOU (non-interest bearing) + Balance owed to Treasury
Step B: Treasury Spending from Account at Central Bank
BANKS
+ Balance at Central Bank + Balance owed to Public
TREASURY
- Balance at Central Bank
+ Assets
CENTRAL BANK
+ Balance owed to Banks
- Balance owed to Treasury
Figure 3 shows that, like in the example in which the Treasury sold
(Figure 2), the effect of drawing on an account that was credited through the sale of
an increase in both the quantities of narrow (e.g. M1) and base (i.e. high-powered) money.
If the government followed Dillard's proposal, not only would there be no increase in the quantity of outstanding debt
as a consequence of rising deficits, but one could not argue that beyond some point, the Treasury would run into a
financial constraint. Thus, as long as there remained the political will to create Treasury balances in this manner,
there would be no limit to Treasury's ability to acquire credits to its balance sheet. The only limitation to the
government's ability to
willingness to provide goods and services in exchange for government money. A government could, then, undertake
Lerner's Functional Finance, continuously making up a shortfall in aggregate spending,
of outstanding debt (or the interest that must be paid on it).
interest-bearing debt directly to the Central Banknon -interest bearing notes isspend these funds, as Wray (1998) recognized, would depend upon the private sector'swithout increasing the quantity
The Need for Policies Guided by the Principles of Functional Finance
This section is intended to provide a (very) general picture of the unemployment trend in a number of world
economies. It must be said, however, that the need for policies based on the principles of Functional Finance does not
depend on the current economic outlook. Indeed, as we have already seen, money-using economies tend to "suffer
from periodic, if not chronic, unemployment," (Wray, 1998, p. 84) which means that something like Functional Finance
(perhaps the Employer of Last Resort (ELR) program supported by Wray (1998) and Forstater (1997)) is needed as
part of the on-going implementation of fiscal policy, irrespective of the current economic situation.
Below is a sample of unemployment conditions in twenty industrialized countries.
It is clear from the graphs that what Lerner referred to as the 'spending gap' is sizable enough to generate substantial
unemployment in most of the countries sampled here. The nations chosen, it should be noted, hardly comprise a biased
sample. Indeed, all eleven countries participating in European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU), Australia, Canada,
Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States are among those sampled.
At the end of 1997, 80% of the countries included in the sample had annual unemployment rates measuring more than
6%, the rate long-believed to be the 'natural' rate of unemployment (at least in the United States). Of those, half (or
40%) had rates of 10% or more. Moreover, of the eight countries with double-digit unemployment rates at the end of
1997, all but one was a member of European EMU. This, as Modigliani, et al. argued, is probably no coincidence, since
preparation for entry into Monetary Union caused countries to pursue highly restrictive fiscal and monetary policies in
order to meet the convergence criteria established in the Maastricht Treaty.
12
While unemployment is fairly low in Japan, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and the United States, the current
performance in these countries, again, does not excuse the need for something like Functional Finance. Indeed, as
Godley (1999) points out, the US economy, currently the envy of almost all industrialized nations, could face an
"unusually protracted recession with a large rise in unemployment" unless steps are taken to implement a "coordinated
fiscal expansion worldwide" (Godley, 1999, pp. 4-5).
Conclusion
In the final paragraph of his essay, Lerner addresses the prospects for the adoption of the principles of Functional
Finance under various systems of governance. Specifically, he maintained that "Functional Finance is not especially
related to democracy or to private enterprise. It is applicable to a communist society just as well as to a fascist
society or a democratic society" (1943, p. 50). He adds, moreover, that "[i]ts relationship to democracy and free
enterprise consists simply in the fact that if the people who believe in these things will not use Functional Finance,
they will stand no chance in the long run against others who will" (1943, p. 51).
It is important to note that although Lerner appears to have considered the implementation of Functional Finance an
option under any
system of governance, he recognized that not all governments could, under existing institutional
arrangements, practice it. Forstater (1999) has also recognized this point, arguing that the institutional "structure
under EMU makes it nearly impossible for a country to enact a counter-cyclical fiscal policy [e.g. Functional Finance]
even if there were the political will [to do so]" (p. 32). The conditions under which Functional Finance can be undertaken
include: "a 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" (Forstater, 1999, p. 32).
We might say that those governments that are capable of adopting the principles of Functional Finance are those for
whom the national currency is, as Lerner described it in 1947, 'a creature of the State.' The United States, Canada,
the United Kingdom, and Australia are among such systems. In contrast, countries participating in EMU and those
adopting currency boards or otherwise fixing their exchange rates are examples of governments which, due to their
monetary arrangements, are constrained in their ability to follow the principles of Functional Finance.
APPENDIX
A T-account can be used to reflect the
not the only way to depict this (one could prepare a full balance sheet before, and a full balance sheet after, a
transaction), it is, in most instances, preferable to more time-consuming methods.
A few examples should provide the reader with sufficient conceptual understanding to cope with the T-accounts used
in the paper. Let us begin with Bank "A", whose initial balance sheet is reflected as:
Initial Balance Sheet of Bank "A"
change in a balance sheet as the result of a single transaction. Although it is
(thousands of dollars)
Cash $100 Demand Deposits $4000
Federal Reserve Account 1000 Time Deposits 2100
Loans 3000
Securities 2000
ASSETS = LIABILITIES + NET WORTH = 6100
If we wish to show the effects of a single transaction, say when a customer writes a check (to a friend who banks
elsewhere) for $100 on his checking account, we could laboriously construct an entirely new balance sheet as:
Balance Sheet of Bank "A" After Check Clears
(thousands of dollars)
Cash $100 Demand Deposits $3900
Federal Reserve Account 900 Time Deposits 2100
Loans 3000
Securities 2000
Or we could simply use a T-account to show the transaction:
Bank "A"
Federal Reserve Account - $100 Demand Deposits - $100
When we use T-accounts, only the asset or liability accounts
is preceded by a plus or minus sign to indicate whether the account was increased (credited) or decreased (debited).
Additionally, a T-account must always "balance". In other words, there must be equal pluses (or minuses) on opposite
sides, or offsetting plus-minus entries on the same side.
Continuing with Bank "A" as our guide, let us pursue a few more examples to ensure that the reader is comfortable
with this tool.
1. A depositor withdraws $50 cash from her time deposit:
Bank "A"
Cash - $50 Time Deposits - $50
2. A depositor writes a check for $100 on his checking account and deposits it into his time deposit:
Bank "A"
Demand
Deposits
- $100
Time Deposits +$100
3. The bank borrows $100 of reserves from the Federal Reserve:
Bank "A"
Federal Reserve Account +$100 Loan from Federal Reserve +$100
affected by the transaction are written down, and each
Footnotes
1. A word of caution is in order here. In laying out the theory of Functional Finance in 1943, Lerner clearly
believed that two economic ills -- inflation and unemployment -- had to be repressed if economic insecurity was
to be eliminated. Importantly, he did not believe that there was any inherent trade-off or inverse relation
between these two ills. Indeed, he opined that inflation would set in only after the system was pushed beyond
full employment. Later, however, Lerner recognized that inflation would begin to set in much sooner. In fact,
throughout much of his remaining career, he devoted himself to the study of policies designed to combat
inflation (market anti-inflation plans, incomes policies, wage-price controls, etc.). He even began to talk of
pursuing "high" full employment vs. "low" full employment (Lerner, 1951; Lerner and Colander, 1980), rather
than simply "full employment," which was his stated objective in 1943.
2. Although Keynes, in this passage, focused on the output and price effects following an expansionary monetary
policy, nothing of substance would change if, instead, fiscal policy had provided the stimulus.
3. We must be very clear about the difference between 'borrowing' and 'printing money'. Following Lerner,
'borrowing' will be used to refer to the sale of newly-issued government bonds, purchased by drawing on existing
deposits. 'Printing money', in contrast, will be used to refer to the sale of newly-issued government bonds,
purchased by crediting a government account.
4. If it wishes to finance its spending by 'printing' money, however, it cannot allow the bank to purchase the bonds
by drawing on an account with the monetary authority. But, as explained in Chapter Four, this is something the
Treasury can specify.
5. Note-option banks are private (US) banks in which government funds can be kept. The importance of these
accounts in coordinating the government's spending is described in Bell (1998).
6. Depending on the institutional arrangements, base money may rise in the next 'reserve period'. That is, if
banks are subjected to reserve requirements, additional reserves (i.e. base money) may be required as a
consequence of the government's spending.
7. This example is taken directly from Baumol and Blinder (1997).
8. While the textbooks usually concede that the inflationary effects depend upon the degree of slack present
before the expansionary policy is undertaken, the imagery of the inflationary effects of deficit spending tends
to prevail.
9. See: Schultze (1959); Minsky (1986); and Ackerlof, et al. (1996).
10. Although Ott and Ott (1965) may have been the first to specify the 'budget restraint,' Christ's work received
greater attention (1967, 1968), spawning countless extensions and refinements.
11. Personal notes from Tony Aspromourgos (1999).
12. Particularly troubling is the fact that these countries may now, as a consequence of joining EMU, be unable to
effectively deal with these levels of unemployment.
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