miket12
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Political Pundit
If the government doesn't need tax to pay it's bills, why do I pay 15% GST on everything I buy or income tax or why did I get a "tax cut" as a landlord?Government spending doesnβt come from taxes.
Operationally, when the NZ Govt spends, Treasury instructs the RBNZ to credit settlement accounts at commercial banks.
New money is created at the point of spending.
Taxes withdraw money from the economy after the spending.
Bonds (βGovt debtβ) manage the liquidity in the banking reserves system that spending creates. This is part of monetary policy.
Critically, neither taxes nor bonds fund spending.
The sequencing is explicit in RBNZ documentation.
Orthodox fiscal framing gets this sequencing wrong, which is why the debate keeps getting stuck on βwho paysβ instead of βwhatβs possibleβ.
The Govt issues the currency. It can always meet obligations denominated in NZD.
The constraint isnβt tax revenue, gentailer dividends, or shareholder payouts.
Itβs real resources: engineers, materials, project management capability, grid integration, and delivery capacity.
So the $14 billion Lake Onslow question isnβt βwhere does the money come from?β Itβs whether itβs a good project and whether NZ has, or is willing to build, the capacity to deliver it without creating bottlenecks.
It's a resource and capability question, not a taxpayer one.
Why? Because what you're suggesting is one stream of money available to a government but overly relying on one stream such as the bond market is inflationary.... which is why we went into recession to battle the high inflation the COVID stimulus caused.
In that case, I wonder what you'll think when your power bill goes up to pay for it? 'I'm not paying this extra because the government doesn't need the money'.
The problem with MMT is that you need to keep on increasing taxes to ensure that the money released by the government to repay bonds and the interest due, isn't inflationary.
Inflation-Loving Governments Are Now Blaming Private Businesses for Inflation | Mises Institute
As inflation becomes more obvious, governments will be blaming businesses for causing the inflation that policymakers have fueled. This is a step on the way to
Here's what happens when a government commits itself to the path of MMT...
What you're suggesting isn't working for Japan where they're now having to reduce government spending after a stimulus which led to record numbers of investors leaving the Japanese bond market.
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