I did not understand the fundamental nature of our economy until I discovered Warren Mosler. Reading his book a year ago was a watershed moment for me. From there, it took a few months of reading his blog to sort out the technical jargon and then another few months reframing his ideas into the "issuer-user" paradigm presented on this site.
The Kansas City School of economics, Modern Monetary Theory, and Chartalism are all related with an interesting history. Instead of explaining it here let me point you to some good resources.
ResourcesThe Kansas City School of economics, Modern Monetary Theory, and Chartalism are all related with an interesting history. Instead of explaining it here let me point you to some good resources.
- Modern Monetary Theory - Wikipedia entry
- Best MMT Overview - Cullen Roche's one page overview
- James Galbraith: Wikipedia / HuffPost / TheNation / NewDeal2.0
- Bill Mitchell: Blog / Twitter / Wikipedia
- UMKC Department of Economics: Blog / Twitter
- William K. Black: Bio / Blog / Wikipedia / HuffPost / TheNation / NewDeal2.0
- Mathew Forstater: Bio / Blog / Twitter
- Stephanie Kelton: Bio / Blog /
- L. Randall Wray: Bio / Blog / HuffPost / NewDeal2.0
- Scott Fullwiler: Bio / Blog / Twitter /
- John Harvey: Bio / Blog / Forbes
- Pavlina R. Tcherneva: Bio / Blog / HuffPost / Twitter
- Warren Mosler: Blog / Wikipedia / HuffPost
- Marshall Auerback: Blog / HuffPost / NewDeal2.0
- Cullen Roche: Blog / Twitter
- Mike Norman: Blog / Twitter
- CFEPS — Center for Full Employment and Price Stability, Publications
- CofFEE — Center of Full Employment and Equity
- Levy Economics Institute of Bard College
- EPIC Coalition -- Forum dedicated to promoting research and public discussion
- Economic School of Thoughts - Dr. Patton, a follower of the Austrian school, provides a nice one page overview of economic schools of thought.
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