What is Modern Money Theory (MMT)?
MMT describes how the economy works. Although MMT does not prescribe government policy, there are some “natural” consequences. Some MMT core points are below.
Posts from Richard Murphy at Tax Research UK
- Thames, and the need for wateron 15 July 2026 by Richard Murphy
From The Guardian this morning, as if it is good news: Thames Water might last a year. The need of the people in the area Read the full article...
- Website updates – as requestedon 15 July 2026 by Richard Murphy
Due to popular demand, we are making some changes to the blog. These have had to fit around the agendas that Andy Moyle and I Read the full article...
- Why don’t women like the far-right?on 15 July 2026 by Richard Murphy
It is an observed fact in poll after poll that women do not like far-right politics as much as men do. Support for Reform and Read the full article...
- Let’s not escalate hateon 15 July 2026 by Richard Murphy
The Guardian has a headline this morning, which reads as follows: I admit to being worried about this. I have no idea why Ann Widdecombe Read the full article...
- Infographic: Fiscal policyon 15 July 2026 by Richard Murphy
Two of the terms least understood in economics are fiscal policy and monetary policy. This deals with one of them.
Posts from Bill Mitchell – Modern Monetary Theory
- Imagine if the British government wrote off its holdings of its own debton 13 July 2026 by bill
Last week, I considered recent research published by the BIS – Bank of International Settlements pushing the ‘growth friendly austerity’ myth – which was a classic example of how the sense of urgency and crisis is engendered by constructing the narrative in such a restricted manner that real world options are excluded which contradict the…
- Bank of International Settlements pushing the ‘growth friendly austerity’ mython 9 July 2026 by bill
I have been ‘at it’ for decades now but it never ceases to amaze me how mainstream macroeconomic analysis is carried out and the way the public just accepts the conclusions without understanding the basis on which the analysis generates those conclusions. Chapter II in the BIS Annual Economic Report (released June 28, 2026) –…
- Depreciating yen – look beyond the obvious for the explanationon 6 July 2026 by bill
The editorial in The Japan Times (July 3, 2026) – Little hope for a declining yen amid structural pressures – is an example of how mainstream commentators seize on superficial facts, apply some ideology, and come up with the wrong conclusion. As I have noted many times, the challenges facing Japan are many, not the…
- What the new British government needs to do to get the unions on side with climate actionon 2 July 2026 by bill
The recent extreme weather in the northern hemisphere, the twin monster tropical storms in Japan, the impending shutdown of the – Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (Amoc) – among other happenings is telling us that things are changing for the worse. Clearly long-term weather trends are open to interpretation because the available data is sketchy the…
- Apparently the RBA has the interests of the unemployed it is putting out of work at heart. Not!on 29 June 2026 by bill
Economics and business correspondents regularly serve as apologists for poor policy. Their motivation is to file a story and often they take the easy way out by paraphrasing press releases put out by some conservative think tank, or economist, or corporation without any critical scrutiny being applied and then masquerade their article as opinion. The…
Other Modern Money Theory Proponents
Other MMT Discussion
- MMT For the British People (Facebook group)
- Modern Money Theory (MMT) Australia (Facebook group)
- Modern Money Theory Dank Meme Stash (Facebook group)
- Intro to MMT – Modern Monetary Theory (Facebook group)
- MMT Podcast (Christian Reilly) (Twitter)
- Activist #MMT, the podcast (Twitter)
- Money on the Left (Twitter) (Web site)
- MMT France (En français)
- Stephanie Kelton @ The Lens/Substack
- Modern Monetary Theory by Brooke Clarke










